Ireland to
Plant 440 Million Trees in 20 Years to Fight Climate Change
Olivia Rosane Sep. 03, 2019 08:10AM EST
Ireland
will plant 440 million trees by 2040 as part of its efforts to combat the
climate crisis, The Irish Times reported Saturday.
The
government had already promised to plant more trees as part of a climate action
plan released in June, which aims to make Ireland carbon neutral by 2050 by
investing in renewable energy, instituting a carbon tax and changing land use,
HuffPost explained. But the plan did not specify an exact number of trees to be
planted. Now, a Department of Communications Climate Action and Environment
spokeswoman has given The Irish Times an exact figure.
"The
target for new forestation is approximately 22 million trees per year. Over the
next 20 years, the target is to plant 440 million," she said.
The trees
will be 70 percent conifers and 30 percent broad-leaf trees.
The
announcement comes about two months after a study found that planting more than
500 billion trees was the "most effective" climate change solution
available. However, critics of the study warned that reforestation wasn't
enough to reduce atmospheric greenhouse gasses, and that it should be one of
many strategies employed, HuffPost explained.
Still,
other countries have embraced tree-planting initiatives. Ethiopia planted a
record 350 million trees in a single day in July. Scotland announced this year
that it had surpassed its own tree-planting goals, The Hill reported. It had
planted 11,200 hectares (approximately 43 square miles) of trees in 2018, a
boost on its 10,000 hectare (approximately 39 square mile) goal. The final
tally was more than 22 million trees planted.
However,
England was less successful. Its tree-planting efforts fell more than 70
percent short of government targets this year, according to HuffPost.
If
Ireland's initiative is to succeed, it will need to persuade farmers to plant
more trees on their land, something the government acknowledges is currently
not popular, The Irish Times reported. The government plans to convince farmers
and to hold community meetings across the country to bolster support for
reforestation.
However,
Pádraic Fogarty of the Irish Wildlife Trust was skeptical of the government's
plan.
"People
are not good at planting trees and trees do not like being planted. They prefer
to plant themselves," he told The Irish Independent.
Fogarty
argued that instead of giving out €94 million ($103 million) in forestry grants
every year, it would be better for the government to pay landowners to plant
nothing, allowing their land to rewild.
"We
have a mental block about letting nature do its thing. We see a space recovered
by nature and we think it's scrub and wasteland and want to get it back 'under
control' whereas if we just left it alone, the forest would come back all by
itself," he said.
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