Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement.
MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Monday, 13 November 2017
Congo basin’s peaty swamps are new front in climate change battle
Stumbling on submerged roots, attacked by bees and wading waist-deep
through leech-infested water, the three researchers and their Pygmy
guides progress at just 100 metres an hour through the largest and
least-explored tropical bog in the world.
The group halt and unpack what looks like a spear, which is plunged
over and over again into the waterlogged forest floor. Each time it
brings up a metre-long core of rich, black peat made up of partly
decomposed leaves and ancient plantlife. The deepest the steel blade
reaches before meeting the underlying clay is 3.7 metres.
Leeds University forest ecologists Simon Lewis and Greta Dargie
cheer. The peat bed below the tangle of trees and water in the
geographical heart of Africa is much deeper than they expected; and
because peat stores carbon and slows global warming, their new research
conducted last week in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)will be
welcome news for the 194 countries meeting in Bonn for the annual UN climate conference.
Lewis and Dargie surprised the world earlier this year
when they showed that the peatlands on either side of the Congo river
contained one third of all the world’s tropical peat and were five times
more extensive than anyone had thought, stretching over 145,500 sq km
(56,000 sq miles), an area larger than England.
Since 2012, the two researchers have spent months at a time wading
through bogs and sleeping on makeshift platforms built above the
crocodile-infested swamp forests in the Cuvette central region of the
neighbouring Republic of the Congo. “We would see elephant feet and
gorilla hands imprinted in the peat. We were increasingly in awe that a
remote, almost unknown, wilderness such as this could still be found on
Earth today,” said Lewis.
Working mainly in the dry season, they took more than 500 peat
samples, and calculated that the central African peatlands hold 30.6
billion tonnes of carbon accumulated over 10,000 years – the equivalent
to three years of the world’s fossil fuel emissions. This would make
them one of the world’s most important carbon “sinks”, they said.
But their new exploratory research, conducted with the Congolese
botanist Corneille Ewango, 50km from Mbandaka in DRC, suggests that
central Africa’s inaccessible forest swamps could be even more important
as a global carbon storehouse than they thought, and could need a
global initiative to research and protect them.
Campaigners from Greenpeace and the local community of
Lokolama are fighting to preserve the precious carbon stores.
Photograph: Kevin McElvaney/Greenpeace
“While the extent of the peat is known, its depth is not. There is
just no data. We are a long way from really knowing how much is there
and need to do more research,” said Dargie.
“Maintaining
these large stores of carbon must be a global priority. Only with
strong scientific data on the peatland, and how it behaves or might
react to future changes, can governments establish baselines and
protections in international agreements to ensure it is preserved,” said
Greenpeace forest campaigner Matt Daggett.
There is growing understanding that the fate of carbon sinks like the
Congo basin peatlands will determine future climate change. If left
alone, they are vital collectors of CO2; but if the forests
above them are felled and the land is converted to farming, as has been
widely practised for the past 30 years in south-east Asia, then the
dried-out peat emits vast quantities of CO2 and intensifies climate change.
Tropical peatland stores around 2,000 tonnes of carbon per hectare
but this has been barely recognised by governments which have continued
to promote intensive farming on peatlands.
The draining of south-east Asia’s peat swamps and the felling of its
trees has been a climate disaster, say scientists. Two months of intense
peat fires started in August 2015 to clear land for palm oil and pulp
and paper plantations in Indonesia released an estimated 884m tonnes of carbon dioxide, more than the European Union in its entirety emitted that year.
The Congo basin forest, the second largest in the world after the
Amazon, has been relatively protected by its inaccessibility, but
environmentalists say it is highly vulnerable and its peat could easily
be destroyed. Pressure is building, they say, from logging companies and
European governments to lift a 15-year-old moratorium on the allocation
of new industrial logging concessions.
Logging on swamplands is prohibited in the DRC but, says the Rainforest Foundation UK (RFUK),
Congolese legislation does not precisely define what constitutes a
swamp. Its analysis suggests 3.4bn tonnes of carbon could be emitted if
the concessions become active.
According
to Greenpeace, nearly half of the DRC’s current logging concessions are
in breach of the law because their permissions have run out and they do
not have approved management plans. These concessions overlap around
10,000 sq km of peat swampland.
“If this forest is cut, there will be decomposition of the peat and vast quantities of CO2 will be released into the atmosphere, said Dagett.
The Congolese government, which has welcomed the scientists, is
cautious about further protection. “There must be a balance between the
forests and development. It comes down to money,” said Joseph Katenga,
forest adviser to Amy Ambatobe, the minister for the environment and
sustainable development.
But communities living close to the carbon-rich swamps near Lokolama
have welcomed the discovery of peat, hoping it would attract money to
better protect their forests which they traditionally use for fishing
and hunting.
“As indigenous people, peatlands are part of our heritage and their
discovery for the world to see represents a great hope for future
generations,” said Valentin Egobo, who speaks for the Lokolama
community.
Researchers have been gathering data in the area since 2012. Photograph: Kevin McElvaney/Greenpeace
“We hope our government will support us in our role as guardians of
this ancient forest and provide us with the needed support to safeguard
peatlands for our children and for the world.
“We
did not know the peat was there. This is very important for us but we
also need development. Our schools are dilapidated. We are marginalised
and impoverished,” Egobo added.
The future of the DRC rainforest may be determined next month when the Norwegian
government is expected to decide whether to fund a French Development
Agency plan to expand “sustainable” industrial logging in the region. This would allow local communities to benefit from their resources, according to the agency.
But Greenpeace, RFUK and a petition signed by 135,000 people in Norway and the UK have
condemned the plan. “Norway risks putting globally significant stores
of carbon at risk through misguided support for so-called sustainable
forest management in DRC. Instead of expanding large-scale
timber-felling, Norway should work with the Congolese government to shut
down the half of the country’s logging areas which the law requires to
be closed and returned to the state,”, said Simon Counsell, the director
of the RFUK.
The need to protect the forests above the peatlands was emphasised
last week by a major report showing that there is 40% more carbon stored
in forested lands than in known fossil-fuel deposits worldwide.
“Releasing this carbon into the atmosphere through continuing
deforestation not only commits us to the worst impacts of climate
change, but also results in the loss of a globally important carbon
sink.
“Protecting the carbon stored in forests is no different than taking
action to ensure fossil deposits like coal stay underground,” said the
report’s lead author, Martin Herold of Wageningen University in the
Netherlands.
No comments:
Post a Comment