“The Trump administration has announced it will
lift protections in Alaska’s Tongass national forest, permitting logging in the
world’s largest intact temperate rainforest. Experts call the
Tongass the ‘lungs of the country’ and one of nation’s last remaining bulwarks
against climate change. Located on the southern coast of Alaska, it is
made up of centuries-old western cedar, hemlock and Sitka spruce trees, and is
home to immense biodiversity, including the largest-known concentration of bald
eagles.
“‘It’s ironic that this administration is trying to tout this
president’s environmental record when [Trump is] unwinding environmental
safeguards all over the place,’ said Ken Rait, project director of the Pew
Charitable Trust, who two decades ago helped win the protections that Donald
Trump is now undoing. ‘And lifting protections on the Tongass, the nation’s
flagship forest, is about the most egregious of all of them.’
“The administration’s decision ignores overwhelming public
support for keeping protections in place on the Tongass, including resolutions
from six south-east Alaska tribes and six south-east Alaska city councils
against lifting protections. Of the public comments solicited on the plan, 96%
were in favor of keeping protections in places. Tribes also petitioned the
government to protect customary cultural use areas of the Tongass. ‘All other
avenues to protect our homelands have been exhausted, to little avail,’ they
wrote in their petition.
“The Tongass has been safeguarded since 2001 by a ‘roadless
rule,’ which prohibits road construction, road reconstruction and timber
harvesting in designated areas of national forests. It barred the construction
of roads on some 58.5m acres, and in addition to the environmental benefits,
the rule was motivated to protect US taxpayers from the costs of maintaining a
web of US Forest Service roads ‘long enough to go to the moon and most of the
way back with no way to maintain them,’ said Rait.
“Tourism has soared, and the forest support some of the last
productive wild salmon runs in the world, and a billion-dollar commercial
fishing industry. A 2019 scientific analysis showed
that the Tongass absorbs more carbon than any other national forest, on a level
with the world’s most dense terrestrial carbon sinks in South America.
“After a brief private meeting between the president and the
Alaska governor, Mike Dunleavy, aboard Air Force One in June 2019, Trump ordered his administration to lift
all protections from the forest. According to Rait, ‘between taxpayer expenses
and the fact that the majority of logs cut on the Tongass will be exported to
China and other Pacific Rim nations, today’s decision isn’t going to have
robust economic benefits to anyone in this country.’
“A recent report from the Center for Sustainable Economy
documented taxpayer losses of nearly $2bn a year from federal logging programs,
largely due to the fact that demand for timber has been flagging
nationally. ‘The Tongass is America’s Amazon,’ Adam Kolton, executive
director of Alaska Wilderness League, said in a statement. ‘This
presidentially directed move to gut roadless protections for our nation’s
largest and most biologically rich national forest is a calamity for our
climate, for wildlife and for the outdoor recreation economy of south-east
Alaska’” (Trump to gut protections in Alaska’s Tongass forest, the “lungs of
the country” The Guardian).
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