By AFPRelaxnews | Oct 9, 2023
Mass tree planting schemes have been gaining ground for years as a way to suck carbon from the atmosphere at scale. But Bill Gates is far from alone in doubting the benefits of such ambitious plans
[CAPTION]Major tree planting commitments often involve agroforestry or plantations, where the trees will eventually be felled, releasing carbon. Image: Shutterstock[/CAPTION]
Bill Gates is emphatic: "I don't plant trees," he declared recently, wading into a debate about whether mass tree planting is really much use in fighting climate change.
The billionaire philanthropist was being probed on how he offsets his carbon emissions and insisted he avoids "some of the less proven approaches."
The claim that planting enough trees could solve the climate crisis is "complete nonsense", he told a climate discussion organised by the New York Times last week.
_RSS_"Are we the science people or are we the idiots?"
Gates' polemical pronouncements made headlines and prompted criticism from backers of reforestation (planting trees in damaged forests) and afforestation (planting in areas that were not recently forest).
"I have dedicated the last 16 years of my life to making forests part of the climate solution," wrote Jad Daley, head of the American Forests NGO.
"This kind of commentary can really set us back," he said on X, formerly known as Twitter.
Mass tree planting schemes have been gaining ground for years as a way to suck carbon from the atmosphere at scale.
Even notoriously climate change-sceptical US Republicans have introduced legislation to support planting a trillion trees worldwide.
But Gates is far from alone in doubting the benefits of such ambitious plans.
A group of scientists warned on Tuesday that mass tree planting risks doing more harm than good, particularly in tropical regions.
That's primarily because it can replace complex ecosystems with monoculture plantations.
"Society has reduced the value of these ecosystems to just one metric -- carbon," the scientists from universities in Britain and South Africa wrote.
Carbon capture is "a small component of the pivotal ecological functions that tropical forests and grassy ecosystems perform," they said in an article in the Trends in Ecology and Evolution journal.
Jesus Aguirre Gutierrez, an author of the paper, pointed to examples in southern Mexico and Ghana, where once diverse forests "have now transformed into homogenous masses".
This makes them "highly vulnerable to diseases and negatively impacts local biodiversity," the senior researcher at the University of Oxford's Environmental Change Institute told AFP.
Also read: Why marrying ecology with economics is important for sustainable living