From Rio+20--GMO Trees and the Green Economy: Green Deserts for All? |
GJEP, STOP GE Trees Campaign, WRM, GFC, CTW | Wednesday, 11 July 2012 | |
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil–While the highly controversial
“Sustainable Energy for All” initiative [1] is underway today at Energy
Day at the Rio+20 Conference on Sustainable Development, the
international STOP GE Trees Campaign [2] is demanding a global ban on
the release of destructive and dangerous genetically engineered trees
(also called GE trees, GMO trees or GM trees) into the environment.
Brazil is one of the most active countries in promoting the development of GE trees for the production of “renewable” bioenergy. “Much of the research on GE trees in Brazil is focused on eucalyptus trees, which are being engineered for faster growth, and for modified wood qualities–such as increased cellulose and decreased lignin content. These engineered traits will facilitate the production of wood-based bioenergy”, stated Isis Alvarez of Global Forest Coalition. “The dramatic and dangerous impacts of non-GMO industrial eucalyptus plantations are well documented and include invasiveness, desertification of soils, depletion of water, increased threat of wildfire and loss of biodiversity”, stated Anne Petermann, Executive Director of Global Justice Ecology Project and Coordinator of the STOP GE Trees Campaign. “Eucalyptus trees are not native to the Americas and they inhibit the growth of native vegetation. In Brazil, these plantations are called Green Deserts because nothing can grow in them. Now they want to engineer them, which will make them even more destructive”, [3] she added. There are currently seven million hectares of eucalyptus in Brazil. These plantations have displaced native forests, grasslands or agriculture; or were grown on the lands of Indigenous Peoples, forest dependent communities. There are plans to double the land covered by eucalyptus plantations in the next decade and the Brazilian government has even proposed to “reforest” the Amazon rainforest with eucalyptus plantations. [4] In the United States, the GE tree company ArborGen is engineering eucalyptus trees to tolerate freezing temperatures. Global Justice Ecology Project joined non-GMO organizations and forest protection groups to sue the US Department of Agriculture to stop the development of these non-native GMO trees in 2010. [5] “Here in Brazil there has been fierce opposition to destructive eucalyptus monocultures, or Green Deserts”, said Winnie Overbeek, Executive Secretary of the Uruguay-based World Rainforest Movement. “Creating GMO cold-tolerant trees is extremely dangerous. This will allow the expansion of monoculture plantations to other regions of the world, increasing the destruction of Green Deserts into new untouched environments and communities”. “While monoculture giants such as the Brazilian Suzano Papel e Celulose begin an advanced trial of genetically engineered trees with the goal of helping reach the global ‘demand’ on bioenergy, EU Renewable Energy policies are accelerating the demand for wood for bioenergy, for example through strategies like the goal of the UK to import 80 million tonnes of wood pellets, mainly from the US, Canada and Brazil for biomass energy production”, [6] stated Joanna Cabello of Carbon Trade Watch, a member of the No REDD Platform. For all of these reasons, the genetic engineering of eucalyptus trees for faster growth to meet the rapidly increasing demand for bioenergy–which will be further exacerbated by the Green Economy–threatens to expand eucalyptus monocultures, and accelerate the destruction of the last of the world’s forests. From Global Justice Ecology Project, STOP GE Trees Campaign, World Rainforest Movement, Global Forest Coalition, Carbon Trade Watch
Contacts:
Anne Petermann, Executive Director, Global Justice Ecology Project +55.21.8079.0538 Winnie Overbeek, +55.21.8821.9007 Isis Alvarez, Global Forest Coalition, +55.21.6950.3337 Notes: [1] Sustainable Energy for All –Or Sustained Profits for a Few?, OPEN LETTER: Sustainable Energy for All Initiative- Using poverty and climate change as excuses to increase corporate profits from energy provision [2] The STOP GE Trees Campaign includes hundreds of organizations from around the world who have united in their struggle to globally ban the release of genetically engineered trees into the environment [3] GE Trees, Cellulosic Biofuels & Destruction of Forest Biological Diversity [4] Steel and Eucalyptus Heat Up Eastern Amazon [5] Analysis of the State of GE Trees and Advanced Bioenergy [6] Nothing Neutral Here: Large-scale biomass subsidies in the UK and the role of the EU ETS |