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Scientists rebut NYTimes op-ed ‘To Save the Planet, Don’t Plant Trees’

Editor’s Note: The following is a response from a group of scientists’ — including 6 members of the National Academy, 3 IPCC Lead Authors, and 1 IPCC Co-Chair — to Dr. Nadine Unger’s September 21, New York Times Op-Ed, “To Save the Planet, Don’t Plant Trees”



Borneo rainforest canopy.
Deforestation for palm oil production in Malaysia. Photos by Rhett A. Butler


One of the biggest near-term opportunities to mitigate climate change is to slow
down deforestation and forest degradation in the tropics, where the lion’s share
of the world’s forest loss is taking place. Brazil has reduced deforestation rates in
the Amazon region by 70%, for example, keeping 3.2 billion tons of carbon
dioxide out of the atmosphere since 2005 and elevating this nation to global
leadership in climate change solutions. In a recent Op-Ed (“To Save the Planet,
Don’t Plant Trees
”, New York Times, September 20), Assistant Professor Nadine Unger of
Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies claims that the scientific
evidence that slowing deforestation or planting trees mitigates climate change is
weak. We strongly disagree.



1) Forests have a cooling effect on our climate because they store vast amounts
of carbon in tree trunks, branches, leaves and soil. They keep this carbon out of
the atmosphere for as long as they remain healthy, intact forests. If they are
cleared or degraded, there is a net flow of carbon to the atmosphere, contributing
to climate change. Slowing forest clearing and degradation is precisely the focus
of the UN’s mechanism for encouraging tropical nations to reduce emissions from
deforestation and forest degradation. Unger’s statement confuses this
fundamental aspect of forest carbon dynamics.




Rainforest in Borneo



2) Forests also cool the atmosphere because they convert solar energy to water
vapor, which increases sky albedo (or reflectivity) via cloud formation. This effect
is particularly strong in the tropics, where the UN mechanism is focused. Unger
neglects to mention this effect. She correctly points out that forests often reflect
less solar energy than snow, rock, grassland or soil, but ignores the effect of
forests on increasing the albedo of the sky above the land, which is the stronger
effect in the tropics.


3) Unger’s recent global study of deforestation suggests that the removal of trees
reduces emissions of naturally-occurring chemicals called biogenic volatile
organic compounds (BVOC). Although Unger opined that BVOCs cause global
warming, her science indicates that BVOCs have anywhere from a cooling to a
warming effect. Her study also found that any potential cooling effect generated
by reducing BVOC emissions through tree removal is outpaced by the larger
warming effect of carbon emissions from deforestation.




Rainforest in Costa Rica



Tropical forests provide a cooling effect through the long-term removal of carbon
from the atmosphere and by increasing sky albedo via cloud generation. This
week’s UN climate negotiations include the continuing and critically important
effort to slow the clearing and degradation of tropical forests as a cost-effective
contribution to climate change mitigation. The scientific basis for this important
piece of the solution to climate change is solid. We strongly disagree with
Professor Unger’s core message. We agree, however, with her statement that
the protection of forests offers “unambiguous benefits to biodiversity”.



Signed:



Daniel Nepstad, Senior Scientist, Earth Innovation Institute & Lead Author, IPCC AR5

Gregory Asner, Scientist, Carnegie Institution for Science & Member, National Academy of Sciences

Arild Angelsen, Professor, Norwegian University of Life Sciences & Contributing Author, IPCC AR5

Paulo Artaxo, Professor, University of São Paulo & Lead Author, IPCC AR5

Walter E. Baethgen, Senior Research Scientist, Columbia University

Rizaldi Boer, Professor, Bogor Agriculture University

Paulo Brando, Post-Doctoral Associate, Carnegie Institution for Science & Scientist, Amazon Environmental Research Institute

Mercedes Bustamente, Professor, University of Brasilia & Coordinating Lead Author, IPCC AR5

Bruce Campbell, Director, CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture, and Food Security

Josep Canadell, Executive Director, Global Carbon Project; Research Scientist, CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research & Lead Author, IPCC AR5

Jeffrey Chambers, Associate Professor, University of California, Berkeley

Marcos Costa, Professor, Federal University of Viçosa, Brazil

Ruth DeFries, Professor, Columbia University; Lead Author, IPCC AR5 & Member, National Academy of Sciences

Kátia Fernandes, Associate Research Scientist, Columbia University

Christopher Field, Director, Carnegie Institution for Science, Member, National Academy of Sciences, & Co-Chair of IPCC AR5 (WG2)

Jonathan Foley, Executive Director, California Academy of Sciences

Lisa Goddard, Senior Research Scientist, Columbia University & Member, National Academy of Sciences

Kristell Hergoualc’h, Scientist, Center for International Forestry Research

Martin Herold, Professor, Wageningen University

Markku Kanninen, Professor, University of Helsinki

Christopher Martius, Principal Scientist, Center for International Forestry Research

Pamela Matson, Professor, Stanford University & Member, National Academy of Sciences

Daniel Murdiyarso, Principal Scientist, Center for International Forestry Research

Carlos Nobre, Senior Scientist, Brazil National Institute for Space Research & Contributing Author, IPCC AR5

Thomas Rosswall, Chair, CCAFS Independent Science Panel

Douglas Sheil, Associate Professor, Norwegian University of Life Sciences

Pete Smith, Professor, University of Aberdeen & Coordinating Lead Author, IPCC AR5

Louis Verchot, Director, Center for International Forestry Research

Reynaldo Victoria, Professor, University of São Paulo

Peter Vitousek, Professor, Stanford University & Member, National Academy of Sciences








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