Global Leaders Pledge to End Deforestation by
2030
The measure reflects a growing recognition of nature’s
role in helping mitigate global warming.
By Catrin
Einhorn and Chris Buckley
Published
Nov. 1, 2021
Updated
Nov. 2, 2021, 2:04 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/02/climate/cop26-deforestation.html
Leaders of
more than 100 countries, including Brazil, China and the United States, vowed
on Monday at climate talks in Glasgow to end deforestation by 2030, seeking to
preserve forests crucial to absorbing carbon dioxide and slowing the rise in
global warming.
The pledge
will demand “transformative further action,” the countries’ declaration said,
and it was accompanied by several measures intended to help put it into effect.
But some advocacy groups criticized them as lacking teeth, saying they would
allow deforestation to continue.
Prime
Minister Boris Johnson of Britain was scheduled to announce the deforestation
agreement at an event on Tuesday morning attended by President Biden and the
president of Indonesia, Joko Widodo.
“These
great teeming ecosystems — these cathedrals of nature — are the lungs of our
planet,” Mr. Johnson is expected to say.
The
governments committed $12 billion and private companies pledged $7 billion to
protect and restore forests in a variety of ways, including $1.7 billion for
Indigenous peoples. More than 30 financial institutions also vowed to stop investing
in companies responsible for deforestation. A new set of guidelines offers a
path toward eliminating deforestation from supply chains.
Many policy
experts have called these measures an important step forward, while emphasizing
that far more is needed.
“The
financial announcements we’ve heard in Glasgow are welcome but remain small
compared to the enormous private and public flows, often in the sense of
subsidies, that drive deforestation,” said Frances Seymour of the World
Resources Institute, a research group.
The pledge
comes amid growing awareness of the role of nature in tackling the climate
crisis, something Britain has sought to highlight at the climate summit, known
as COP26. Intact forests and peatlands, for example, are natural storehouses of
carbon, keeping it sealed away from the atmosphere. But when these areas are
logged, burned or drained, the ecosystems switch to releasing greenhouse gases.
If tropical
deforestation were a country, it would be the third-biggest emitter of
greenhouse gases in the world, according to the World Resources Institute,
after China and the United States. Much of the world’s deforestation is driven
by commodity agriculture as people fell trees to make room for cattle, soy,
cocoa and palm oil.
The value
of healthy forests goes far beyond carbon. They filter water, cool the air and
even make rain, supporting agriculture elsewhere. They are fundamental to
sustaining biodiversity, which is suffering its own crisis as extinction rates
climb.
Previous
efforts to protect forests have struggled. One program recognized in the Paris
climate accord seeks to pay forested nations for reducing tree loss, but
progress has been slow.
Previous
promises to end deforestation also have failed. A United Nations plan announced
in 2017 made similar commitments. An agreement in 2014 to end deforestation by
2030, the New York Declaration on Forests, set goals without a means to achieve
them, and deforestation continued.
The same
will happen this time, some environmentalists predicted.
“It allows
another decade of forest destruction and isn’t binding,” said Carolina
Pasquali, executive director of Greenpeace Brazil. “Meanwhile, the Amazon is
already on the brink and can’t survive years more deforestation.”
Supporters
of the new pledge point out that it expands the number of countries and comes
with specific steps to save forests.
“What we’re
doing here is trying to change the economics on the ground to make forests
worth more alive than dead,” said Eron Bloomgarden, whose group, Emergent,
helps match public and private investors with forested countries and provinces
looking to receive payments for reducing deforestation.
The
participating governments promised “support for smallholders, Indigenous
Peoples and local communities, who depend on forests for their livelihoods and
have a key role in their stewardship.”
Tuntiak
Katan, the general coordinator of the Global Alliance of Territorial
Communities and a member of the Shuar people in Amazonian Ecuador, praised the
support for Indigenous and local communities but questioned throwing money at a
system he sees as broken.
“If this
financing doesn’t work directly, and shoulder to shoulder, with Indigenous
peoples, it’s not going to have the necessary impact,” he said.
This year,
scientists found that parts of the Amazon have begun emitting more carbon than
they store.
China is
one of the biggest signatories to the deforest declaration, but the country’s
top leader, Xi Jinping, did not attend the climate negotiations in Glasgow.
China suffered heavy forest losses as its population and industry grew over the
past decades, but more recently, it has pledged to regrow forests and to expand
sustainable tree farming.
By China’s
estimate, forests now cover about 23 percent of its landmass, up from 17
percent in 1990, according to the World Bank. Though some research has
questioned the scale and the quality of that expanded tree cover, the
government has made expanded reforestation a pillar of its climate policies,
and many areas of the country are notably greener than they were a couple of
decades ago.
Still,
China’s participation in the new pledge may also test its dependence on timber
imported from Russia, Southeast Asia and African countries, including large
amounts of illegally felled trees.
In a
written message to the Glasgow meeting, Mr. Xi “stressed the responsibility of
developed countries in tackling climate change, saying that they should not
only do more themselves, but should also provide support to help developing
countries do better,” Xinhua news agency reported.
Catrin
Einhorn reports on wildlife and extinction for the Climate desk. She has also
worked on the Investigations desk, where she was part of the Times team that
received the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service for its reporting on sexual
harassment. @catrineinhorn
Chris
Buckley is chief China correspondent and has lived in China for most of the
past 30 years after growing up in Sydney, Australia. Before joining The Times
in 2012, he was a correspondent in Beijing for Reuters. @ChuBailiang
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