How Europe’s climate policies have led to more trees being cut down in the U.S.
OAK CITY, N.C. For the sake of a greener Europe, thousands of American trees are falling each month in the forests outside this cotton-country town.
Every morning, logging crews go to work in densely wooded bottomlands along the Roanoke River, clearing out every tree and shrub down to the bare dirt. Each day, dozens of trucks haul freshly cut oaks and poplars to a nearby factory where the wood is converted into small pellets, to be used as fuel in European power plants.
Soaring demand for this woody fuel has led to the construction of more than two dozen pellet factories in the Southeast in the past decade, along with special port facilities in Virginia and Georgia where mountains of pellets are loaded onto Europe-bound freighters. European officials promote the trade as part of the fight against climate change. Burning biomass from trees instead of coal, they say, means fewer greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.
But that claim is increasingly coming under challenge. A number of independent experts and scientific studies including a new analysis to be released this week are casting doubt on a key argument used to justify the cutting of Southern forests to make fuel. In reality, these scientists say, Europes appetite for wood pellets could lead to more carbon pollution for decades to come, while also putting some of the East Coasts most productive wildlife habitats at risk.
From the point of view of whats coming out of the smokestack, wood is worse than coal, said William H. Schlesinger, the former dean of Duke Universitys Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences and one of nearly 100 scientists to sign a letter to the Environmental Protection Agency last year asking for stricter guidelines on using biomass to generate electric power. You release a lot of carbon in a short period of time, and it takes decades to pull that carbon back out of the atmosphere.
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