Mass tree planting: a bad idea to fight pollution?

The solution to offset CO2 emissions?
Carbon sinks
A method widely used by large companies
Particularly in the airline sector
Big projects
A greenwashing strategy?
An attempt to hide a failure to curb emissions
Sometimes abusive practices
A truly effective strategy?
Not according to Bill Gates
Hidden dangers?
A focus on carbon
Too much homogeneity
The impact on ecosystems
Unsustainable projects
A lack of space
Practical advice
Protect before replanting
Avoid certain areas
An evolution of European legislation
Reduce CO2 emissions
The solution to offset CO2 emissions?

Is planting new trees on a massive scale a miracle solution to offset CO2 emissions and fight pollution? This widespread practice, long considered positive, is increasingly being called into question.

Carbon sinks

Originally, the planting was justified by the fact that trees are carbon sinks: they absorb CO2 through photosynthesis and store it outside the atmosphere, which allows human emissions to be at least partially neutralized.

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A method widely used by large companies

In recent years, this method has been widely used by large companies to offset their high greenhouse gas emissions.

@Miha Rekar / Unsplash

Particularly in the airline sector

Airlines in particular are singled out by environmentalists for this practice. At the end of 2019, Air France announced the compensation of CO2 emissions from its 450 daily domestic flights by doing so.

Big projects

Quoted by 'Le Monde', Anne Rigail, the company's general director, mentioned projects such as "tree planting, forest protection, energy transition and even the safeguarding of biodiversity".

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A greenwashing strategy?

But some observers consider tree planting by companies to be a “greenwashing” strategy, as this action does not directly cancel out the consequences of a polluting activity.

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An attempt to hide a failure to curb emissions

Myrtho Tilianaki, from the French NGO CCFD-Terre Solidaire, observed, by studying the carbon strategies of several companies, that these actions often hide an absence of measures to reduce emissions.

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Sometimes abusive practices

And certain practices can be abusive: “We have had cases in the past of carbon offset projects which led to intimidation, evictions, land grabbing phenomena,” adds Myrtho Tilianaki, quoted by 'France 24' .

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A truly effective strategy?

Is tree planting at least effective in its role as a carbon sink? This is not the view of a growing number of scientists and public figures.

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Not according to Bill Gates

Bill Gates declared, during a conference organized by the 'New York Times', that he does not plant trees, calling the practice "complete nonsense".

Hidden dangers?

The opinion of the founder of Microsoft is confirmed by a study cited by 'Geo', published on October 3: according to its authors, British and South African scientists, the massive planting of trees would have more disadvantages than benefits, particularly in tropical regions.

@Boudewijn Huysmans / Unsplash

A focus on carbon

“Society has reduced the value of these ecosystems to a single parameter: carbon,” they write in the journal 'Trends in Ecology and Evolution'. However, carbon capture is “a small element of the essential ecological functions that tropical forests and grassland ecosystems perform”.

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Too much homogeneity

The tree species chosen are, moreover, not varied enough. In some countries, previously very diverse forests have become “homogeneous masses”, according to an Oxford researcher, cited by 'AFP'.

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The impact on ecosystems

This homogeneity makes the trees “very vulnerable to diseases” while having “a negative impact on local biodiversity”, according to the Oxford scientist.

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Unsustainable projects

Trees are selected for their speed of growth or for their value in wood or paper pulp. They will therefore be cut down sooner or later, which will release carbon and cancel out the positive impact of the plantation.

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A lack of space

Another adverse effect: planting trees reduces available agricultural space, which leads to an increase in the price of food and can cause the undernutrition of millions of people on the planet.

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Practical advice

How can we realize the absorption potential of trees without inflicting collateral damage on ecosystems? The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, United Kingdom, and the organization BGCI (Botanic Gardens Conservation International) have proposed ten golden rules.

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Protect before replanting

The first of these is to better protect existing forests, taking into account the time they need to recover, before starting to replant.

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Avoid certain areas

It is also advisable to avoid meadows and wetlands to plant new forests, and to select resistant tree species rich in biodiversity.

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An evolution of European legislation

On September 21, 2023, the member states of the European Union agreed to prohibit declarations of neutral or positive environmental impact based exclusively on the compensation of CO2 emissions.

Reduce CO2 emissions

Indeed, compensation often consists of planting trees without concern for effectiveness. Priority is now given to directly reducing companies' CO2 emissions.

@Jas Min / Unsplash

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