GREENS
DON'T SEE FOREST FOR THE TREES
Greens Don't See Forest for the Trees
---------- Text from the LA Times article
----------
March 26, 2002
Commentary
GREENS DON'T SEE FOREST FOR THE TREES
By PATRICK MOORE
(Patrick Moore, a co-founder of Greenpeace, is
president of Greenspirit, an environmental
consultant to government and industry.)
It has become a principle of the environmental
movement to insist that wood and paper products
be certified as originating from sustained,
managed forests. Movement members even created
their own organization, the Forest Stewardship
Council, to make the rules and hand out the
certificates.
Lord help those who don't fall in line, as
big-box retailers and builders discovered when
Greenpeace and the Rainforest Action Network
became their judge and jury--hanging corporate
reputations from the rafters with the TV cameras
rolling.
Many corporations felt compelled to accept
restrictive buying policies for wood and paper
products to demonstrate loyalty to the cause.
This appears politically correct on the surface.
Yet, as with so many environmental issues, it's
not that simple, and the result may damage the
environment rather than improve it. The
environmental movement's campaign to force
industry into accepting it as the only judge of
sustainable forestry is pushing consumers away
from renewable forest products and toward
nonrenewable, energy-intensive materials such as
steel, concrete and plastic.
Anti-forestry groups such as the Sierra Club and
Greenpeace make endless and unreasonable demands
restricting forestry practices. This is mainly
why the Forest Stewardship Council has certified
less than 2% of the wood and paper produced in
North America.
Meanwhile, the same environmental groups won't
acknowledge that some regions--such as
California--already comply with government
regulations that meet or exceed guidelines
imposed by the Forest Stewardship Council.
Wood is the most renewable and sustainable of
the major building materials. On all measures
comparing the environmental effects of common
building materials, wood has the least impact on
total energy use, greenhouse gases, air and
water pollution and solid waste.
So why isn't the environmental movement
demanding that the steel and concrete industries
submit to an audit for "sustainability"? Where's
the green steel, concrete and plastic? These
materials are nonrenewable, require vast amounts
of energy to manufacture and recycle and are
contributors to greenhouse gas emissions.
Why shouldn't steel and concrete manufacturers
be required to reduce energy consumption and
greenhouse gas emissions or face boycotts,
demonstrations and restrictions? Why does the
environmental movement stand silent in the face
of promotional campaigns by steel and concrete
interests that leverage mythical environmental
claims against wood for their own commercial
benefit?
Because emotive images of forests sell
memberships.
The environmental movement has unfortunately led
the public into believing that when people use
wood, they cause the loss of forests. This
widespread guilt is misplaced. North America's
forests are not disappearing. In fact, there is
about the same amount of forest cover today as
there was 100 years ago, even though we consume
more wood per capita than any other region in
the world. Isn't this proof positive that
forests are renewable and sustainable?
When we buy wood, we are sending a signal to
plant more trees to satisfy demand. If there
were no demand for wood, landowners would clear
away the forest and grow something else instead.
We have powerful tools at our disposal to reduce
carbon dioxide emissions and the threat of
climate change. Grow more trees, and then use
more wood as a substitute for materials like
steel and concrete that are responsible for
excessive emissions in the first place.
If the environmental movement would recognize
this one fact, it would turn its anti-forestry
policy on its head and redirect membership
dollars to where they are most needed--promoting
sound environmental choices.