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Key forest-rich countries fail to acknowledge climate impact of increased logging, says EU expert group

12 avril 2019

Key forest-rich countries fail to acknowledge climate impact of increased logging, says EU expert group

12 April, Brussels – Despite the climate emergency, most EU countries are planning to significantly increase the logging of their forests. This will reduce forests’ ability to store carbon, meaning there could be 400 Mt more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere between 2021-2025 than previously expected. This is more than the annual emissions of France and Finland combined.

Key forested countries, including Finland, Sweden, Slovenia, Latvia and Poland have been unable to show that they are correctly reporting the climate impact of such increased logging. These findings were revealed by an EU Expert Group who examined Member States’ National Forestry Accounting Plans. The findings are an embarrassment to countries such as Sweden and Finland, who present themselves as climate leaders.

The findings are particularly relevant to the Finnish public who are preparing to vote in General Elections in on Sunday.

“This is a moment of truth for Finnish forest and climate policy. The government submitted a plan to increase harvests by more than a quarter but didn’t mention the climate impact. After a thorough review the Expert Group didn’t buy it. Elections are close, and this is a damning indictment of the Sipilä government’s risky climate policy. We now need a new era of politicians that stand up for climate and forests,” said Otto Bruun, representative of the Finnish Society for Nature Conservation, also a member of the EU Expert Group.

The Expert Group scrutinised these plans as part of the EU Land Use, Land Use Change and Forestry (LULUCF) Regulation. The Regulation was approved last year as part of the EU’s Climate and Energy Package for 2030. It requires that EU Member States account carbon dioxide emissions from land and forestry, with the aim of ensuring that they remove more carbon dioxide than they produce. As part of this Regulation, Member States are obliged to produce National Forestry Accounting Plans that sets the approach for what carbon dioxide emissions from their forestry operations they are accountable for.

“These plans are highly technical and often hard to understand but scrutinising them is crucial to tackling climate change because unless we have healthy natural forests removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, it will be impossible to meet the global aim of keeping temperature increases below 1.5 degrees. The planned increase in harvesting will equal an unprecedented reduction in the carbon sink, and that is a calamity for the climate,” said Hannah Mowat, Fern’s campaigns coordinator, who represented the NGO in the Expert Group.

“The EU is subsidising the burning of forests for bioenergy on a massive scale. Emissions are meant to be measured at the point of harvest (in the LULUCF Regulation) rather than the point of combustion. It is clear from these draft reports that this is not happening adequately” Mowat continued.

Some findings from National Forestry Accounting Plans we would like to note:

  • Poland would increase tree harvesting by 44 per cent, but was only planning on accounting only 12 per cent of the related emissions to the EU
  • Finland would increase harvesting by a quarter but did not plan on accounting any of these emissions to the EU
  • Slovenia’s proposed forest management reference level for years 20212025 would mean a more than 50 percent reduction in the forest management sink compared to 2000-2009
  • Latvia would be harvesting trees so intensively that their forests will be a net source of emissions during 20212025
  • Sweden argued that harvesting all available forest growth would be sustainable, essentially aiming to increase harvest by 10 per cent without accounting for the climate impact
  • Slovakia has increased harvesting intensity by 97 per cent in the last 20 years, leading to a significant decline in the carbon sink, which is projected to continue in the coming decades.
  • Ireland would be harvesting trees so intensively that their “forests” will be a net source of emissions from 2018 onwards
  • Estonia’s forest sink will be reduced due to increased harvesting of mature forests

“These land-use accounting plans are the first to be proposed since the adoption of the Paris Agreement. It is therefore essential that Member States take the message from the Expert Group seriously and improve their plans so forests are allowed to help rather than hinder efforts to meet the Paris goals,” said Hanna Aho, spokesperson for Finnish development NGOs Fingo, also a member of the EU Expert Group.

“From the beginning of July, Finland will hold the EU Presidency. They will need to lead the whole of the EU in actions to stay within 1.5 degrees temperature limit and yet their Forest Plan is to increase harvesting! Finland and the EU must set a good precedent to rest of the world and plan to protect and restore their forests,” Aho continued.

Fern, Fingo and the Finnish Association for Nature Conservation call on the EU to stop allowing EU Member States to subsidise industrial wood burning, and to redirect funds to support forest protection and restoration.

The expert group conclusions will now be considered by the European Commission, which will communicate the necessary changes to Member States. Member States then have until the end of 2019 to revise their plans.

END

For more information, contact:

Hannah Mowat, Fern, +33 6 79 11 80 91, hannah@fern.org

Hanna Aho, Climate policy adviser, Fingo, +358 50 3646550, hanna.aho@fingo.fi

Otto Bruun, Climate policy officer, Finnish Association Nature Conservation, +358 40 6313399, Otto.Bruun@sll.fi

Catégorie: Press Releases

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