Climate change: Hot air, fake science and genetically modified trees
Critical Analysis of the 'COP 9' UN Climate Negotiations, By Chris Lang
Published in WRM Bulletin 80, March 2003 www.wrm.org.uy
The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) has
been
in force since 21 March 1994. For a decade, international climate change
negotiators have filled meeting rooms with hot air. Meanwhile,
greenhouse
gas emissions have increased by 11 per cent, according to World
Resources Institute.
Yet when more than 5,000 participants descended on Milan for the ninth
Conference of the Parties to the UNFCCC (COP-9) in December 2003,
reducing
greenhouse gas emissions was not on the agenda.
Instead, as Larry Lohmann of The Corner House, a UK-based solidarity and
research group, explains, the meeting "formulated rules for capturing
new
subsidies for industrial forestry projects that will accelerate global warming, disempower activists trying to tackle it, promote
genetically-modified monoculture tree plantations, reduce biodiversity
and violate local people's rights to land and forests worldwide."
One of the decisions reached in Milan allows the North to establish
plantations in the South under the Kyoto Protocol's "Clean Development
Mechanism". These carbon dumps are supposed to absorb carbon dioxide and
to
store carbon.
The COP-9 decision on carbon dumps will allow corporations to sell "carbon
credits" based on the amount of carbon supposedly absorbed by
large-scale
industrial monoculture tree plantations, including those using
genetically
modified trees. The decision allows corporations to take over huge
tracts of
land in the South and to continue polluting.
COP-9 also accepted what is perhaps the biggest scientific fraud the
world
has ever seen. In the international climate change negotiations, one ton
of
carbon released by burning coal or oil is considered to be the same as
one
ton of carbon contained in a tree plantation. From the point of view of
the
impact on the climate, however, these are two different types of carbon
which cannot be added to, or subtracted from, each other.
Carbon stored in the form of fossil fuel under the earth is stable and
unless corporations dig it out and burn it, it will not enter the
atmosphere. Tree plantations, on the other hand, can catch fire, they
can be
destroyed by pests, they might be logged or local communities might try
to
reclaim the land they lost to the plantations by cutting down the trees.
Allowing genetically modified (GM) trees to be used as carbon dumps only
makes a bad situation worse.
Before the Milan meetings, Norway and Switzerland had argued publicly
against allowing the use of GM trees under the Kyoto Protocol. During
COP-9
any opposition to GM trees withered away. Kyoto rules now state that countries on the receiving end of GM tree carbon dumps should "evaluate,
in
accordance with their national laws, potential risks associated with the
use
of genetically modified organisms by afforestation and reforestation
project
activities".
Northern governments and corporations, according to this statement, have
no
obligation to evaluate the risks involved in the GM tree projects they
impose on the South.
Even the mention of the word "risks" during the Kyoto negotiations in
Milan
was too much for the US chief climate negotiator, Harlan Watson. "We
felt
particularly that this singling out of GMOs was inappropriate in this
context," Watson told Agence France-Presse.
In an official submission issued at the end of COP-9, the US government
stated: "Genetically modified organisms do not present unique risks that
would warrant specific mention in the preamble to a decision on Clean
Development Mechanism activities."
Many communities in the South have seen the impacts of fast-growing tree
plantations. In South Africa, Brazil, Thailand and India (to give a few
examples) communities have seen their common lands, grasslands and forests
converted to monoculture tree plantations. Because of the huge water
needs
of these plantations, streams have dried up and fields near plantations
have
become too dry to grow crops.
In 1993, Japanese car manufacturer Toyota started field trials to test
trees
which had been genetically modified to absorb more carbon. While carbon
absorption increased, Toyota's scientists also noted a dramatic increase
in
water consumption.
Trees genetically modified to grow without seeds, flowers, pollen or
fruits
will grow faster. The prospect of silent, sterile monocultures might
look
good from the corporate perspective, but it would be disastrous for insects,
birds, wildlife and people living near the plantations.
GM trees that do produce pollen could cross with native trees,
irrevocably
changing forest ecosystems. Trees can take up to 100 years to mature,
making
it impossible to know the long-term risks. Dead leaves, branches, roots
and
trees rot, mixing with the soil and adding to the risks.
Earlier this year, a coalition of the People's Biosafety Association,
the
Union of Ecoforestry and Friends of the Earth Finland, launched a
petition
against GM trees which will be presented to the UN Forum on Forests in
Geneva in May 2004.
The coalition, called People's Forest Forum, states: "The course taken
in
Milan was a wrong one. We do not need plantations of genetically
modified
tree clones on our planet. Plans like this are in direct contradiction to the terms of the Rio Convention on Biodiversity. We hope that as the UN
Forest Forum assembles in Geneva next May, it will recognize this
discrepancy and ban the introduction of genetically modified trees."
Sign the petition to ban GE trees at http://elonmerkki.net/dyn/appeal
News & Critical Analysis from past UN Climate Negotiations...
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