Dubai Telegraph - Is planting trees to combat climate change 'complete nonsense'?

EUR -
AED 4.313234
AFN 75.750435
ALL 95.578696
AMD 433.594907
ANG 2.102159
AOA 1078.160336
ARS 1638.971773
AUD 1.625109
AWG 2.11404
AZN 1.999672
BAM 1.958437
BBD 2.373175
BDT 144.574668
BGN 1.95913
BHD 0.444976
BIF 3506.83234
BMD 1.174466
BND 1.49167
BOB 8.141894
BRL 5.790702
BSD 1.178287
BTN 111.063856
BWP 15.776243
BYN 3.329855
BYR 23019.541599
BZD 2.369771
CAD 1.603364
CDF 2720.064631
CHF 0.915033
CLF 0.026588
CLP 1046.41439
CNY 7.992303
CNH 7.987329
COP 4391.212453
CRC 540.500166
CUC 1.174466
CUP 31.12336
CVE 110.414612
CZK 24.310747
DJF 209.820735
DKK 7.472819
DOP 70.07077
DZD 155.423039
EGP 61.917074
ERN 17.616996
ETB 183.972419
FJD 2.568381
FKP 0.863023
GBP 0.864883
GEL 3.147732
GGP 0.863023
GHS 13.255849
GIP 0.863023
GMD 85.736074
GNF 10340.659465
GTQ 8.997345
GYD 246.52194
HKD 9.192848
HNL 31.323911
HRK 7.539253
HTG 154.323854
HUF 355.902081
IDR 20401.597252
ILS 3.418737
IMP 0.863023
INR 110.912846
IQD 1543.578414
IRR 1541956.947453
ISK 143.801193
JEP 0.863023
JMD 185.589895
JOD 0.832657
JPY 184.144002
KES 151.682245
KGS 102.672444
KHR 4726.162529
KMF 492.10156
KPW 1056.962147
KRW 1724.486599
KWD 0.361498
KYD 0.981922
KZT 545.674746
LAK 25857.596849
LBP 105154.351013
LKR 379.417652
LRD 216.227592
LSL 19.224422
LTL 3.467894
LVL 0.710423
LYD 7.452972
MAD 10.799449
MDL 20.272124
MGA 4892.316697
MKD 61.676845
MMK 2465.917641
MNT 4203.300853
MOP 9.503997
MRU 47.141268
MUR 54.988565
MVR 18.15135
MWK 2043.037861
MXN 20.275107
MYR 4.603321
MZN 75.050158
NAD 19.224586
NGN 1599.599736
NIO 43.357827
NOK 10.917372
NPR 177.688178
NZD 1.973409
OMR 0.451583
PAB 1.178287
PEN 4.081295
PGK 5.127664
PHP 71.115081
PKR 328.303558
PLN 4.229206
PYG 7211.649015
QAR 4.294993
RON 5.262191
RSD 117.382025
RUB 87.677284
RWF 1727.425963
SAR 4.439687
SBD 9.433617
SCR 16.55833
SDG 705.267211
SEK 10.875383
SGD 1.489822
SHP 0.876858
SLE 28.892668
SLL 24627.968842
SOS 673.406736
SRD 43.961469
STD 24309.083409
STN 24.531883
SVC 10.309882
SYP 129.83015
SZL 19.218878
THB 37.847764
TJS 11.011555
TMT 4.122377
TND 3.417889
TOP 2.827833
TRY 53.276327
TTD 7.970733
TWD 36.867679
TZS 3063.471122
UAH 51.592714
UGX 4406.933896
USD 1.174466
UYU 47.115446
UZS 14278.225498
VES 582.780873
VND 30901.385664
VUV 138.617742
WST 3.175865
XAF 656.805031
XAG 0.014574
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.174054
XCG 2.123559
XDR 0.816855
XOF 656.841431
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.225528
ZAR 19.270765
ZMK 10571.61339
ZMW 22.446032
ZWL 378.177704
  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.15

    -0.15%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    63.18

    0%

  • BCC

    -1.4800

    72.76

    -2.03%

  • BCE

    0.3400

    24.57

    +1.38%

  • RELX

    -1.5900

    34.16

    -4.65%

  • RIO

    -2.4000

    103.11

    -2.33%

  • GSK

    -0.0300

    50.5

    -0.06%

  • NGG

    -1.9400

    85.91

    -2.26%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.97

    -0.17%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    23.42

    0%

  • AZN

    -2.4000

    182.52

    -1.31%

  • BTI

    -1.4800

    58.08

    -2.55%

  • VOD

    -0.4400

    15.69

    -2.8%

  • BP

    -0.8200

    43.81

    -1.87%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    17.45

    -0.29%

Is planting trees to combat climate change 'complete nonsense'?
Is planting trees to combat climate change 'complete nonsense'? / Photo: Zinyange Auntony - AFP/File

Is planting trees to combat climate change 'complete nonsense'?

Bill Gates is emphatic: "I don't plant trees," he declared recently, wading into a debate about whether mass tree planting is really much use in fighting climate change.

Text size:

The billionaire philanthropist was being probed on how he offsets his carbon emissions and insisted he avoids "some of the less proven approaches."

The claim that planting enough trees could solve the climate crisis is "complete nonsense", he told a climate discussion organised by the New York Times last week.

"Are we the science people or are we the idiots?"

Gates' polemical pronouncements made headlines and prompted criticism from backers of reforestation (planting trees in damaged forests) and afforestation (planting in areas that were not recently forest).

"I have dedicated the last 16 years of my life to making forests part of the climate solution," wrote Jad Daley, head of the American Forests NGO.

"This kind of commentary can really set us back," he said on X, formerly known as Twitter.

Mass tree planting schemes have been gaining ground for years as a way to suck carbon from the atmosphere at scale.

Even notoriously climate change-sceptical US Republicans have introduced legislation to support planting a trillion trees worldwide.

But Gates is far from alone in doubting the benefits of such ambitious plans.

A group of scientists warned on Tuesday that mass tree planting risks doing more harm than good, particularly in tropical regions.

That's primarily because it can replace complex ecosystems with monoculture plantations.

"Society has reduced the value of these ecosystems to just one metric -- carbon," the scientists from universities in Britain and South Africa wrote.

Carbon capture is "a small component of the pivotal ecological functions that tropical forests and grassy ecosystems perform," they said in an article in the Trends in Ecology and Evolution journal.

Jesus Aguirre Gutierrez, an author of the paper, pointed to examples in southern Mexico and Ghana, where once diverse forests "have now transformed into homogenous masses".

This makes them "highly vulnerable to diseases and negatively impacts local biodiversity," the senior researcher at the University of Oxford's Environmental Change Institute told AFP.

- 'Not just running around planting' -

Major tree planting commitments often involve agroforestry or plantations, where the trees will eventually be felled, releasing carbon.

And they are dominated by five tree species chosen largely for their timber and pulp value, or growth speed.

Among them is teak, which can overtake native species, "posing additional risks to native vegetation and the ecosystem", said Aguirre Gutierrez, who is also a Natural Environment Research Council fellow.

Other critiques include the lack of space globally for the many proposed mass planting projects and the risk of competition between smallholder agriculture and planting.

Misclassification of grassland and wetland as suitable for forest and planting poorly adapted or cared-for seedlings have also been problems highlighted by scientists.

So does planting trees really have no value?

Not so fast, says Daley, whose American Forests organisation says it has planted 65 million trees.

It's Gates' premise that is wrong, Daley said.

"Literally no one is saying... that forests alone can save our environment," he told AFP.

He argues that critics ignore carefully calibrated projects involving native species in areas that need reforestation and focus instead on a few poorly conceived schemes.

"This broad brush critique has ignored the fact that much reforestation is driven by the loss of forests that won't regenerate without help."

"We are not just running around planting trees wherever we feel like it to capture carbon."

There are efforts to bridge the gap between critics and proponents, including 10 "golden rules for restoring forests", proposed by Britain's Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and Botanic Gardens Conservation International.

They advise avoiding grasslands or wetlands, prioritising natural regeneration, and selecting resilient and biodiverse trees.

But they start with a rule that perhaps everyone can agree upon: protect existing forests first.

"It can take over 100 years for these forests to recover, so it is crucial that we protect what we already have before planting more."

F.Saeed--DT