Guest guest Posted August 7, 2002 Report Share Posted August 7, 2002 Dear friends, As you may have noticed, we published an article on tree plantations in Japan (enclosed below). We found the issue of the pollen-related allergies reported by the French newspaper Le Monde very interesting in informing about a type of impact which had never heard about before. Please let us know if you have more information on this issue or on other impacts related to monoculture tree plantations in Japan. Additionally, we published another article on Japanese involvement in the promotion of tree monocultures in Costa Rica (see also below). Please tell us if you have more information on this or on your government's involvement in the promotion of tree plantations in other countries. Best regards, Teresa Perez ******************************************************* WORLD RAINFOREST MOVEMENT International Secretariat Maldonado 1858; Montevideo, Uruguay E-Mail: wrm Web page: http://www.wrm.org.uy Editor: Ricardo Carrere ******************************************************* ================================= W R M B U L L E T I N 60 July 2002 (English edition) ================================= - Japan: Sick from monoculture tree plantations The cloud of pollen that usually covers Japan in the Springtime is disappearing and the Japanese are starting to feel more relieved from their respiratory allergy that leaves one out of six inhabitants of the Archipelago with red eyes and a congested nose. It is even worse in the cities due to the combination of pollen with release of gases from vehicles. In the last 10 years, in Tokyo, the proportion of population affected by allergies has risen from 7% to 20%. Forty years ago, this did not happen. What has changed? The reply is to be found in forest degradation and loss. The modernisation process has implied a change in the way of looking at the forest. Its spirit, once a source of religious, architectonic, poetic and artistic inspiration has been taken away. Today, turned into merchandise, it is mainly a source of energy and building materials. And of allergies. World War II swallowed half the forests, and in 1950 a policy for systematic reforestation was installed, centred on the plantation of fast growing conifers, especially Cryptomeria, a species which is more profitable for building. Thus presently there are 10 million hectares planted with a single species of conifer, which is at the root of the Spring pollen cloud. These enormous monoculture plantations have implied an imbalance that, in addition to having impacts on human health, also have environmental, social and economic consequences. Environmental imbalance is to be seen in catastrophes such as landslides and alteration to the ecosystem, in detriment to the local fauna and flora. From the socio-economic standpoint it has not been much use either. In fact when the Cryptomeria plantations were ready to be exploited, profitability criteria made the logging industry import wood at lower prices. This has implied a loss of jobs among the rural population linked to the forestry sector, and in turn, promoted rural emigration. Within this business logic, in spite of possessing enormous volumes of standing trees, Japan is today one of the greatest importers of wood in the world - in the year 2000 it imported 100 million m3 - and has become the major predator of forests in the rest of Asia. In the meanwhile the plantations only seem able to generate allergies. But this is not all. The powerful Japanese industry, a great releaser of carbon dioxide, and therefore responsible for climatic change, is resorting to the new formula of carbon sinks to avoid reducing its releases. And for this purpose it is resorting to the plantation of extensive monoculture tree plantations abroad (see WRM bulletin No. 20). Somehow, it is exporting its own sickness. Article based on information from: " La vengeance de la forêt " , Philippe Pons, Le Monde, 14 June, 2002. ******************************************************* - Costa Rica: Japanese dollars to promote monoculture tree plantations The new President of Costa Rica, Abel Pacheco would seem to have good intentions regarding the environment, but at the same time, shows some gaps in knowledge of the native tree species of his country. In fact, such contradictions became evident on 2nd June, on occasion of a ceremony at the Presidential Residence, celebrating the donation by the government of Japan (through the World Bank), of US$300,000 aimed at promoting commercial tree plantations. During the ceremony President Abel Pacheco stressed the need tob fight for native species and halt plant " Nazism. " It would seem that the President was not aware that the species to be planted --Gmelina and Teak-- are not native, but come from Asia. In fact the project funded with the Japanese government donation, is aimed at planting 50,000 hectares a year of Gmelina and Teak, for a period of ten years. That is to say that the plan is to cover a small country like Costa Rica with no less than 500,000 hectares of monoculture tree plantations. The donation is accompanied --as usual-- by the corresponding environmental, social and economic discourse to justify this type of forestry " development. " The very name of the project (Project for the Reactivation of Commercial Reforestation in Costa Rica - REFORESTA), transmits a deceitful message that " reforestation " is taking place, when in fact it is really " monoculturisation " that is being carried out. Furthermore, Constantino González, the chairman of the fund managing the donation has stated that this activity will generate between 20 and 30 million dollars over the next ten years and will make it possible to supply local demand for wood and eliminate pressure on forests and lessen illegal logging. All this sounds good, but does not agree with the true situation, either in Costa Rica or in any other part of the world. It is sad that a country such as Costa Rica, possessing a very rich forestry diversity, has entered into the Japanese game of becoming a supplier of cheap wood for this and other insatiable markets of the industrialised world, instead of concentrating on rehabilitating its forests destroyed by other " development " processes (such as cattle-raising) which, in the past have resulted in environmental and social destruction. We would very much like to see the new President of the Republic " fight for native species " and face " plant nazism " promoted in this case, by the government of Japan and its intermediary, the World Bank. We hope to see this. Article based on information from: " Reactivan reforestación comercial, " by Lisbeth Huertas Jiménez, Semanario Universidad, 19 July, 2002, sent by Juan Figuerola, e-mail: juaneco ******************************************************* WRM International Secretariat Maldonado 1858 CP 11200 Montevideo Uruguay Tel: 598 2 413 2989 Fax: 598 2 418 0762 http://www.wrm.org.uy Health - Feel better, live better http://health. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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