Make Our Planet Green Again!


Recently, I read an alarming headline which indicated that the ‘world’s tropical forests are a huge carbon emission source,’ according to latest science. My immediate thought was that perhaps we had finally reached the tipping point where tropical forests and other ecosystems have been so heavily impacted by climate change that they are now leaking carbon, and are no longer providing key ecosystem services. Earlier studies had suggested that this could happen to the entire Amazon basin and other forest ecosystems if the remaining forests are further fragmented by logging and affected by fire and drought.

On closer reading, however, while the situation is alarming, it also gives rise to new hope. The study published in Science has revealed that tropical forests are now so degraded by human activity that they have lost up to 75 percent of their biodiversity and biomass. While the tree canopy looks intact for the satellites that we increasingly rely on to monitor the state of the world’s forests, the forest below the canopy can be literally empty of key plants and wildlife. The reason I see some hope in this rather bleak assessment is that almost all this forest degradation is man-made, and it can be reversed quickly, and relatively cheaply, if we begin to act decisively.

Tropical forests are amazingly resilient and can recover much of their original biodiversity and carbon storage capacity without expensive restoration investments, as long as there are sufficient remnants of intact forests nearby, and as long as the factors that drive forest degradation are removed. Restoration of degraded forests and other ecosystems is possible, and it is one of the most cost-effective climate change mitigation and adaptation measures. Restoring degraded landscapes into productive, resilient ecosystems with clear economic and social benefits for local communities – and with clear benefits for the global climate – can give developing countries a way out of the vicious circle of rural poverty, rapid urbanization, and uncontrolled migration. In fact, nature-based solutions to climate change are rather underestimated, and definitely untapped: a recent study published in the Proceedings of the American National Academy of Sciences finds that nature could provide 37 percent of all emission reductions we will need by 2030. Yet, only 2.5 percent of climate finance is currently channeled towards conserving and restoring forests, agricultural landscapes and other ecosystems!

The Global Partnership on Forest and Landscape Restoration is actively supporting a growing number of countries and local governments to tap into nature’s potential for climate action, and sustainable growth. Over 30 countries have now committed to restore more than 150 million hectares of degraded forests and other landscapes, and action on restoration is underway from Rwanda to Brazil to Viet Nam. Even industrialized countries are starting to recognize the benefits of large-scale landscape restoration. The United States has committed to restore 15 million hectares by 2020, and they are well on track to achieve this target. The result will be thousands of new jobs in rural areas, and improved recreation options, water catchment areas, and wildlife habitat.

But more needs to be done, and time is running out. We quickly need to scale up land restoration into a global movement that captures every country, every local government, and every local community, as well as the private sector. The challenges and opportunities are huge: restoring 150 million hectares could cost over 30 billion USD per year between now and 2030, and it could also generate more than 80 billion USD each year into local economies through ecosystem services such as clean water, food production and tourism.

This is a phenomenal return on investment!

If we can successfully build a business case for public and private investments into land restoration, the restoration agenda will take off as the ‘next big thing’ in climate action and sustainable development. During the Global Landscapes Forum in Bonn in December 2017, we convened a coalition of actors who want to be part of this movement, including faith-based and religious organizations, who want to invest on the right side of history, even as we are seeing historic divestments from fossil fuels. The time to act and to change the world is now!

Tim Christophersen is the Chair of the Global Partnership on Forest and Landscape Restoration; and Coordinator of the Freshwater, Land and Climate Branch of UN Environment. He is based in Nairobi. 

Agree, yet it is a very slow exercise ... meanwhile kill the emitters...

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Martina Hoft

Biologist, PhD; Water treatment

7 年

La faculté en génie des eaux travaille exactement sur ?a (entre autres).

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Dr. Jalil S.M.

Chief Conservayor of Forest,(Rtd) president at Forestry and environment forum, bangladesh

7 年

Tim Christophersen needs more study ro make such a n inference about such an age old knowledge. The feeling of local people appears to me something important to scientific study.

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Matthew Reddy

Senior Private Sector Specialist GEF

7 年

Good points. Highlighting canopy cover - quite right, just an indicator but so often "over-weighted" when looking at forest health. And I would add that the restoration of trop forests can be done at quite low cost in many circumstances when there are sufficient remnants but when there aren't it can be hugely, prohibitively costly and resource intensive. Perhaps this is also a point for the business case - invest now and save more.

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Christopher Stewart

global head, sustainability impact

7 年

Great piece Tim Christophersen and crucially, efforts to restore and protect forests have to involve the private sector which has the power to implement changes on the ground, for good or ill - it's absolutely possible to create plantations with a triple positive impact on people, biodiversity and climate (Jobs and livelihood support, ecosystem restoration and net carbon fixation) , as we are doing in Gabon, and across our company we involve hundreds of thousands of smallholders in livelihood improvement programmes and better agricultural practices. But this needs to be scaled up to the landscape level and multiple sectors and acytors, because the positive outcomes can only be sustained through alignment of policy, regulatory framework, incentives and practice. It is hard to see how this can be done incrementally - if we want to reverse the degradation of tropical forests we also need to reimagine global agriculture.

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