[Pil-pc-oceania] Trees vs. food debate to remain centre stage (farmonline)

Deb Guildner bocor at bigbutton.com.au
Wed May 7 07:57:56 EST 2008


Trees vs. food debate to remain centre stage
MATT CAWOOD
6/05/2008 8:55:00 AM
Trees are currently the only mainstream solution for landholders hoping to 
offset the costs of their emissions under an emissions trading scheme - but 
this raises another set of challenges.
Massive tree plantings raise a completely new set of problems-not least a 
"trees-or-food" issue in a world already grappling with food shortages.

Soil carbon has now gained prominence as the other major alternative for 
carbon sequestration, but the research community and bureaucracies are only 
now belatedly preparing for serious investigation of its possibilities.

As a result of this delay, Australian farmers will have to wait for the 
Kyoto II round of talks in 2012 to argue a place for their soil carbon in 
international emissions trading.

Trees, on the other hand, are already a known quantity.

They are visible, sequester known quantities of carbon, can be assessed on a 
broad scale, and are acceptable under the (current) Kyoto rules.

But to make a dent in agriculture's emissions bill, extraordinary numbers of 
trees will have to be planted.

As a rough rule of thumb, hybrid eucalypts growing in a high rainfall zone 
(higher than 600 mm per year) can sequester 25-30 tonnes a hectare a year of 
CO2 equivalents.

A cow on pasture produces 1.5-2 tonnes/year of CO2 equivalent, indicating 
that a hectare of high-rainfall eucalypts offsets the annual belches of 
15-20 cows.

An Australian Farm Institute (AFI) paper observed that if an extra 1pc of 
Australian farmland was sown to trees, it could result in 500-1,000 million 
tonnes of carbon being sequestered over the 100 years they would need to be 
in the ground.

That century's worth of sequestration is roughly equivalent to one-fifth to 
a third of the agricultural sector's greenhouse gas emissions in one year.

Beverley Henry, manager of Meat & Livestock Australia's Environment, 
Sustainability & Climate Change division, said planting trees to offset 
emissions, however, raised serious questions about conflicting demands on 
land use.

"You're looking at tying land up under trees for 100 years, but it's 
difficult to look 100 years in advance and know in advance what our food 
requirements will be, or what pressures there will be for more agricultural 
land," Dr Henry said.

There are other issues with mass tree plantings. CSIRO research has found a 
55pc decrease in water flows under forest compared to that under grassland-a 
substantial issue for already water-stressed catchments.

The AFI has also noted that large-scale emissions-driven forestry could 
increase bushfire risks-already forecast to increase under climate 
change-and increase pest and feral animal problems for surrounding farmland.

SOURCE: Science and environment news from Rural Press weekly farm 
newspapers, updated daily on FarmOnline.




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