| Canada Logging May Ignite 'Carbon Bomb' - Greenpeace 
    CANADA: April 11, 2008
 
 
 VANCOUVER - Canada threatens to ignite a "carbon bomb" that could 
    drastically worsen global warming if it continues heavy logging in areas of 
    its vast northern forest, Greenpeace warned in a report on Thursday.
 
 
 Logging and other developments in the boreal forest release the carbon that 
    the trees have trapped from the atmosphere over decades, potentially 
    producing more greenhouse gases than from burning fossil fuels, the 
    environmental group charged.
 
 Greenpeace called for a moratorium on new logging in areas of the forest 
    that still have large, unfragmented blocks of older-growth trees, and warned 
    it had similar fears about the boreal forests that stretch across Russia and 
    northern Europe.
 
 "Research is starting to show that the forest is tipping from being an 
    annual carbon sink to being an annual carbon source," said Christy Ferguson, 
    Greenpeace's forests campaigner in Toronto.
 
 The "Turning Up the Heat" report, prepared by researchers at the University 
    of Toronto, surveyed a variety of separate scientific studies on the boreal 
    forest in recent years.
 
 Canada's boreal forest, characterized by the predominance of conifers like 
    pine and spruce, stretches in a vast curve across the country below the 
    Arctic, from the Yukon territory in the northwest to the Atlantic coast of 
    Newfoundland.
 
 A 1993 study estimated it stored about 186 billion tonnes of carbon, equal 
    to about 27 times what the world produces from burning fossil fuel each 
    year.
 
 Two-thirds of the carbon is stored in the forest's soil, which decays when 
    the tree cover is removed.
 
 Greenpeace says the carbon released as trees are harvested contributes to 
    climate change. That, in turn, threatens the northern forest with problems 
    such as insect outbreaks and increased forest fires that destroy more trees.
 
 The global warming, which is often most apparent in the far north, also 
    allows the permafrost to melt, releasing still more greenhouse gases.
 
 That creates the scenario of a "carbon bomb" or the sudden release of 
    massive amounts of carbon into the atmosphere, similar to what happened in 
    1997 when peat fires broke out in Indonesia, Ferguson said.
 
 "It hasn't happened yet. That's good, and we can stop it," she said.
 
 Greenpeace is not calling for a total ban on logging in the boreal forest, 
    where many small communities are dependent on the lumber, plywood and paper 
    industries for economic survival. In fact, protecting parts of the forest 
    will help producers in the long run, the group said.
 
 Canada's forest industry has argued that because harvested trees are 
    replanted, carbon released through logging is eventually recaptured as the 
    new trees grow.
 
 The Canadian Forest Products Association said in October that its members 
    had agreed to make the industry carbon neutral by 2015 without having to 
    purchase carbon offset credits.
 
 But Ferguson said the scientific studies indicate carbon neutral logging 
    might not be possible, and the soil in some logged areas continues to 
    release carbon for up to a decade after the trees are cut.
 
 "As much as we would want it to be the way it works, that just isn't what 
    happens," Ferguson said.
 
 (Reporting Allan Dowd, Editing by Rob Wilson)
 
 
 Story by Allan Dowd
 
 
 REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 
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