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THIRD WORLD NETWORK BIOSAFETY
INFORMATION SERVICE
26 March 2005
Dear Friends and colleagues,
RE: GM TREES NO SOLUTION TO CLIMATE CHANGE
In December 2003, at the ninth meeting of the Conference of Parties to
the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP-9), government
representatives agreed on the rules under the Kyoto Protocol's clean development
mechanism for tree plantations as carbon sinks. One of the decisions reached
at the meeting opens the way for genetically engineered (GE) trees to
be used as carbon sinks under the Protocol's clean development mechanism.
But according to Chris Lang in an article attached below, growing GE trees
poses additional environmental and social problems to those already created
by large scale tree plantations.
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.
GM trees could cross with natural trees, invade natural ecosystems and
this would change the forest ecosystem. If this happens there is no way
of recalling them and damage would be done.
Lang also took to task the logic that tree plantations act as good examples
of carbon sinks. He pointed out that tree plantations are relatively unstable.
They can catch fire, be destroyed by pests, damaged or blown down in storms
or they might be logged. All trees eventually die and decay. In all these
cases the carbon stored in the trees is released to the atmosphere.
Before COP-9 both Norway and Switzerland had publicly argued against the
use of GM trees in the Kyoto Protocol. At the meeting, the Norwegian negotiator
suggested excluding GM trees entirely from Kyoto. The US was the most
vocal opponent in what its negotiator called the "singling out of
GMOs".
Nevertheless, the end result of the COP-9 meeting was that Kyoto rules
now state that countries where plantations of GM trees as carbon sinks
are planned should "evaluate, in accordance with their national laws,
potential risks associated with the use of genetically modified organisms
by afforestation and reforestation project activities".
According to Lang, this decision allowing Northern companies and governments
to establish plantations of GM trees in the South is tantamount to allowing
proponents of GM trees to impose their dangerous new technology on the
world. The winners would be timber plantation companies, consulting firms
and polluting energy companies. The losers would be rural people in the
South, who would see their lands converted to monoculture tree plantations
and their livelihoods destroyed.
With best wishes,
Lim Li Lin and Chee Yoke Heong
Third World Network
121-S Jalan Utama
10450 Penang
Malaysia
Email: twnet@po.jaring.my
Website
REF: Doc.TWN/Biosafety/2005/B
GE TREES: NO SOLUTION TO CLIMATE CHANGE
By Chris Lang. Published in
Gen-ethischer Informationsdienst
February/March 2005.
http://chrislang.blogspot.com/2005_03_01_chrislang_archive.html
The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) came
to force in 1994. The convention states that its purpose is the "stabilization
of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would
prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system".
Yet in the decade since 1994, greenhouse gas emissions increased by 11
per cent, according to the World Resources Institute.(1)
When the thousands of participants get together each year to discuss climate
change at the Conference of the Parties to the UNFCCC, reducing greenhouse
gas emissions is not even on the agenda. In December 2004, the tenth Conference
of the Parties (COP-10) took place in Buenos Aires. After two weeks of
negotiations, the best that the more than 6,000 participants could achieve
was an agreement to hold another meeting. But at this next meeting, which
is to be held in Germany in May, participants will not be allowed to discuss
anything which might lead to new commitments. The US refused to agree
to a meeting focussing on compulsory reduction of emissions.
The US, with about five per cent of the world's population is responsible
for more than 20 per cent of carbon dioxide emissions. The USA has not
signed the Kyoto Protocol, and has no intention of doing so. But as Michael
Zammit Cutajar, the ex-Executive Secretary of the UNFCCC Secretariat,
explained recently: "The Kyoto Protocol['s] . . . market orientation
was largely inspired by the USA [and] largely instigated by
the negotiating positions of the USA."(2)
Kyoto's "market orientation" allows Northern countries to meet
part of their emissions targets by trading carbon dioxide with each other.
Carbon trading "turns the earth's carbon-cycling capacity into property
to be bought or sold in a global market," states the Durban Declaration
on Carbon Trading, which has been signed by more than 100 NGOs.
Kyoto's "market orientation" also allows increased emissions
of greenhouse gases. Through the Kyoto Protocol's clean development mechanism,
industrialised countries can invest in projects in the South which are
supposed to store carbon, thereby gaining credits allowing further emissions.
One example of this is the establishment of tree plantations as carbon
sinks.
If a power company in the Netherlands (say) wants to build a new power
plant, it can plant an area with trees in Ecuador (say) to absorb the
carbon dioxide produced by the new plant, thus making its new power plant
"carbon neutral", in the jargon of the carbon traders. In 1994,
an official from the US Department of Energy said that "Tree-planting
will allow US energy policy to go on with business as usual out to 2015."
On one level, it all sounds perfectly reasonable. Trees absorb carbon
dioxide from the air through photosynthesis. Carbon is stored in wood
and other tissues until the tree dies.
Logic and fraud
But the logic behind carbon sinks is based on a fraud. In the international
climate change negotiations, one ton of carbon released by burning fossil
fuels 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.
When carbon is stored in the form of fossil fuel under the earth it is
stable. Unless it is dug out and burnt, it will not enter the atmosphere.
Tree plantations are relatively unstable. They can catch fire, they can
be destroyed by pests, they can be damaged or blown down in storms, they
might be logged or local communities might try to
reclaim the land they lost to the plantations by cutting down the trees.
All trees eventually die and decay. In all these cases the carbon temporarily
stored in the trees is released to the atmosphere.
In December 2003, at the ninth Conference of Parties to the UNFCCC (COP-9),
government representatives agreed the rules under the Kyoto Protocol's
clean development mechanism for tree plantations as carbon sinks. One
of the decisions reached at the meeting allows genetically engineered
(GE) trees to be used as carbon sinks under the Kyoto's clean development
mechanism.
COP-9 "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," as Larry Lohmann of The Corner House, a UK-based solidarity
and research group, put it.(3)
Before COP-9 both Norway and Switzerland had publicly argued against the
use of GM trees in the Kyoto Protocol. At the meeting, the Norwegian negotiator
suggested excluding GM trees entirely from Kyoto. Nevertheless, the end
result of the COP-9 meeting was that Kyoto rules now state that countries
where plantations of GM trees as carbon sinks are planned should "evaluate,
in accordance with their national laws, potential risks associated with
the use of genetically modified organisms by afforestation and reforestation
project activities".
Even the mention of the word "risks" was too much for Harlan
Watson, the US chief climate negotiator. "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."
Industrial plantations
In order to have a noticeable effect on the climate, immense areas would
have to be planted with trees. Industrial tree plantations have caused
serious problems for communities living near them in the South. In Brazil,
for example, Aracruz Cellulose, the world's largest producer of bleached
eucalyptus pulp, established its plantations on the lands of the Tupinikim
and Guarani indigenous peoples and other local communities. In April 2004,
Brazil's Movement of Landless Peasants protested against the pulp and
paper industry's take over of vast tracts of land in Brazil. Landless
people occupied areas of industrial tree plantations owned by six pulp
and paper companies including Aracruz.
Using GM trees as carbon sinks would bring problems additional to those
of large scale industrial tree plantations. 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.
The first open air trial of GM poplars took place sixteen years ago in
Belgium. Since then there have been several hundred field trials, most
of them in the USA. All of these were experimental plots and the trees
were destroyed at the end of the experiment.
The first commercial application
Two years ago, the Chinese government allowed the commercial release of
GM trees. Well over one million insect resistant GM poplar trees have
now been planted in China. Many of China's GM trees are planted in experimental
plots, but it is possible to buy GM trees from Chinese tree nurseries
and to plant them anywhere in the country. Neither the Chinese government
nor the forestry scientists who produced the trees have records of where
the trees have been planted.
Huoran Wang, a forestry scientist at the Chinese Academy of Forestry in
Beijing, explained the risks involved at a meeting organised by the UN
Food and Agriculture Organisation in 2003. "Poplar trees are so widely
planted in northern China that pollen and seed dispersal can not be prevented,"
Wang explained. He added that maintaining "isolation distances"
between GM and non-GM poplars is "almost impossible".
Genetically modified trees pose the ultimate threat to the world's forests.
Unlike food crops, trees can live for hundreds of years. It is impossible
to predict what might happen over the life of a tree, how it will be affected
by extremes of heat or cold, for example. If GM trees were to cross with
natural trees, invade natural ecosystems and their impacts were to become
all too visible, it would be too late. There is no way of recalling them
to the laboratory.
No boundaries
GM trees that produce pollen could cross with native trees, irrevocably
changing forest ecosystems. Some trees can re-grow from broken twigs and
others grow suckers from the roots of living or already fallen trees.
Seeds can float down rivers. Trees, whether genetically modified or not,
do not respect international boundaries. GM trees (or genes from those
trees) planted in one country could spread into neighbouring countries,
regardless of international legislation on importing GMOs. Yet forestry
scientists argue that the only way to find out whether their new GM tree
technology is safe is by trying it out commercially. Steven Strauss, professor
at the Department of Forest Science at Oregon State University, wrote
in 2002, "As with other forms of novel breeding, the extent of testing
needed will be determined empirically - via adaptive
management - during early commercial applications."
Silent plantations
Forestry scientists are working on producing GM trees which are sterile,
in order to prevent the trees from crossing with natural trees. Plantations
of sterile trees would have neither flowers nor would they produce fruit
or seeds. They would grow faster but would be silent.
Silent, sterile monocultures might look good from the corporate perspective,
but they would be a disaster for insects, birds and wildlife as well as
for people living near the plantations.
The US Department of Energy is funding a three year, US$5.1 million research
project into the possibility of using plantations of poplar trees to store
carbon. Scientists at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) are collaborating
with the Universities of Florida, Oregon State and Minnesota as well as
the National Renewable Energy Laboratory and the US Forest Service to
produce GM trees which would store carbon.
"We're talking about millions of acres," ORNL's Stan Wullschleger
told the Knoxville News Sentinel in March 2003.
Oregon State University's Steven Strauss is one of the world's biggest
proponents of GM trees. Yet he admits that there is "a lack of a
pressing need for the technology [of GM trees] at present in the USA".
This is "due to a lack of tax incentives for intensive tree-based
pulp and bioenergy plantations, low world pulp prices, etc." However,
he
adds, "This of course could change radically overnight if the world
were to get serious about carbon emissions control and sequestration."
The decision reached in December 2003 at COP-9 allowing Northern companies
and governments to establish plantations of GM trees in the South might
be precisely the subsidy that proponents of GM trees have been looking
for to impose their dangerous new technology on the world. The winners
would be timber plantation companies, consulting firms and polluting energy
companies. The losers would be rural people in the South, who would see
their lands converted to monoculture tree plantations and their livelihoods
destroyed. If they are ever planted, the resistance to GM tree carbon
plantations will be massive.
Related articles
* November 2004 - Emissions trade instead of climate protection
* August 2004 - China: Genetically modified madness
* May 2004 - Genetically modified trees cause memory loss
* March 2004 - Climate change: Hot air, fake science and genetically modified trees
* More articles about GE trees
* More articles about climate change
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Footnotes
1
A list of companies that support World Resources Institute appears on
the organisation's web-site. Here is a short selection: Shell International,
Shell Foundation, Monsanto, McDonald's Corporation, Microsoft Corporation,
BP, Citigroup Foundation, Cargill Dow, General Motors Corporation, Ford
Motor Company Fund.
2
Michael Zammit Cutajar "Reflections on the Kyoto Protocol - looking
back to see ahead", 1. Juli 2004, in Memorandum
to the Inquiry into the International Challenge of Climate Change: UK
Leadership in the G8 and EU, The Corner House, Sinks Watch and Carbon
Trade Watch, December 2004.
3
Larry Lohmann, Race to the Bottom at the Climate Talks, Forest Cover: A
Global
Forest Coalition Newsletter on International Forest Policy, Nr. 11, Februar
2004.
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