Argentina:
Indigenous and environmental activists sound alarm over plans to
promote tree plantations
The
Patagonia region of Argentina accounts for only 4% of the country’s
tree plantations. This limited development of the sector is viewed
by the Argentine authorities and forestry industry as a source of
vast possibilities: four million hectares of potential plantation
land divided among the provinces of Neuquén, Río Negro and Chubut.
Both
the national and regional authorities are directing their efforts
towards tapping this potential. After gathering in April in Esquel,
Chubut for the First Coordinating Meeting of the Patagonian Regional
Forestry Plan, they are now gearing up for the 2009 World Forestry
Congress to be held in Buenos Aires, envisioned as a showcase that
will draw foreign investors, consultants and business delegations
to the country.
But
the region’s Mapuche indigenous communities view these developments
as a threat, and warn that the government is not measuring the true
costs of such an undertaking. “The goal is to place the region at
the forefront of the rest of the country, no matter how they have
to do it,” say environmentalists and Mapuche community leaders.
According
to the government of Neuquén, around 60% of the province’s 1.5 million
hectares of land [of which only 60,000 are now occupied by tree
plantations] is private property – although in many cases, the legitimacy
and legality of this ownership is disputed by the Mapuche people.
The remaining 40% is public land used for transhumant or migratory
cattle-raising, primarily of goats and sheep.
The
question is how to reconcile traditional productive practices with
plantation activities. Traditional herding systems comprise three
subsystems that are indivisible: winter pastures in lowland areas,
summer pastures on mountain slopes, and the migration routes between
the two, which can range from a few kilometres to hundreds of kilometres,
depending on the community. This is precisely where plantation activity
– as it has been designed – is not compatible with the current use
of the land by small producers. The fencing off of large areas of
land for tree plantations [in this case, pine trees] will cut off
the migration routes and diminish the area of land available for
use as pasture.
Deepening conflicts
These
factors have given rise to a series of land conflicts that have
intensified in recent years. In 2003, faced with the decline in
their livestock herds due to the reduction and deterioration of
their summer pastures caused by overgrazing and the drying up of
springs – a consequence of the establishment of pine plantations
– the Wiñoy Folil Mapuche community moved back into the fields it
had used since ancestral times in Pampa de Lonco Luan, in the department
of Aluminé. They had been forced off of this land in the 1980s by
the Corporación Forestal Neuquina (CORFONE).
Last November, in
this same region, the Paineo and Cayupán communities called on the
provincial authorities for the restitution of their summer pastures,
which had also been sold to forestry companies. And in January of
this year, the Central Regional Council (CZC) – which represents
Mapuche communities in the central region of the province of Neuquén
– and the community of Vicente Katrunao Pincén took back a number
of areas of land from
which they had been
forced to leave.
“While they have
been turning over land
to private owners,
we have also begun a process of recovering summer pastures that
have been illegally usurped. This process is growing, because the
more they shut us in, the more they oblige us to hit back to defend
ourselves against this plight and recover our territory,” said Martín
Velázquez Maliqueo, the logko or traditional leader of the
community of Logko Puran, which forms part of the CZC.
Although the conflict
sparked by the incursion of forestry companies into Mapuche territory
has been most heated in the south-central region of Neuquén – due
to the degree of development of the plantation sector in this particular
province – the tensions extend to the rest of the provinces of Patagonia.
In August 2004, the
Italian company Ecoxilon signed a letter of intent with the government
of Río Negro to lease a million hectares of public land for 30 years
“for forestation and oxygen production.” While this initiative was
ultimately shelved, at the time the Indigenous Advisory Council
condemned the provincial authorities for agreeing to hand over this
land with no regard for the land rights over it claimed by the Mapuche
people.
Alien
species
In
addition to these land conflicts, the Mapuche people have also voiced
their alarm over the introduction of alien evergreen species – Pinus
ponderosa and Pinus contorta, native to western United
States – which disrupt the delicate balance among the different
elements of the natural ecosystem.
Environmental organizations share in this opposition to plantations
of alien species, stressing that they produce changes in the acidity
of the soil, take over and displace native species due to a lack
of natural enemies, and disrupt hydrological systems by absorbing
large quantities of water, among other factors. They are also concerned
that when these plantations have “matured”, it will lead to the
establishment in the region of highly polluting pulp mills as the
next link in the production cycle.
Tree
plantation activity was given a boost in the early 1990s by a government
policy to promote the sector, crowned in 1999 by Law 25,080, which
grants subsidies and tax exemptions among other incentives for the
establishment of tree plantations. The economic crisis of 2001 put
a brake on the sector’s rapid expansion, and by 2003 raw wood production
accounted for only 0.3% of GDP, while wood processing activities
represented 2%. But now the possibility of establishing tree plantations
under the Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism and obtaining
credits for carbon capture presents an extra incentive.
Of
the three Patagonian provinces, Neuquén has most actively promoted
plantation activity, which has also been drawn to the area by favourable
soil conditions. At present, 60% of the region’s tree plantations
are in Neuquén, and the area devoted to this sector is growing by
3,500 hectares a year. The 2001 Neuquén Forestry Plan set a goal
of reaching a growth rate of 10,000 hectares of new plantations
annually based on a sustained increase over the next 35 years. The
provincial government itself is responsible for 63% of planting
activity, which is carried out through CORFONE, a mixed public/private
company with majority state ownership.
By
Hernán Scandizzo,
e-mail: hernan.gsp.74@gmail.com
This
article was originally published in July 2008 by Noticias Aliadas,
available at:
http://www.noticiasaliadas.org/articles.asp?art=5664