Trump Moves
to Open 16.7 Million Acre Alaskan Rainforest to Corporate Exploitation
Common Dreams Aug. 28, 2019 09:15AM
A sow and
her cubs at Tongass National Forest in Alaska, the planet's largest intact
temperate rainforest. Forest Service Alaska
By Jake
Johnson
President
Donald Trump has reportedly ordered the U.S. Department of Agriculture to open
Alaska's 16.7 million-acre Tongass National Forest — the planet's largest
intact temperate rainforest — to logging and other corporate development
projects, a move that comes as thousands of fires are ripping through the
Amazon rainforest and putting the "lungs of the world" in grave
danger.
The
Washington Post, citing anonymous officials briefed on the president's
instructions, reported late Tuesday that Trump's policy change would lift
20-year-old logging restrictions that "barred the construction of roads in
58.5 million acres of undeveloped national forest across the country."
The move,
according to the Post, would affect more than half of the Tongass National
Forest, "opening it up to potential logging, energy, and mining
projects."
The logging
restrictions have been under near-constant assault by Republicans since they
were implemented, but federal courts have allowed them to stand. As the Post
reported:
Trump's
decision to weigh in, at a time when Forest Service officials had planned much
more modest changes to managing the agency's single largest holding, revives a
battle that the previous administration had aimed to settle.
In 2016,
the agency finalized a plan to phase out old-growth logging in the Tongass
within a decade. Congress has designated more than 5.7 million acres of the
forest as wilderness, which must remain undeveloped under any circumstances. If
Trump's plan succeeds, it could affect 9.5 million acres ...
John
Schoen, a retired wildlife ecologist who worked in the Tongass for the Alaska
Department of Fish and Game, co-authored a 2013 research paper finding that
roughly half of the forest's large old-growth trees had been logged last
century. The remaining big trees provide critical habitat for black bear, Sitka
black-tailed deer, a bird of prey called the Northern Goshawk and other
species, he added.
Environmentalists
were quick to voice outrage at the U.S. president's reported move and draw
comparisons between Trump and his Brazilian counterpart Jair Bolsonaro, who has
rapidly accelerated deforestation in the Amazon
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