Tree
monocultures don’t save the climate
Monoculture tree plantations must not be considered as climate mitigation
measures and should be excluded from any reward system
Poznan, December 8. Climate Justice Now!, an informal network of more
than 160 organizations worlwide has submitted to the Secretariat of
the UNFCC and is distributing to the delegates, the following statement
on behalf of the network, to make aware about the social and environmental
dangers of monoculture tree plantations related to climate change
mitigation measures.
There is evidence about the social
and environmental impacts of large scale timber plantations that is
now abundant and well documented. Among them: occupation of vast areas
of land resulting in dispossession of local peoples, increased poverty
resulting from the loss of means of livelihood not compensated by
the few and badly paid jobs in plantations, depletion of water resources,
pollution of soils, water and air, disappearance of local biodiversity,
irreversible impacts on soils
There is also documented evidence
in several countries about the differentiated gender impacts of plantations,
resulting in an increase in women’s workload, loss of their
traditional means of livelihood and disempowerment within their communities.
In spite of that carbon sink plantations
(including the possible use of genetically modified trees) continue
to be promoted within the CDM and rules are being simplified to make
their approval and implementation easier. At the same time, research
on the production of ethanol from tree cellulose is being carried
out in a number of countries (including genetic manipulation of trees
and enzymes), and would result in the occupation of yet more food-
producing lands by tree plantations aimed at feeding cars.
Evidence about the social and
environmental impacts of large scale oil palm monocultures –including
CO2 emissions from deforestation, fires and peatlands- is also well
documented and apart from those mentioned above, they also include
the impacts resulting from the use of a wide range of agrotoxics that
impact on the health of local communities and workers and particularly
on women employed as pesticide sprayers.
In spite of that, many governments
–North and South- are promoting biodiesel from palm oil as a
substitute for fossil fuels, thereby encouraging their further expansion.
Some of the governments of countries having large oil palm plantations
are at the same time publicizing them –with the aim of receiving
payments- as carbon sink plantations.
Plantations are also present in
the REDD discussions, given that they have been defined by UNFCCC
as a type of forest. This means that deforestation would not be counted
as such if the area is “converted” to monoculture tree
plantations or if forest destruction in one area is “compensated”
with tree plantations in another. In terms of “net” deforestation,
a country could in fact receive large amounts of funding for actually
destroying forests and planting tree monocultures.
Additionally, plantations actually
contribute to climate change through deforestation, draining of peat
swamps -releasing the carbon stored therein- provoking carbon emissions
from grassland soils, being prone to fires resulting in carbon emissions
and in the case of pulpwood plantations ending up in a product which
has a short life, is thrown away in landfills and rots to produce
methane.
In sum, large scale tree monocultures
must be excluded from any type of climate mitigation measures because
of their social and environmental impacts and because they contribute
to climate change.