Activists
Symbolically Cut Trees to Save Forests and Call for GE Trees Ban
Hundreds of
copies of the document "Offsetting
corporate sins by planting trees at the Convention on Buying Diversity"
were also distributed
Bonn, Germany, 27th May
A large number of activists today
stopped and cut Genetically Engineered frankentrees that attempted
to invade a tree planting ceremony outside of the meeting of the UN
Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD).
"We came here to this event
because this tree planting ceremony is representative of corporate
green-washing initiatives pretending to protect biodiversity,"
said Peter Gerhardt of the German based group Robin Wood. "The
tree planting ceremony is symbolic of what industry is pushing--non-native,
often invasive trees for monoculture timber plantations. If industry
has its way, in the near future these will be genetically engineered
(GE) trees for production of second generation agrofuels or pulp and
paper," he continued.
The activists expressed concern
about the refusal of the EU and Brazil to ban GE trees. "These
trees are simply too dangerous, not only to forests, but also to local
communities and Indigenous Peoples who depend on forests for their
existence," stated Camila Moreno of Terra de Direitos of Brazil.
"Already forest dependent
communities, especially women, are threatened by monoculture timber
plantations and GE trees will mean more plantations and an even greater
threat," stated Anne Petermann, of Global Justice Ecology Project,
and the STOP GE Trees Campaign. 1 "Imposing a ban on the release
of genetically engineered trees into the environment is the only sensible
position, which is supported by the entire African delegation plus
numerous Parties from Asia and Latin America."
The environmentalists also expressed
their concern about the One Billion Trees campaign of the UN Environment
Program. 2 "This campaign fails to inform people that planting
the wrong tree at the wrong place can be ecologically and socially
harmful", stated Dr. Miguel Lovera, Chairperson of the Global
Forest Coalition.
"Companies also want to use
GE trees and other tree monocultures for offsetting carbon emissions,"
highlighted Ana Filippini of World Rainforest Movement and the STOP
GE Trees Campaign. "The destruction of forests, which are important
carbon sinks, for new tree plantations releases huge amounts of carbon,
worsening climate change. What we need is forest restoration with
native species, not monocultures."
A potential ban on GE trees was
discussed at length during the first week of the Biodiversity Convention
and will now move into the High Level Session where Ministers from
around the world will decide what will happen with this issue. A decision
to stop GE trees is considered critically important at this time because
of the rapid advancement of GE trees technology, which is being especially
driven by the projected increase in demand for wood that would accompany
cellulose-based second generation agrofuels.
Contact: Orin Langelle, GFC Media
Coordinator, +49 (0)176 771 87583
Dr. Miguel Lovera, GFC Chairperson, +49 (0)152 225 344787
For photographs of this action
and other events during the CBD please go to:
http://globaljusticeecology.org/gallery.php?catID=26
Notes:
1 The STOP GE Trees Campaign
is comprised of 137 organizations in 34 countries.
2 The United Nations Environment
Programme (UNEP) has launched a major worldwide tree planting campaign
called Plant for the Planet: Billion Tree Campaign.