The
rainforests hold the key to taming El Niño's destruction
Analyses from Noaa and Nasa confirm that El
Niño is strengthening and that it looks a lot like the strong event that
occurred in 1997–98.
Indonesia is smouldering and Godzilla is to
blame. But even though this is reality,
not a monster movie, there is still a hero: the tropical rainforest. Healthy forests protect our climate
and moderate our weather. As the ‘Godzilla’ El Niño builds in the weeks ahead
of Paris talks, it is a timely warning that deforestation is partly to blame
for its impacts
This year’s El Niño, the
ocean-traveling climate cycle notorious for throwing the weather off kilter, is
nicknamed “Godzilla”. While it is projected to deliver plenty of rain to some
parts of the world, including drought-parched California, it is already
causing dangerously dry conditions in the tropics. Papua New Guinea, for
example, is experiencing its worst drought in decades,
which spells doom for coffee and food crops.
What is El
Niño?
An explanation of the formation and impacts of the
far-reaching climate phenomenon, which the US National Weather Service said has
finally arrived
Read more
The last time El Niño was this
intense, in 1997, five
million hectares of rainforest went up in smoke in Indonesia at a time when
rain usually falls in sheets. The forest
fires generated gigatonnes of carbon dioxide, equivalent to 13-40% of the
world’s fossil fuel emissions at the time. The resulting haze, which spanned an
area from northern Australia to the Philippines to Sri Lanka, caused widespread
health problems and grounded airplanes.
With six of Indonesia’s provinces
on high alert and fires raging, this
year could be just as bad. Already, over
25 million Indonesians have suffered from the fires.
Standing, healthy forests, the
Earth’s “sweat glands”, pump moisture into the atmosphere, providing the globe
with its greatest defense against droughts, forest fires and other
weather-related disasters. Without this buffer, we’re more exposed and
vulnerable to the whims of extreme weather.
To maintain an effective buffer,
it is imperative that global efforts to protect forests are accelerated.
Tropical forests are important climate bulwarks, and the impact of cutting them
down packs a wallop beyond the release of the vast stores of carbon they hold.
Tearing down forests also changes the earth’s surface, triggering major shifts
in rainfall and increases in temperature worldwide that can be just as
disruptive to the climate and weather as those caused by carbon pollution.
One of the most ambitious forest
commitments to date, last
year’s New York Declaration on Forests, recognizes the “double whammy”
impact of deforestation on the climate and weather. This agreement among
corporations, governments, NGOs and indigenous groups to end deforestation by
2030 includes a call to restore and regrow forests in addition to protecting
already-standing forests.
Planting forests eventually
stores carbon. But it takes an agonizingly slow 50-100 years or more for new
forests to absorb the amount of carbon released when a tropical forest is
cleared and burned. It is far more effective to prevent the forests from
falling in the first place. But planted forests can provide a different,
underappreciated benefit to the world’s climate and weather – and they do so
more quickly than they recover carbon or the plant and animal life they once
held.
Within a decade, most planted
forests in tropical regions develop a closed canopy, as branches from one tree
touch those of the next. At this stage of growth, they transform substantial
amounts of water in the soil – which they reach via roots far deeper than found
in crops or grasses – into moisture in the air, which cools the atmosphere
above and the area around them. This process also generates moist conditions
and rainfall locally and in the surrounding region.
It also generates the mass
movement of air and conditions in the upper atmosphere that ultimately
influence rainfall and temperature, both close by and far away. When forests
are standing, they give us our climate and they can help protect us against a
changing climate.
But when forests are cut down,
these systems are disrupted. Changes in circulation due to tropical
deforestation ultimately hit the upper atmosphere, where they cause ripples, or
teleconnections, that flow outward in various directions, similar to the way in
which an underwater earthquake can create a tsunami. The atmosphere connects climate
in one place to climate in the rest of the world.
Deforestation across the tropics,
therefore, might
alter growing conditions in agricultural areas in south-east Asia, South
America and Africa, and as far away as the US Midwest, Europe and China. This
means that cutting down forests could imperil the world’s breadbaskets, even
those thousands of miles away from the tropical forest belt – with dire
implications for the ever-increasing demands on the world’s food supply.
As the Godzilla El Niño bears
down and the climate talks in Paris heat up, remember that deforestation is
partly to blame for its impacts. Deforestation
worsens droughts, making El Niño more damaging than it would otherwise be.
Healthy forests protect our climate and moderate our weather.
The international community
assembling in Paris in December cannot keep global warming below 2C without
both protecting the world’s remaining tropical forests and restoring vast areas
of tropical forest that have already been lost. If we do not ensure the future
of our forests, this year’s Godzilla El Niño may prove to be a puny harbinger
of the monsters to come.
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