
Trees for a Future
Trees are one of the most
important assets on the planet and they can contribute to the solution of many
of the problems that challenge humankind. Trees offer the means to meet the
needs of an exploding global population from the finite resources of the
planet, maintain water supplies, check floods, soil erosion and desertification
and reverse global warming.
The amazing potential
of trees
More needs to be done to
harness the massive potential of trees
as a source of food and many other raw materials that can be used by people for
clothing, shelter and energy. Trees can yield everything that humans really
need, except the minerals extracted directly from the earth. Trees can thrive
where arable and grain crops would fail to grow. Wood is the fuel of most of
the world's people. If burnt in efficient stoves, waste and pollution would be
minimised. With careful management programmes wood can provide an indefinitely
renewable resource. If animal farming were phased out, vast areas of land would
be freed up for tree planting programmes less land is needed to provide for a
plant-based diet.
Trees as a food source
Only about 11% of the earth's land surface is cultivated, but it has been calculated that, by planting trees, three-quarters of the earth could provide materials to supply human needs. Trees are an amazing source of food: if the yield per hectare of different types of crops are compared, trees come out a long way ahead. Such abundance could contribute significantly to world food supplies.
Yields per hectare
Livestock: 0.2 tonnes
Cereals: 4 to 6 tonnes
Walnuts: over 29 tonnes
Carob: over 49 tonnes
Some trees also have edible leaves that can yield leaf protein through small scale manufacturing processes. If livestock farming and vast cereal monocultures were phased out, some of the land that would be released could be used for growing trees yielding food crops, timber for construction and fuel and materials for other uses, such as bio-fuels and fibres for cloth.
Destruction of forests
Life on this planet could not
survive without trees, yet vast tracts of forests across the globe have been -
and are still being - destroyed, largely as a result of animal-based
agriculture. Most recent global estimates suggest that 150,000 hectares - an
area equivalent to the size of England and Wales are being destroyed each year.
Since 1969, 25% of Central America's forests have been destroyed to create
pasture for intensive cattle grazing concerns, and large areas of forest in
Brazil have been cleared to grow soya crops. However, people in industrialised
countries should not just stand back and complacently criticise the felling of
tropical forests - they also need to be working to restore their own forests.
The hazel, beech and oak trees that once covered many parts of Britain yielded
far more protein than the sheep and cattle that now graze these deforested
areas. Persistent grazing by farmed animals prevents the regeneration of
natural forests.
Trees and the
environment
Trees make a positive impact
on the environment: they stabilise the soil, reduce erosion and
desertification, and help to cleanse the air. Trees help to maintain the water
cycle by reducing run-off surface water, so that water goes into underground
water stores rather than running laden with soil into watercourses and the sea.
As trees are permanent crops, their cultivation does not require regular
ploughing which damages soil structure. Trees also add to the fertility of the
soil - their roots bring minerals and trace elements from deep in the ground;
tree leaves dropping onto the soil become incorporated as humus into surface
layers. Some varieties of tree, such as alder, have nitrogen fixing bacteria in
their roots which will also enrich soils.
Most importantly, trees play
a vital role in the battle to reduce global warming. Trees take in carbon
dioxide and give out oxygen. Plankton in the oceans absorbs about half the CO2
in the atmosphere, but trees also have enormous potential to store carbon in
their tissues. While they live and their wood is used for long-lasting timber
products, trees keep large amounts of carbon out of the atmosphere. When they
are burnt or decay, they give out no more than they first took in.
With good management and with
the replacement of trees as some are felled, forests have the capacity to act
as permanent sinks for atmospheric carbon. Governments around the world are
starting to acknowledge the role of trees in combating greenhouse gases and
some major tree planting programmes are now underway to compensate for specific
emission releasing facilities such as new coal fired power stations.
Planting trees for food
and the environment
There are many productive
tree species that are well suited to the climate in the UK. Almonds, walnuts,
hazel and sweet chestnut will grow in the southern counties, while further north,
pine, oak, beech and hazels can be productive. Apples and many other fruit
species can be found to suit most parts of the UK. Hillsides that have been
given up to sheep grazing, such as in the Welsh hills, could be reclaimed to
reinstate the magnificent forests that once existed there.
Trees can be incorporated
into the home garden too. The idea of a forest garden, introduced by pioneers
such as Robert Hart, uses trees that produce food crops underplanted with other
plants in different layers, including fruit bushes and green and root crops.
Worldwide, more and more land
is being lost each year due to increasing rates of desertification. This
process need not be happening: unsustainable farming practices – grazing
animals and the use of chemical fertilisers and pesticides have led to a
breakdown of soil structure and subsequent erosion. Deserts are now being
reclaimed by major tree planting programmes.
If new forests are to be
established to check global warming and to meet needs for food, energy and
other raw materials, the land required will be significant. However, if this
takes place alongside the phasing out of animal based farming, land which once
was forests but has been cleared for grazing or overtaken by desertification
following clearance could be reclaimed for large scale tree planting
programmes.
So what can you do?
·
Join MCL and help to spread
the message. Members receive our quarterly journal New Leaves to keep in
touch with others and share ideas for a more compassionate way of life.
·
Adopt a vegan diet and use
the MCL Food
Target (on the Food and Agriculture leaflet and the website)
to review what you eat to see how you can challenge your own dietary habits.
Other sources of
information
The MCL Tree Poster (see
website)
Abundant Living in the Coming Age of the Tree by Kathleen Jannaway. Available from MCL (see booklets link below).
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