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Forests Can Make Money While Slowing Global Warming
CONCORD, NH (AP) - Maintaining and improving the world’s working forests
is key to slowing global warming, but climate change will accelerate if the current
rate of forest loss continues, according to scientists and policy experts who
spoke at a conference in Concord.
“
If you look at the sources of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, there are two:
One is fossil fuels and the other is forests,” said Laurie Wayburn, president
of the Pacific Forest Trust, a San Francisco nonprofit that has led California’s
efforts to put a dollar value on the ability of forests to remove carbon dioxide
from the atmosphere and store it.
“
To date, we have focused our efforts only on fossil fuels,” said Wayburn. “For
us to be successful in addressing climate change, we also absolutely need to
focus on forests.”
The conference focused on how climate change affects timberland and the forest
products industry in the Northern Forest, which stretches from northern New
York to Maine. Former New York Gov. George Pataki was among the panelists and
talked
about a regional initiative to control greenhouse gases including carbon dioxide.
The Northeast, perhaps more than any other region of the country, has tried
to protect working forests through conversation easements and public acquisition
of land, Wayburn said. But like the rest of the country, it also faces accelerating
deforestation because of residential and commercial development.
That’s worrisome because harvesting trees faster than they grow back
not only reduces the amount of carbon dioxide forests can pull from the air:
It adds
to global warming because as the wood is processed, burned, or breaks down,
it releases most of its carbon into the atmosphere, she said.
“
Development is really outpacing forestry as the highest and best use of forest
lands, and finding ways to deal with that will have significant climate benefits,” she
said.
European nations, which signed the 1997 Kyoto Protocol on climate change,
have already made a start with a cap-and-trade system to reduce emissions of
greenhouse
gases that contribute to global warming. Companies that can’t meet their
emission reduction targets can buy credits from those that reduce carbon dioxide
- including the forest industry.
The United States rejected Kyoto. But California’s Climate Action Registry
is paving the way for a similar system by quantifying and pricing carbon dioxide,
whether it’s stored in older, better-managed forests, or saved through
greater energy efficiency in appliances, Wayburn said.
A similar system could work in the Northeast, she said. The keys are preserving
existing forests through conservation easements; storing more carbon by increasing
the average age of the trees and selecting for more hardwoods than softwoods
- which also increases the wood’s market value; and making sure such
measures produce an economic return for landowners.
“
Climate is a forest product,” she said. “We can leverage that to
increase the net stocks of carbon that these forests are taking up and holding
... in a way that puts a higher-value forest industry back on the landscape.”
It’s also important to develop new markets for the region’s low-grade
wood, as the paper and pulp industry moves overseas, she said. Particularly promising
are alternative energy technologies using wood as fuel, because it is a “carbon-neutral” renewable
resource: As forests grow to provide more fuel, the re-absorb the carbon dioxide
released by combustion.
The stakes are high, because climate change will hurt the region and the
forest industry economically, said Eric Kinglsey, vice president of Innovative
Natural
Resource Solutions, a consulting firm in New Hampshire and Maine.
If present warming trends continue, New England’s sugar maples - prized
by makers of fine furniture - will give way over the next century to a mix
of mid-Atlantic hardwoods, predominantly hickory, he said. The maple syrup
industry
would collapse, and sawmills geared toward northern hardwoods would have to
retool.
Hickory might make good baseball bats and railroad ties, but “it’s
not a beautiful wood,” Kingsley said. “You don’t usually go
to someone’s house and admire their hickory dinner table.”
Climate change also will increase the length of mud season in fall and spring,
he said. Loggers cannot take heavy machinery into the woods without seriously
damaging the soil unless the ground is dry or frozen.
John Aber, a climate scientists and vice president of research at the University
of New Hampshire, said if global warming is not halted or reversed, in a century
New England’s climate will resemble North Carolina’s now.
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