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Save the Forests, Not Each Tree
The Los Angeles Times March 30, 1998 By Patrick
Moore
The battle over the fate of the nation's forests-wilderness vs.
wood-has been fought before, but it is once again raging as
politically correct activists posture to preserve everything while
using nothing. Nearly 100 years ago, John Muir, founder of the
Sierra Club, and Gifford Pinchot, first chief of the U.S. Forest
Service, battled for the hearts and minds of Americans over the fate
of the nation's forests. In the end, a compromise was struck. Large
areas of federal lands were designated as national parks, where
nature was to be preserved and protected. Other large tracts were
allocated to the national forest system, where timber could be
obtained to provide for society's needs. The legislators of the day
understood the need for such a compromise. The people want
wilderness and the people need wood.
But now, it is so trendy
to be opposed to cutting trees that many people find it possible to
ignore the absolute necessity of using wood in their everyday lives.
Many seem willing to forget that wood is, without question, the most
renewable and environmentally friendly of all materials used to
build our civilization. Wood is the material embodiment of solar
energy, created by photosynthesis in a factory called the forest,
and whether we like it or not, wood can only be obtained from trees.
It has become fashionable to suggest that logging be banned on all
federal public lands, including the national forests and lands
administered by the Bureau of Land Management. The Sierra Club has
adopted such a position, one now supported by congressional
legislation that would outlaw commercial forestry on all public
lands in the United States. The authors of the bill claim that such
a policy would "save taxpayers money, reduce the deficit, cut
corporate welfare and protect and restore America's natural heritage
by eliminating the fiscally wasteful and ecologically destructive
commercial logging program on federal public lands." They are wrong,
and their plan would result in a great deal of harm to the
environment and economy they seek to protect.
While there may
well be need for reform in the way forestry is managed on public
lands, this in no way negates the very positive benefits of forestry
to society and the environment as a whole. These benefits include
employment in rural communities, road access and facilities for
public recreation and protection from wildfires. The most important
benefit, however, is the provision of wood as a building material
and as a source of fiber for paper products. Practically no other
use of public lands brings such an important environmental benefit
as the use of that land for sustainable forestry.
Wood
requires far less consumption of energy to produce than any of the
substitutes-steel, concrete, plastic. By using more energy, we burn
more fossil fuels, which in turn results in higher emissions of
greenhouse gases, carbon dioxide in particular. Therefore, using
more renewable wood and less steel, concrete and plastic will help
reduce greenhouse gas emissions, one of the main goals of
environmentalists around the world. What has been lost here is
balance. Forests serve a number of important functions, among them
recreation, wildlife habitat, carbon storage and timber production.
It is not possible to have total preservation and timber production
on the same acre of land. The only logical approach is to zone the
land so that some of it is used for each of the many values forests
provide. A single-minded, preservationist approach across the entire
public estate is wrongheaded because it fails to address the
complexity of multiple benefits derived from forests and
trees.
Imagine if the people of the Polynesian Islands
decided that all the palm trees must be preserved, that none could
be cut for building houses or canoes. Their culture would be
destroyed. It is not that Polynesians don't love the trees-they
practically worship them, since the palms provide so much of what
they need for food and shelter. But they do have an intuitive
understanding that so long as the palms are sustainably harvested,
there will always be trees for future generations.
We need to
find this same wisdom and to oppose the preservationist agenda that
would deny the environmental benefits of using part of the public's
land to produce some of the public's wood.
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