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Today for you 30 new articles about earth's trees! (320th edition)

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http://www.peacefromtrees.org

 

--British Columbia: 1) Great Bear Rainforest plan still not approved,

2) Plan to work with Tla-o-qui-aht on protected area designation, 3)

Cambell wants private forest reserves in Cowichan, 4) They won't save

the giant snag? 5) Archeological laws are ineffective, --Canada: 6)

Overview, 7) Moon-scaping 50,000-square-miles of wilderness, --UK: 8)

Almost half of all chestnuts stricken, 9) Tribute to the ring of the

oaks of Accrington, 10) How to guide for low-impact tourism, 11)

Assemblyman demands harsh fines for cut trees, 12) Save the forest of

Harland Way,

--Norway: 13) They have vast pine forests to tap into for biofuels?

--Greece: 14) Summary of protests related to developer's arson campaign

--Niger: 15) He returned to a desert and all he could see were trees

--Sierra Leone: 16) Chinese stockpiling logs in anticipation of export

ban ending

--Nigeria: 17) All the forest will be gone in 12 years?

--Mozambique: 18) Biofuels Mega project to ruin forest, 19) Charcoal makers,

--Liberia: 20) Caving to industry and offering timber contracts again

--Cameroon: 21) Enforcement is essentially just sporadic seizures of wood

--Angola: 22) Japanese to invest in " eucalyptus timber exploration " in Ganda

--Tanzania: 23) A diversity of trees grown on farms

--Australia: 24) A travelers reflection on Styx deforestation, 25)

Gunns overview, 26) Leader is " not unsympathetic, "

--World-wide: 27) 15-country coalition of rainforest nations complain,

28) Forest Peoples' Alliance, 28) You mean something is wrong with

FSC? 29) Forests really are major carbon sinks, 30) Rainforest Action

Network: evasions and personal recriminations,

 

British Columbia:

 

1) Two years after B.C. Premier Campbell announced a " historical land

use agreement " that was intended to protect Canada's Great Bear

Rainforest, it remains unlegislated. Although the land use agreement

was supposed to establish new conservancy boundaries, new large scale

industrial proposals are planned within these same areas—leaving the

world renowned Great Bear Rainforest under threat once again. " People

across BC, Canada and around the world supported the effort to protect

this magnificent forest and applauded Premier Campbell for his

visionary achievement, " states Ian McAllister of the BC Environmental

group Pacific Wild, " and now we watch in dismay as taxpayer funded

environmental assessments take place on projects that should simply be

shelved. " http://world-wire.com/news/0804010003.html

 

2) Canada's Environment Minister John Baird and Dr. James Lunney,

Member of Parliament for Nanaimo—Alberni, today announced that the

Government of Canada will provide $82,100 to the Tla-o-qui-aht First

Nation to help develop a series of protected areas adjacent to the

Long Beach Unit of Pacific Rim National Park Reserve. The initiative

is part of the First Nation Tribal Park system. " Today's announcement

demonstrates our Government's desire to work collaboratively with

Aboriginal people in and around Canada's national parks, " said

Minister Baird. " By protecting both national park and tribal park

lands we are ensuring the long-term ecological integrity of the

Pacific Rim area. This is real action that builds on our Governments

record of expanding and protecting national parks and marine protected

areas across Canada. " Under this initiative, the Tla-o-qui-aht First

Nation, with support from Parks Canada, will develop land management

plans and a business plan to handle existing tribal parks in

Tla-o-qui-aht territory as well as the creation and operation of new

ones. " As the local Member of Parliament I understand how iconic

Pacific Rim National Park is to Canadians, " said Dr. James Lunney.

" Today's announcement builds on the existing good working relationship

between our Government and the Tla-o-qui-aht First Nation to protect

this beautiful part of our country for generations to come. "

Development of a Tribal Park system adjacent to Pacific Rim National

Park Reserve will provide economic opportunities for the Tla-o-qui-aht

First Nation, enhance the ecological integrity of tribal and national

park lands and increase the spectrum of visitor experiences available

in the Long Beach area. Nadine Crookes, A/Superintendent, Pacific Rim

National Park Reserve, Parks Canada - (250) 726-4709

 

3) The Town of Lake Cowichan will lobby Premier Gordon Campbell and

his government to designate forest land reserves on private forest

lands to ensure a viable forest industry in the Cowichan Lake area.

" The intent is to keep forest lands as forest lands, " said Councillor

Tim McGonigle, who is a forest worker. Mayor Jack Peake said that if

private forest lands are sold it will more likely mean the loss of

forest land. " If private forest land is for sale it seems to me the

provincial government should have first dibs on it, " said Peake.

Councillor Pat Foster told the council meeting that rumour has it

TimberWest will be selling its campgrounds around Cowichan Lake. Most

of the Cowichan Valley's electoral areas, including Areas F and I,

have amended their F1 forestry zoning to increase the minimum lot size

to 200 acres from 50 acres in hopes it would encourage continued

logging operations. Brooke Hodson, Cowichan Valley Regional District

director for Youbou-Meade Creek, supports council's initiative. " I

applaud anyone who wants to jump on board, " said Hodson. " If we keep

whittling away at all these private forest lands there won't be

anything left. " Town council's move is also supported by the Youbou

TimberLess Society, whose April newsletter discusses the erosion of

working forest land. " I'm glad to hear it, " Roger Wiles of Cowichan

Lake's Marble Bay, who is secretary for the TimberLess Society, said

about Lake Cowichan's resolution. " It sounds like good news. The

community suffers not just from the loss of a working forest, it's

also a loss to the watershed. " Steve Lorimer of TimberWest said Friday

that his initial reaction to the resolution is it's not needed. " We

don't need a forest land reserve designation because we already have

the rezoning process, " said Lorimer. TimberWest, the largest private

forest land owner on Vancouver Island, owns 134,000 acres, of which

39,000 acres are slated for potential sale. According to a map on

TimberWest's Web page, there is one piece of the company's land

halfway between Lake Cowichan and Duncan that is slated for sale, as

well as two others south of Duncan. " This is the portion that we think

has the highest value potential as a result of planning and zoning

changes, " says TimberWest's Web page.

http://www.bclocalnews.com/vancouver_island_central/lakecowichangazette/news/171\

72341.html

 

4) Without a radical shift in thinking about first nations

archaeology, B.C. is in danger of losing what is left of its ancient

heritage and sparking heated conflict with natives, according to PhD

candidate Michael Klassen. Virtually all of the first nations'

9,000-year-old footprint in southwestern B.C. has been eradicated by

development, Klassen said. Most of it has been destroyed lot by lot,

because each property taken alone may not register as scientifically

significant. " But when you look at it cumulatively, it is nearly all

being wiped out, " Klassen said. And what is left, natives will not let

go easily, he warned. Fuelled by a series of legal decisions and

legislative changes in the 1990s, first nations have realized the

archaeological record is essential to their claim on any territory in

B.C. Tens of thousands of archaeological sites in Metro Vancouver,

Greater Victoria and the Gulf Islands have already been destroyed by

urban growth and waterfront development. An entire industry of

archaeological consulting has grown up in B.C. over the past 15 years,

mainly focussed on examining sites in the process of being destroyed

by backhoes.

http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/story.html?id=aeb6147f-b9ad-4bc9-8dbc-53\

93dbdafc74 & k=187

94

 

5) Residents shouted " shame, shame, " and called for Vancouver park

board commissioners to resign after they voted unanimously Monday

night to fell the 13-metre red cedar snag, which the board feared had

become a public safety hazard. " It would be an awful thing if people

woke up and heard the tree ended its existence by falling on someone, "

commissioner Loretta Woodcock said. A cedar sapling will be planted in

the middle of the hollow stump. The snag itself will be halved and

laid on the ground, forming a pathway. In the past, thousands of

amateur photographers have clustered around the snag to take pictures

of people in its hollow base. The tree has recently been closed off to

protect the public. The snag, believed to be 1,000 years old, has been

rotted through since the 1900s and was cracked further during storms

last winter, causing it to lean at an 11-degree angle. Six residents

pleaded with the park board to keep the tree, arguing it didn't

explore all the options to protect what they called a historic

artifact that should be preserved as part of the Olympic legacy.

Resident Eleanor Hadley suggested the tree could be supported from

within, using dental techniques. " The tree can be saved from within

rather than having these ugly outside braces that ruin Stanley Park, "

she said. But Ian Robertson said the tree should go back to nature.

" We are dealing with a tree that is dead - unfortunately its time has

come, " he said. With a girth of nearly 20 metres, in the early days,

the tree provided ample room for horses and their riders. The hollow

tree was a stop on a number of horse-drawn carriage rides, which

picked up passengers at major hotels for a drive around the park. And

when early automobiles arrived in Vancouver at the turn of the

century, many of those cars - such as Stanley Steamers and Ford Model

Ts - backed into the tree for the traditional picture.

http://www.dose.ca/news/story.html?id=61b3cf55-9865-4a77-972a-ef0f9963b8a3

 

Canada:

 

6) Canada's lumber and paper industry must also address its declining

competitiveness and use trees for non-timber products such as

biochemicals, the provincial and federal officials said in a draft

report on the future of the country's forests. Canada is home to about

10 percent of the world's forests, and more than 90 percent of the

country's forest land is government owned. The report, which was light

on specifics, said the forests will feel the impact of global warming

even if steps are taken internationally to reduce emissions of

greenhouse gasses linked to climate change. Potential problems include

more large-scale fires in Western and Northern Canada, outbreaks of

tree-eating insects that are normally controlled by cold weather, and

wetter conditions and ice storms in Atlantic Canada. The country must

also look at using some of its forest as " carbon sinks " that can

offset greenhouse gas emissions by capturing and storing carbon

dioxide from the air, according to the report, which is still subject

to public comment. Canada must recognize that changing technology has

made its lumber and paper firms less competitive with those in other

countries with lower labor costs, but the traditional way of dealing

with that situation will not work in the future.

http://uk.reuters.com/article/environmentNews/idUKN0130868020080401

 

7) AlterNet today reports on BP's plan to destroy Alberta's forests

the size of Florida while increasing greenhouse gases and polluting

water resources. British Petroleum is turning away from the public

image of an oil company with environmental consciousness, which it so

carefully has crafted since 1997, a plot that even made the company

support the Kyoto protocol. Slogans like moving " beyond petroleum "

sound rather hollow though today in face of its plans to wreak havoc

in Alberta, Canada with its scheme to extract crude oil from tar

sands. The project, called by Greenpeace " the biggest environmental

crime in history " , represents a policy reversal of BP's own

long-standing, self-imposed ban on the production of crude oil from

tar sands, a combination of clay, sand, various minerals and bitumen,

found in the Canadian wilderness The process of extracting and

refining tar sands (containing an estimated 175 billion barrels of

recoverable oil), also known as Canadian crude involves: 1)

strip-mining and therefore moon-scaping a 50,000-square-mile span of

wilderness (approximately the size of Florida) located in the western

Canadian province of Alberta; 2) an input of 250 cubic feet of natural

gas to extract a single barrel of bitumen from tar sands (because of

the required method of either steaming or 'fireflood' the tar sands

which are too thick to be pumped like oil); the tar sands industry in

general consumes enough gas in a single day to heat approximately 4

million American homes; 3) redirecting surrounding rivers to the pits,

then routing the water to man-made lakes of toxic sludge (it takes

five barrels of water to produce a single barrel of crude); 4)

substantial manpower, heavy machinery (some of which can be up to

three stories tall and weigh as much as a jetliner) and an incredible

amount of energy in a process that generates up to four times more

carbon dioxide than conventional drilling (over the next seven years,

global warming pollutants released into the atmosphere from tar sands

oil production are projected to quintuple to 126 megatons, up from 25

megatons in 2003) -- Combatting the tar sand boom is being made

difficult because Canada lacks environmental standards and

regulations. All its has are national guidelines that can be flouted

by provincial governments, which is the case in Alberta.

http://isiria.wordpress.com/2008/04/01/bp-to-ravage-canadian-forests-the-size-of\

-florida/

 

UK:

 

8) A survey of more than 2,600 horse chestnuts across the country

found that 49% showed symptoms of the bleeding canker disease, which

attacks bark and can kill the tree or require it to be chopped down.

Previous estimates said only 5% of trees were affected. Roddie

Burgess, head of plant health at the Forestry Commission, which

carried out the new survey, said: " This was the first opportunity we

have had to carry out a survey of this type, and the results did take

us by surprise. " Commission staff checked the state of 1,385 rural

trees and 1,244 in urban locations across England, Scotland and Wales

last summer. More than half (54%) of the urban horse chestnuts showed

symptoms of the disease and 44% of the rural trees were affected. The

symptoms were most common in south-east England, where more than

three-quarters (76%) of the trees surveyed showed symptoms. There are

thought to be 1 million horse chestnuts in Britain. The experts cannot

be sure whether the sickly trees have the disease until they are

screened for the bacterium responsible, Pseudomonas syringae. The

emergence of the bacterium has baffled scientists, because for decades

the bleeding canker disease was thought to be caused by a fungus. Joan

Webber, a senior research scientist at the Forestry Commission, said:

" It attacks the bark, kills it and makes it like a sore. " Several

thousand horse chestnuts are thought to have been killed or removed

after catching the disease, but Webber said: " We don't know how many

trees succumb. It's not necessarily a death sentence for trees that

become infected. "

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/apr/02/conservation.wildlife1

 

9) Plans to create a £1.3million woodland tribute to the ring of oak

trees which gave Accrington its name have been announced.

Environmental charity the Prospects Foundation, along with Hyndburn

Council, are bidding for lottery funding to create the large-scale

project. Prospects initially came up with the idea of creating a " ring

of oaks " somewhere in the centre of Accrington last year. But now the

council, along with Lancashire County Council's Remade initiative,

have announced a much larger plan for extensive tree planting and park

improvements to the parks which encircle Hyndburn. It is thought that

Accrington got its name because it was once surrounded by old oak

woods and the name is derived from the phrase acorn-ring-town. Coun

Lynn Wilson said: " Ring of Oaks is the overall theme and relates to

the origins of the name of Accrington. We hope the plans will generate

powerful community interest and increase involvement in the woodland

heritage of the area. " A significant funding bid is being prepared for

a woodland heritage programme. " In Hyndburn we will seek to attract

funding to seven parks and open spaces, to support tree management,

access improvements and heritage interpretation. There will also be

community, education and training opportunities. " Prospects

development manager Ellie Taylor said: " It is early days for the

project but it is one that we are very keen to see created. " I think

it will be a really popular idea in the area and people will feel a

real ownership of the site because of the connotations of the name

Accrington. " The council-owned parks involved are Oakhill Park,

Haworth Park, Bullough Park, Milnshaw Park, Peel Park/Coppice, all

Accrington as well as Woodnook Vale in Baxenden and Foxhill Bank and

White Ash Valley in Oswaldtwistle. Detailed proposals for each park

have not yet been developed, but each site is expected to include tree

and woodland management and planting. Access improvements and signage

together with community activities.

http://www.lancashireeveningtelegraph.co.uk/display.var.2162161.0.1_3m_woodland_\

project_unveil

ed.php

 

10) A guide to how best to holiday in the rainforests has been

produced in an attempt to reduce damage to fragile habitats from

tourism. The guide, which is aimed primarily at tour operators, has

been produced by Conservation International, an environmental

organisation. The guide includes a self-assessment checklist for tour

operators to evaluate the extent to which their policies benefit or

harm rainforests and their inhabitants. Neel Inamdar, a senior adviser

for ecotourism for Conservation International, hopes the guide will

create greater awareness of the effects of tourism on rainforests. He

urges travellers to book only with companies that adhere to its

recommendations. " Tourism has exploded in areas of rainforest in the

past 20 years and we have a general concern about its impact on areas

of high biodiversity, " he said. A Practical Guide to Good Practice:

Managing Environmental Impacts in the Rainforest Sector will be

published in print and online next week. In Britain, Responsible

Travel will distribute it to more than 250 tour operators.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/hubs/greentravel/975635/Taking-care-of-the-rai\

nforest.html

 

11) An assembly member has called for £30,000 fines to be imposed for

the destruction of protected trees. Jim Wells of the DUP was speaking

after a large number of trees were felled on a private estate on the

outskirts of Newcastle in County Down. Mr Wells said he was disgusted

by what happened at Myrtle Lodge. " I am very, very angry and so are

all the surrounding residents. Bit by bit Newcastle is being destroyed

by this type of activity, " he said. " We need to make an example of

this particluar incident to make sure it doesn't happen again. "

Patrick Craig from the Woodland Trust said: " We're just absolutely

appalled that yet again some more native trees have been destroyed.

" The legislation is very, very strong, but unfortunately when it comes

to enforcement, there doesn't seem to be the willingness or ability of

anybody to actually enforce those protection orders. " A DOE

spokesperson said: " Planning Service can confirm that investigations

into a possible breach of planning control in the Bryansford area of

Newcastle are ongoing, however we cannot comment on the details of the

investigation at this stage. "

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/northern_ireland/7319891.stm

 

12) When the project began shortly after Christmas, many local

residents told the Wetherby News how outraged they were no public

consultation had taken place. Wetherby resident Woody Whittick and her

conservationist expert husband Iain, of Foxhill, were one couple who

were dismayed to see at least 25 to 30 mature trees destroyed outside

the back of their home. But Coun Lamb said the May meeting would

update residents on the woodland's current situation and clarify the

reasoning behind the felling. He also said it would give local people

a chance to discuss their concerns with the Forestry Commission and

develop ideas about the best way to preserve the beauty of the area

for future generations. He said: " I'm delighted that residents will

have an opportunity to discuss the Harland Way. " This is a hugely

popular woodland area, and people naturally have a keen interest in

its future. " I recently inspected the site with Mr Cooper, and he

agreed that the work was vital in order to improve the age diversity

and variation of woodland in the area. " His only issue was with the

lack of consultation – something which I agree needs to be improved,

and which we're trying to address, not least by holding this meeting.

" This forum will allow people to hear from someone with expert

knowledge of woodland areas. Hopefully we can engage with local people

and give them the chance to develop ideas about how best to preserve

the future of this truly beautiful location. " Hundreds of trees along

the popular network of wooded paths have been felled as part of Leeds

City Council's efforts to maintain natural tree cover and the unique

nature of the site. The council has always maintained the principle of

the essential tree thinning work was to improve the age diversity and

variation of the woodland which would, in turn, enrich species

diversity and increase tree cover in the future. " Ideally broadleaved

woodlands should be thinned every ten or so years, this contributes to

diversity of species and age-class, ensuring the woodland is robust

and varied. "

http://www.wetherbynews.co.uk/wetherby-news/Residents-to-get-say-on.3922519.jp

 

Norway:

 

13) Norway will double production of bioenergy by 2020 by tapping its

vast pine forests and seek to become an exporter of renewable energies

to diversify from oil and gas, the government said on Tuesday. " This

is alchemy at its best, " Oil and Energy Minister Aaslaug Haga said of

the plan to turn forests into what she called " green gold. " The scheme

would also help Norway reach targets for axing greenhouse gas

emissions. Norway, the world's number five oil exporter, would double

output of bioenergy from wood, other plant material and farm waste to

total about 28 terawatt hours (TWh) a year. The rise of 14 TWh is the

equivalent of Oslo's total energy use or about a tenth of Norway's

annual electricity production. " We want to be a considerable exporter

of renewable energy, " Haga told a news conference of the plan by the

Labour-led government. Doubling bioenergy, along with a push for extra

energy from small hydropower plants and wind farms, would help make

Norway an exporter of renewables. " We now have a situation where we

import electricity in a normal year, " she said. The increase for

bioenergy production would be largely through a better exploitation of

forests that cover 38 percent of the Nordic nation, rather than new

plantings. Norway would not let the bioenergy goals compete with

farmland -- a worry in some countries where energy production is

taking land from crops. Just three percent of the chill, mountainous

Nordic nation is suitable for food crops. TREES " Forests have by far

the biggest potential without swapping out farm production, "

Agriculture Minister Terje Riis-Johansen said. Haga said households

and businesses should be encouraged to burn more wood for heating, for

instance, and shift from oil burners or electricity, which is almost

all generated from hydropower in Norway. The government would raise

subsidies for bioenergy, step up research and impose other measures

such as a ban on the installation of oil-fired heaters in new

buildings from 2009. Riis-Johansen said the plans could create

hundreds of jobs and that a switch from the use of oil for 10 TWh of

energy could save three million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions a

year. Norway's emissions are now about 50 million tonnes a year.

Norway is far above a goal of cutting its greenhouse gas emissions

under the U.N.'s Kyoto Protocol by 2008-12. And it plans to cut its

net carbon dioxide emissions to zero by 2030 in what it says is one of

the world's toughest climate targets.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/feedarticle?id=7428314

 

Greece:

 

14) The casino is built within the natural forest of Parnitha, and

remained untouched during the arsons that destroyed a large part of

Greece's forests and wildlife and costed more than 67 people their

lives, since the local firemen were sent to protect the casino's

infrastructure and not the forest. The casino is even planning its

expansion inside the damaged forest area, a part of wich (around

20.000 acres) was donated to the casino by the Greek government, right

after the arsons, so as to 'protect' it. The casino belongs by 51% to

a Greek state's agency, and by 49% to private companies, mainly

'Regency Entertainment-BC Partners'. Sunday, July 29 2007, one month

after the destructive sprawl arson at Parnitha mountain, Athens, 27

activists got arrested near the mountain, accused for a symbolic

attack with paintbombs against the 'Mont Parnes' casino, earlier that

day. The activists, in a communique they circulated, signed: 'The

Deers of Parnitha' state they decided to act against the casino

'recognizing the fact that its presence is irrelative and totally

competitive to the natural forest, and that it is needed to kick it

out and prevent its expansion. That's why this paint attack was a

symbolic, fair and a positive action aiming to contribute in the

awakening of an equal social justice'. Two days before that, an 'Open

Assembly from Strefis hill' organized a march in the forest and

blockaded the casino's teleferik, facing intense police pressure. On

the 29th, the police mobilized riot-policemen, police cars,

helicopters and special police squads. This operation resulted in the

arrest of 27 activists, who were beaten while hand-cuffed. Inside GADA

(Athens police headquarters), they were tortured and deprived of any

phone calls, even to their lawyers. After their strong dissent inside

GADA, and the gathering of supporters outside the building, those

injured heavily were sent to a hospital, and the police announced the

accusations against the 27. On January 10, the 27 activists faced a

jury in Athens, where more than a hundred supporters attended. All 27

were found not guilty for the accusations concerning throwing paint at

the casino, while two of them were found guilty for 'dissobedience'

and set on parole because they denied to give their identity while

they were under arrest. The 27 are set free, without charges.

http://athens.indymedia.org/front.php3?lang=el & article_id=784086

http://athens.indymedia.org/front.php3?lang=el & article_id=782687

http://www.indy.gr/newswire/drasi-enantia-sto-kazino-27-syllpseis-gia-plimmelmat\

a-6-traymatie

s-meta-apo-ksylodarmo-astynomikn-sygkentrosi-allileggyis-ekso-apo-ti-gada

 

 

Niger:

 

15) Returning to Africa after a 10 year absence, Chris Reij could

barely believe his eyes. On the arid margins of the Sahara in Niger,

all he could see were trees. It was no mirage: after studying land use

in Africa for three decades, he was witnessing the untold story of the

re-greening of the Sahel. He tells Fred Pearce about the African

farmers who are defying the experts. Describe what you have seen on

your recent trips to rural Africa. You might call me an old Africa

hand. I have been working there on and off for 30 years, looking at

how people manage their natural resources. I was in Niger regularly

between 1984 and 1994. Back then, a lot of the land was treeless.

There had been frequent droughts. Farmers had chopped down their trees

for firewood and the desert was spreading.

http://www.newscientist.com/channel/opinion/mg19726491.700-interview-and-then-th\

ere-were-trees.h

tml

 

Sierra Leone:

 

16) Some 230 miles away from Freetown, Gangama, Taetima, and Mesima

communities in the Bonthe district have raised concerns over possible

illegal exploitation and extraction of forest trees in complete

contravention of government ban. This claim was verified by a recent

assessment report done by Green Scenery, a national non-governmental

organization with objective to promote education and awareness on the

country's environment in general and in particular the conservation of

the country's biodiversity. As a way to dealing with the alarming rate

of deforestation, Government of Sierra Leone (GoSL) put a ban to all

forms of commercial logging and exporting in November 2007 and

reinforced this ban again in early 2008, the report stated. However,

investigations revealed that a main interest group, a Chinese

commercial interest, has been stockpiling logs in the Ngongokama

forest so that it can be exported when the ban is eventually lifted.

Having seen evidence of the felled logs from Gbongokama Community

Forest, and from concerns raised by the communities over the logging

of trees from the forest, it was only but necessary to undertake this

quick assessment to give an insight to the team as to the level of

damage already caused. The communities claim that the forest is over a

century old and has served as source of common resource pull for

generations past and present but recent spate of deforestation around

the country seems alarming. The activity increased to a critical level

when interest for the purchase of high density wood by certain

commercial entities intensified. The tree species that has attracted

loggers attention in the community forest bears the trade name Cam

wood; in local dialect it is called Mbundoi (Mende) with biological

name Baphia nitida. In its natural environment, the tree resembles

other species thus making these species vulnerable to the loggers. In

real terms, many trees that are not Cam wood have been felled in the

forest and were abandoned.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200803281410.html

 

Nigeria:

 

17) Nigeria will lose all of its remaining forests in the next 12

years if the rate of deforestation remains unchecked, an environmental

expert warned Thursday. " Considering the rate at which trees are

chopped down without any regeneration efforts ... all of Nigeria's

forests will disappear by 2020, " Kabiru Yammama told AFP. Yammama, who

heads up the National Forest Conservation Council (NFCCN), a body that

acts as a consultant to the Nigerian government, said all forests in

northern Nigeria have been depleted and deforestation is moving

southwards. " The north has lost virtually all its forests. Our 1999

survey showed that the rate of deforestation in northern Nigeria alone

stood at 400,000 hectares per annum, " he said. Nigeria uses 40.5

million tonnes of firewood every year, he said, adding: " Imagine the

depredation wrought on the vegetation in the last decade. " According

to the most recent NFCCN report, released in 2007, 35 percent of

arable land in 11 northern states has been swallowed by desert. This

has affected the livelihood of over 55 million people, more than the

combined population of Mali, Burkina Fasso, Senegal and Mauritania.

Nigeria has the seventh-largest gas reserves in the world but has so

far failed to harness them to produce affordable cooking gas, meaning

the bulk of the population still relies on wood or charcoal for

cooking. " Now that the forests in the north are gone, attention has

shifted to ... southern Nigeria where trees are burnt for charcoal.

This is more destructive than tree chopping because it is more rapid

and kills all the flora and wildlife, " Yammama further warned. " If

this trend continues unchecked Nigeria will join the league of

Ethiopia which has lost all its forests, " he said.

http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5jM-Z4a6gJHbcdxwornY5BJ6lQNjA

 

Mozambique:

 

18) The coordinator of the Mozambican NGO " Amigos da Floresta "

(Friends of the Forest), the prominent sociologist Carlos Serra, has

warned that approval of the first mega-projects to produce biofuels

will worsen the threat to the country's forests. In a statement issued

on the first anniversary of the foundation of " Amigos da floresta " ,

Serra said that a great deal still has to be done to halt the illegal

exploitation of timber in Mozambique, given that the number of

forestry inspectors is manifestly inadequate to cover the entire

country. On top of this they are badly trained and ill equipped, and

thus highly vulnerable to bribery. To complicate matters " there is now

a new element in play, which is the approval of the first

mega-projects to produce biofuels " . Serra claimed that this would

involve " hundreds of thousands of hectares of land " . (But in fact to

date, only one large project has receive government approval. This is

PROCANA, which involves planting 30,000 hectares of sugar cane in the

southern province of Gaza to produce ethanol). The government has

promised that fertile agricultural land will not be used for biofuels.

Instead they will be planted on " marginal land " . Serra feared that the

term " marginal land " in reality means forests, which will be cleared

to make way for biofuels. He warned that deforestation is an evident

reality in Mozambique, and criticized the lack of scientific studies

on the real situation of the country's forests. The forest inventory

presented last year is not yet publicly available, and logging

licences were still being issued on a " doubtful scientific basis " .

Serra said that this year " little has changed with regard to illegal

exploitation of timber when compared with 2007 " . But there were " some

slight improvements, the result of greater pressure on the part of

civil society " . " Amigos da Floresta " is now organizing a campaign of

environmental education and awareness on the importance of forests,

which will include articles in the press, cartoon strips, theatre and

music. http://allafrica.com/stories/200803260902.html

 

19) Matenga - Santos Junior Guilaza's hands are calloused, burned

countless times by the smoldering wood he separates, barehanded, from

the dark, steaming dirt of his earthen kiln. His bare feet are

leathery and flattened from trekking over this overgrown land – from

his bamboo-and-thatch hut, past increasingly rare trees, and to the

road where he, like thousands upon thousands of others, sells the

charcoal that fuels southern Africa. " I go by foot, " he says

matter-of-factly as he guides a visitor through shoulder-high grasses

that can slice skin like fine razors. ( " Watch for the snakes, " he

warns.) Mr. Guilaza has been chopping trees and making charcoal for as

long as he can remember. It's what his father did and his grandfather,

too. It's what all the men do in this village, not far from the

crocodile-thick Pungue River. And it's how legions of impoverished

people throughout the developing world stay alive. Charcoal is more

portable than simple wood, and can be made with trees, earth, fire –

and sweat. In regions where electricity and money are scarce, but

physical toil is not, the fuel is everywhere. In Mozambique, for

instance, the government estimates that charcoal is the main fuel

source for 80 percent of the population. Along with South America,

Africa loses forests at a faster rate than almost any place on earth,

according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization. Many farmers

use a slash-and-burn process, cutting forest and burning the remaining

vegetation to plant crops in the temporarily rich soil. Logging –

illegal and legal – clears large amounts of forests. But almost half

of Africa's forest loss is a result of people chopping trees for

firewood or charcoal, estimates the UN Billion Tree Campaign.

http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0402/p20s01-woaf.html

 

 

Liberia:

 

20) Under intense pressure from the timber industry – including many

familiar faces from the past – the Forest Development Authority (FDA)

of Liberia has started to issue timber contracts. Yet key legislation

on community rights – to ensure an equitable balance between

community, conservation and commercial forestry – is still in draft.

The rush to allow a timber trade with a poor track record of

corruption and trampling on community rights raises the spectre of

Liberia's forests once again undermining stability in this fragile

country. In the past Liberia's timber industry has fuelled conflict,

widespread human rights abuses and destabilisation in West Africa. It

is critical that those linked to the conflict are not able to operate

in the forestry sector again. It is imperative the rule of law is

followed, and seen to be followed. However, the process to date has

had its difficulties. Significant weaknesses have been documented in

the prequalification for those wishing to obtain logging permits, to

which the Government of Liberia did not respond. And evidence suggests

the system for debarring " those who have aided and abetted civil

disturbances " is failing. Above all, a proper implementation of the

Community Rights Law is critically important. It is too early to

allocate either concessions or conservation areas before having

clarified and codified who owns the forest. The resumption of

large-scale logging before this law is implemented will undermine the

efforts of rural communities to develop and prosper, as they once

again become dependent on the whim, and unequal negotiating power, of

the timber industry. Liberia is well placed to learn from the

experience of other countries in the region: in Ghana and Cameroon,

for example, the longstanding failure to develop and implement an

effective community role in the management of forest resources has

exacerbated rural poverty, and at times led to conflict. The

Government of Liberia and the FDA have repeatedly stressed their

" absolute commitment not to return to the old way of doing business " .

We therefore call on the FDA to remain committed to treating the six

initial contracts currently being awarded as a pilot, and withhold any

further steps to allocate concessions until the Community Rights Law

is properly implemented and issues raised by Liberian civil society in

the prequalification process are fully addressed.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200803271045.html

 

Cameroon:

 

21) And what about these startling revelations of the President of the

Cameroon Association of Timber Exploiters who said only one out of the

27 companies the government sanctioned in February for outright

violation of the country's forestry law is legally registered with

them? The more reason why cleaning up the sector should not only be

limited to the sporadic seizure of wood destined for exportation at

the port. It should actually begin with weeding out impostors from the

sector. The most recent decision by Minister Ngolle Ngolle was on 20th

March 2008 when he suspended 16 logging companies from carrying out

forest exploitation activities through out the national territory.

Those sanctioned failed to show up at the Ministry of Forestry and

Wildlife to justify the origin of their wood seized at the Port of

Douala in October 2007. The move comes barely a month after a similar

one taken last February 15, 2008 suspending 27 forestry enterprises

for the same motive. 14 other enterprises, who have been convened for

a working session with the Forestry and Wildlife boss, are on the

hold. They might also be slammed sanctions linked to their

nonconformist activities in forestry exploitation; activities which

infringe on the option to manage our forest durably. That the Minister

of Forestry can hit hard on these " untouchables " of the forestry

sector is laudable. The courageous move paves the way for transparency

in a domain where corruption and defiance of the law have found

fertile grounds. Most of the " almighty " logging companies have so far

functioned in complete arrogance and disregard of the forestry law in

the country; creating and implementing their own rules to the

detriment of government's coffers, the local communities which ought

to benefit from the venture and above all our forest. The questions

many people are asking is: how come that the irregularities could only

be noticed at the sea port despite the existence of numerous check

points on our roads? What would have happened if the Minister of

Forestry and Wildlife did not dispatch a control team of experts to

the Douala port last October? Your guess is as good as mine. It is

however a pointer that nothing should be taken for granted if the

sector must be cleared of its malicious operators. Controls at the sea

port should therefore be systematic and rigorous to make it

practically impossible for wayward loggers to pilfer Cameroon's timber

out of the country. http://allafrica.com/stories/200803260539.html

 

Angola:

 

22) Ganda – A group of three Japanese companies plans to invest in

eucalyptus timber exploration in the industrial complex of pulp and

paper company, Companhia de Celulose e Papéis de Angola, in Angola's

Benguela province, Angolan news agency Angop reported Monday. The

agency said that a mission from the three companies travelled to the

municipality of Ganda in order to identify the potential of the timber

available in the region and gather further information to carry out an

economic feasibility study. Speaking to Angop, the head of the

Japanese delegation said that the region's timber potential was

excellent and that the current aim was to identify timber production

capacity and assess the possibility of recuperation of the pulp and

paper factory. Following Benguela, the delegation visited the Ukema

and Caala forest perimeter in Huambo province. Companhia de Celulose e

Papel de Angola is currently responsible for 18 eucalyptus forest

plantations located in the municipal areas of Ganda (Benguela), Ukuma

and Caala (Huambo) and some regions of Bié and has been out of

operation since March 1983, when it was partially destroyed due to the

civil war in Angola. http://www.macauhub.com.mo/en/news.php?ID=5083

 

Tanzania:

 

23) In Tabora, Uyui and Sikonge districts, women are cashing in on

species such as ntonga (Strychnos cocculoides) ntalali (Vitex

mombassae) mbula (Parinari curatellifolia) and furu (Vitex doniana),

which they have planted on their farms alongside traditional crops.

Other trees popular with the farmers are: mbuguswa (Fracourtia

indica), ng'ong'o (Sclerocarya birrea), zambarau (Syzium guineense),

mmbuyu or baobab (Adansonia digitata) and ukwaju or tamarind

(Tamarindus indica). The fruit from these trees is processed into

jams, juices and wines. So passionate are the farmers about

conservation projects in the area that they have taken to policing the

vast woodlands against loggers. Mwadawa Luziga spends much of her day

in the woodlands and she doesn't regret it. She says it is now rare to

see anyone destroying wild and indigenous trees because women

conservation groups have taught the community at large that it is

import to conserve such trees. " We are creating awareness in our

communities about the importance of conservation and our efforts are

bearing fruits. It has for instance become unfashionable to log trees

for firewood and many farms as you can see are dotted with indigenous

and wild trees, " she said. Government institutions have also

introduced incentives to encourage private land owners to protect

dwindling natural forests from further destruction. The conservation

projects were conceived to address problems facing the Tabora region

such as widespread poverty, food shortage, malnutrition, HIV and Aids

and the degradation of renewable resources. The region is dominated by

the Miombo woodlands, which have plenty of edible fruit trees.

Production of value-added products such as jams and juices started

with the development of a fruit processing technology by the

Agricultural Institute in Tumbi (ARI-Tumbi) in April 2004. The project

received a grant of £60,000 ($78,000) from Farm Africa's Maendeleo

Agricultral Technology Fund. David Mayanga, an extension officer at

Inara Village, said, " Sustainability of these trees is vital. As you

know, most of the world's virgin forests are diminishing at a rapid

rate and people must rely more and more on man-made managed forests.

That's why we have been encouraging local people to manage the

remaining virgin forests. " Apart from preserving acres of indigenous

forests, the success of the conservation effort is reflected in the

standards of living of the surrounding communities. From processing

jam and juice and wine making, many families have seen their incomes

increase three-fold.

 

Australia:

 

24) Thriving within that wooded silence was a unique variety of

Tasmanian wildlife that included the Tasmanian Devil, the long-tailed

mouse, the ring-tailed possum and the spotted-tailed quoll. Bird life

included the black currawong, the green rosella, the olive whistler

and the grey goshawk. Joining those creatures were the Tasmanian tree

frog, tiger snakes and the Macleay's swallowtail butterfly - all these

species protected within the boundaries of the park. But just down the

road, in the heart of the Styx Forest, many of these same creatures

were not as lucky. I soon learned that one of Tasmania's largest

logging companies (ironically, named Gunn's Ltd.) was getting ready to

cut down one of the last remaining stands of unprotected eucalyptus

regnan. It's the world's tallest hardwood tree, second only in size to

the world-famous Californian redwoods. If the company has its way,

this 450-year-old stand of eucalyptus regnans will be clear-cut, then

ground into low-value woodchips. A report by Ecologist magazine

describes the process as follows: " When the loggers have done their

bit, the helicopters will come. From above the forest, they will drop

incendiary chemicals, similar to napalm, on the myrtles, the

eucalypts, the cockatoos, the whipbirds, the banners, the tree ferns.

.... The remains of the forest will burn for days. When the fire stops,

(the forest) will be a charred mass of blackened stumps and white,

ashen ground. Finally, the loggers will return. They will lace the

area with carrots, implanted with a nerve-attacking poison known as

1080. Everything that eats it - wombats, possums, wallabies,

bandicoots - will die. Cleared of potentially destructive wildlife,

the area will then be planted with lines of fast-growing, non-native

trees, which will provide the loggers with a means of producing

woodchips in a way which is much more economically efficient than the

old-growth forests of the Styx valley ever were. " Greenpeace adds that

of the wood logged in Tasmania, 90 percent is converted into woodchips

for the Asian paper industry and sold at around $15 per ton. In 2000,

the Australian Bureau of Statistics calculated that 5.5 million tons

were converted to woodchips. " Importers should source woodchips from

plantations, not ancient forests, " Australia Campaigns Manager Danny

Kennedy recently informed the press.

http://www.tahoedailytribune.com/article/20080401/NEWS/470538518

 

25) On February 26, Forestry Tasmania, the state-government-run

corporation that manages Tasmania's forests, revealed that it had

signed a 20-year deal to supply wood to Gunns Limited's proposed Tamar

Valley pulp mill. Forestry Tasmania executive general manager Hans

Drielsma told the Hobart Mercury that the deal, worth about $350

million, involved half of Forestry's annual pulp wood harvest. The

contract is conditional on mill construction starting by June 30. It

has also been revealed that Labor Premier Paul Lennon is considering

funding the $60 million water and effluent pipelines needed for the

mill to operate. The premier is considering declaring the pipelines

" essential state infrastructure " . Many landowners who have refused

offers of financial compensation from Gunns in return for allowing the

pipeline to pass under their properties are suspicious that this

latest proposal may allow the government to trigger compulsory land

acquisitions for the project. Property prices in the Tamar Valley are

tumbling. Bob McMahon of Tasmanians Against the Pulp Mill told the

March 4 Mercury that " West Tamar property is bust. Everyone has

probably lost at least $100,000 on the value of their homes and people

are leaving the area. " Hydro Tasmania has struck a deal with Gunns

that will mean the pulp mill's annual requirement of 26,000 megalitres

of water will cost the logging company only $624,000. The March 6

Mercury reported that the state government could have made $1.05

million if this water was used to generate power to sell to Victoria

at the average 2007 rate. There is also concern that during drier

times the mill may use up to half the water flowing naturally into

Trevallyn Dam, depriving Launceston and the Cataract Gorge of their

required flows. In Hobart, students are planning to walk out of school

on April 1 as part of a national day of action on climate change. They

intend to take their protest to the ANZ bank to point out the climate

change implications of the mill. Hundreds of people rallied on March

14 outside the headquarters of Gunns in Launceston to protest the mill

and mark the one-year anniversary of Gunns' withdrawal from the

Resource Planning and Development Commission (RPDC), the independent

body meant to assess the impact of the proposed mill.

http://www.greenleft.org.au/2008/745/38553

 

26) Environment Minister Malcolm Turnbull has for the first time

declared he is " not unsympathetic " to calls for Gunns Ltd's

controversial Tasmanian pulp mill to be shifted to a less-sensitive

site. In a sign the Government may pressure the giant timber company

to come up with a more environmentally and politically acceptable

site, Mr Turnbull yesterday reiterated he had not yet granted approval

for the $2billion project, saying he had given its critics more time

to comment. Businessman Geoffrey Cousins, a confidant of John Howard,

is leading a campaign against the pulp mill, which is to be built in

the heart of the Tamar Valley winegrowing and tourism region in

northwest Tasmania. There is a push to shift the mill from the

marginal seat of Bass to an alternative site at Hampshire, near

Burnie, about 100km to the west. Hampshire is in the seat of Braddon.

Asked at a public forum in Brisbane yesterday whether he was

sympathetic to calls for the project to be moved, Mr Turnbull said:

" I'm not unsympathetic. " But he reminded the crowd of more than 500,

who had turned out to hear him debate climate change with Labor

environment spokesman Peter Garrett, that his job was to assess the

proposal in accordance with the relevant legislation — or risk being

sued. Mr Cousins has vowed to campaign against Mr Turnbull in his

eastern Sydney electorate of Wentworth in a bid to block the pulp

mill. However, he was yesterday forced to deny a conflict of interest

after it was revealed he held a 3.2 per cent stake in a baking

business based in Launceston, up the Tamar River from the proposed

mill site. Mr Cousins angrily denied his stake in the 100 per cent

owner of Cripps Nubake, June Investments, from which he is entitled to

tens of thousands of dollars of dividends each year, represented a

conflict. Mr Turnbull's suggestion that he was not unsympathetic to a

new mill site was a rare occasion during the 90-minute debate where he

was cheered by the audience, which generally heckled and jeered the

millionaire businessman and adored Mr Garrett like the rockstar he

used to be.

http://ekrgriseldastephanie.wordpress.com/2008/04/01/pressure-mounting-on-gunns-\

pulp-mill/

 

World-wide:

 

27) A 15-country coalition of rainforest nations has complained that

the UN climate change mechanism encourages countries to replant

forests they have cut down, but fails to reward 'good' countries that

have not deforested in the first place. The Coalition of Rainforest

Nations, led by Costa Rica, Papua New Guinea and the Democratic

Republic of Congo (DRC), have told the UN climate change summit in

Nairobi, Kenya that they want to be rewarded for the vast swathes of

rainforest they have left intact. The Coalition says it wants to

receive 'carbon credits' similar to ones given to countries like

Brazil, which has chopped down many of its rainforests and is now

receiving credits for new plantations. The carbon credits system

evolved out of the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) of the 1997 Kyoto

Protocol. That agreement, aimed at mitigating climate change, assigns

emissions targets to signatory industrialised nations, which in turn

divide them among businesses involved in large air-polluting

activities. Firms that exceed their targets have an option to 'buy'

credits from others who are not using up their full allowance, or

offset their excess emissions by 'buying' an equivalent amount of

carbon that is naturally trapped in trees. The seller must have

approved 'carbon credits', which are endorsed under the CDM and given

only to new afforestation projects. That, the Coalition says, is

wrong. " The positive impact of [intact] forests has not been taken on

by the Kyoto Protocol, " complained Georgette Koko, the minister of

environment of Gabon, where 70 per cent of forests remain. " Our

sustainable development efforts may be seriously slowed down unless we

get the support of the international community for the rational and

sustainable use of our forests, " she said at the Nairobi conference.

" Central African countries consider that their efforts made in

managing forests deserve to be recognised and supported, because they

are positive for climate, " the Coalition said in its proposal to the

UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. It says the proposal -

which describes the claim for credits as 'avoided deforestation' -

should be adopted after the Kyoto Protocol expires in 2012, and a new

regime is put into place.

http://nation.ittefaq.com/issues/2008/03/31/news0313.htm

 

 

28) The emergence of the global climate issue and the effective

participation of forest communities in the conservation of the

environment was one of the reasons for the re-launching of the Forest

Peoples' Alliance, in September last year. The Alliance had been first

established in 1989, shortly after the murder of leader Chico Mendes

and represents the interests of indigenous peoples, extractive

producers, riverine populations and other traditional communities who

keep a mutual pact of survival with the forest. During the workshop,

leaders of Latin American forest communities expect to reach a

consensus on which stand they shall take with regard to economic

compensation for the environmental services they provide to the planet

by helping to conserve millions of hectares of rain forests.

Representatives from Asia and Africa will be participating as

observers. In order to encourage discussions during the workshop, the

Forest Peoples' Alliance has invited some of the most expressive

scientists and experts on topics related to climate, deforestation,

indigenous and community rights in rain forests, including Daniel

Nepstad (The Woods and Hole Research Center), Peter Frumhoff (Union of

Concerned Scientists), Márcio Santilli (Instituto Socioambiental) and

Paulo Moutinho (IPAM). The meeting's final document will be taken to

debate with global authorities during the meeting of the Subsidiary

Body for Scientific and Technological Advice (SBSTA) of the Climate

Convention to take place next June, in Bonn, Germany. Policies and

incentives for the reduction of emissions from deforestation and

forest degradation in developing countries also shall be discussed

during the meeting.

http://forestnewswire.com/index.php?option=com_content & view=article & id=119:fores\

t-people-want-t

o-be-heard-at-the-un-debate-on-climate-and-deforestation & catid=1:latest & Itemid=5\

8

 

28) The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) has come under increasingly

harsh criticisms from a variety of environmental organizations. The

FSC is an international not-for-profit organization that certifies

wood products: its stamp of approval is meant to create confidence

that the wood was harvested in an environmentally-sustainable and

socially-responsible manner. For years the FSC stamp has been

imperative for concerned consumers in purchasing wood products. Yet

amid growing troubles for the FSC, recent attacks from environmental

organizations like World Rainforest Movement and Ecological Internet

are putting the organization's credibility into question. Last week

the World Rainforest Movement released a scathing press release

calling a decision by the FSC to certify eucalyptus plantations in

Brazil its " death certificate. " The eucalyptus plantations are owned

by Veracel, a partnership between Aracruz Celulose of Brazil and Stora

Enso of Sweden-Finland, which has a shaky environmental record. The

press release alleges that Veracel " has a very well known record of

harmful actions, including violating local communities' rights over

land, to environmental pollution, water depletion and ecosystem

destruction. " World Rainforest Movement's greatest concern, however,

is that by certifying Veracel's eucalyptus plantations, the FSC is

stating that large-scale monoculture plantations are environmentally

sound, socially responsible, and beneficial to local people. Whereas

research has shown that monoculture plantations support little

biodiversity, result in CO2 emissions relative to natural forests, and

undermine the efforts of local people to manage forests in a

sustainable manner. In calling this decision the FSC's " death

certificate " the World Rainforest Movement asserts that " the

certification of Veracel is not an isolated fact, but the last piece

in a chain of failures. "

http://redapes.org/news-updates/forest-stewardship-council-has-failed-the-worlds\

-forests-say-cr

itics/

 

29) More than two million trees belonging to nearly 5000 species,

growing in tropical forests spread over 12 sites and three continents,

have been monitored since the 1980s. The aims of this major study were

to analyze the carbon storage capacity of tropical forests and measure

the effects of climate change on how they function. Their results

suggest that the tropical forests studied did indeed act as carbon

sinks, but appeared to react principally to intrinsic phenomena rather

than climate change. They also demonstrated the complex functioning of

forest ecosystems, their vulnerability and the importance of efforts

to ensure their conservation. Tropical forests account for nearly

two-thirds of terrestrial biodiversity and store more than half of the

carbon in the biosphere. Recent studies have predicted that in a

carbon dioxide-enriched environment, physiological changes will affect

tropical plants; their functioning will be modified, their biomass

will increase and they will sequester more carbon(2). Under these

conditions, rapidly-growing tree species should be favored over

slow-growing species, and globally, the carbon sinks represented by

tropical forests should contribute to limiting atmospheric emissions

from fossil fuels. The international research group led by the

Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, and coordinated by Chave,

tested these hypotheses for the first time using forestry inventories

initiated in the early 1980s. The scientists developed novel

statistical methods which, for a given species, made it possible to

estimate the biomass of trees as a function of wood density and trunk

diameter. They were also able to define two groups of species:

rapid-growing and slow-growing. For each studied plot, carbon

assessments were performed at the scale of the ecosystem and for both

of these groups of species. Chave and his colleagues confirmed that

carbon storage capacity had increased significantly during the last

two decades. Ancient tropical forests are thus indeed major carbon

sinks. What is the mechanism underlying this carbon sequestration? At

all sites but one, the biomass of slow-growing species had increased,

but not that of rapid-growing species(3). There was thus no clear

evidence that tropical forests have modified their functioning in

response to climate change over the past twenty years. Indeed, these

results tend to suggest that the forests are now rebuilding themselves

after disturbances in the past. Consequently, tropical forests will

not be able to limit the rapid rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide

levels for a long time to come.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/03/080330214448.htm

 

 

30) After six months of evasions and personal recriminations,

Rainforest Action Network (RAN) has officially answered the question

" how does Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certified logging of

primary and old-growth forests 'protect endangered forests' " ? RAN has

been the target of protest by thousands of forest conservationists

from eighty countries concerned with how RAN's support for FSC

legitimizes continued loss of ancient forests, their biodiversity and

the climate. This is there answer: " Simply, FSC certification isn't

the ultimate protection for endangered forests, but it is a vastly

superior alternative to standard industrial logging. In forests that

would otherwise be logged without third party oversight, FSC promotes

practices that preserve ecosystem functions (like habitat and water

quality) and safeguards the most ecologically valuable areas. " -- RAN

statement, 4/1/08. Sadly, RAN provided an answer to this sincere,

straight- forward question only after continued prodding and

denigrating protestors as " attention seekers " and " flame bait " .

Ecological Internet had to resort to questioning their webmaster to

get a preliminary response, since confirmed, and has now been notified

further discussions on their web site will be censored. Certified

logging of primary forests has gained in prominence given the role

ancient forest loss and diminishment plays in climate change. Many

long-time destroyers of rainforests including FSC, the World Bank and

renowned renegade logger Rimbunan Hijau of Papua New Guinea now

suggest that industrial selective logging of ancient forests is good

for the climate. New initiatives including avoided deforestation

payments are proposed to marketize and profit from rainforest

ecosystem services, yet most are mute regarding the acceptability of

continued industrial logging in newly " protected " areas. Notably

absent from RAN's statement is any scientific evidence or

quantification of FSC being " vastly superior " . They fail to

acknowledge conflicts of interests by certifiers and the slew of

problematic certifications. There is no detailed strategic analysis by

RAN showing that the benefits from FSC logging will in the long term

result in more rainforests being protected, in comparison to working

to end all such logging now. For years RAN has even suggested first

time industrial logging of primary and old-growth forests is

" sustainable " . GlenBarry

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