PRESS/SOCIAL MEDIA RELEASE      
Ancient Forests Absorb 20% of Human's Carbon, Logging and 
Other Industrial Destruction of Old Forests Must Stop Now

- The myth that primary and old growth forests should be 
"sustainably" managed is dealt a mortal deathblow. Members 
and funders of RAN, FSC and others greenwashing ancient 
forest logging called upon to withdraw support in protest

February 19, 2009
By Earth's Newsdesk and the Rainforest Portal
Projects of Ecological Internet
http://www.ecoearth.info/newsdesk/
CONTACT: Dr. Glen Barry, [email protected]

(Seattle, WA) -- Ecological Internet welcomes the 
emerging science published today in "Nature" indicating 
tropical trees in undisturbed forest are absorbing nearly 
a fifth of the CO2 released by burning fossil fuels[1]. 
This is in addition to the long-term carbon sequestered 
within old trees' wood and soils. This is the most recent 
of several major scientific studies indicating the need 
to fully protect all remaining primary and old growth 
forests as a keystone response to global climate, 
biodiversity and water crises. 

"This is huge -- not only do ancient rainforests reliably 
store massive amounts of carbon, as we have known for 
sometime, but they continue to remove enormous amounts of 
carbon every day they remain standing and are non-
degraded. The study partially solves the mystery of where 
human carbon pollution has been going, and in so doing 
supports the need for avoided deforestation payments," 
said Dr. Glen Barry, Ecological Internet's President.

It was found that remaining tropical forests remove a 
massive 4.8 billion tonnes of CO2 emissions from the 
atmosphere each year. This includes a previously unknown 
carbon sink in Africa, which mops up 1.2 billion tonnes 
of CO2 a year. Over the past 40 years, each hectare of 
intact African forest was found to have annually trapped 
an extra 0.6 tonnes of carbon. This builds upon last 
year's studies that found old-growth forests are "carbon 
sinks" and continually absorb carbon dioxide, and that 
their first time logging releases 40 percent of their 
carbon[2].

"We are receiving a free subsidy from nature," says Dr. 
Simon Lewis, a Royal Society research fellow at the 
University of Leeds, and the lead author of the paper. 
"Tropical forest trees are absorbing about 18% of the CO2 
added to the atmosphere each year from burning fossil 
fuels, substantially buffering the rate of climate 
change."

Dr. Lee White, co-author on the study, said "to get an 
idea of the value of the sink, the removal of nearly 5 
billion tonnes of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere by 
intact tropical forests, based on realistic prices for a 
tonne of carbon, should be valued at around £13 billion 
($USD 18.7 billlion) per year. This is a compelling 
argument for conserving tropical forests."

### MORE ###

The findings critically demolish claims by groups as 
diverse as the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), World 
Bank, Rainforest Action Network (RAN), Greenpeace and WWF 
that "well-managed, responsible and low-impact" logging 
in the world's dwindling ancient forests can ever have 
environmental benefits. Over the past two years, each has 
been the target of Ecological Internet's campaign to end 
old growth forest logging, which is "certified" by FSC as 
being "green".

Late last year RAN agreed to review their long-time 
support for first time industrial logging of ancient 
forests[3]. When Lafcadio Cortesi, RAN's new rainforest 
campaigner, was asked to comment upon the Nature report, 
he replied it is a "bit of a stretch and certainly 
premature to link... the nature paper findings with RAN 
and the FSC." He refused to answer the question "how does 
logging 500 year old ancient trees protect rainforests 
and the climate," continuing two years of RAN 
stonewalling on the most basic of questions regarding 
their support for FSC ancient forest logging.

EI President, Dr. Glen Barry, said "the science has never 
been clearer: global ecological sustainability depends 
critically upon protecting and restoring old forests. How 
much longer can RAN and the world dither? Our demand of 
RAN remains the same: either use your membership to get 
FSC to eliminate their sourcing of certified timbers from 
ancient forests, or resign immediately from FSC in 
protest. Sadly, our campaign resumes after failure by RAN 
to keep their earlier promises."

"We call upon RAN members to resign, and their funders to 
stop their support, in protest of America's leading 
rainforest group supporting -- against a growing body of 
ecological science -- first time industrial destruction 
of primeval forests. EI will be taking further protest 
action at a place and time of our choosing."

### ENDS ### 

[1] Nature, "Increasing carbon storage in intact African 
tropical forests", February 19, 2009, Vol 457.

Study press release:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/02/090218135031.htm

[2] Old-growth forests as global carbon sinks. Nature 
455, 213-215 (September 11, 2008).

Green Carbon: The role of natural forests in carbon 
storage. ANU E Press (July 2008).

[3] "Ancient Forest Victory, as Rainforest Action Network 
Yields, Commits to Review FSC Support", 
http://www.rainforestportal.org/issues/2008/10/release_ancient_forest_victory.asp#more


DISCUSS RELEASE:
http://www.rainforestportal.org/issues/2009/02/release_ancient_forests_absorb.asp

Ecological Internet provides the world's largest and most 
used climate and environment portals at 
http://www.climateark.org/ and http://www.ecoearth.info/ . 
Dr. Glen Barry is a leading global spokesperson on 
behalf of environmental sustainability policy. He 
frequently conducts interviews on the latest climate, 
forest and water policy developments and can be reached 
for comment at: [email protected]

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