NMS Feb 22

Page 70

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‘Strategic Forest Reserves’ the Wrong Strategy for Climate Change

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trategic Forest Reserves” is the latest idea based on the notion we can fix climate change by walking away from forests and not removing any trees. There’s no question forests have an important role to play in addressing climate change. Healthy forests can sequester and store enormous amounts of carbon. But setting aside forests, particularly those managed by federal agencies, as “strategic” reserves for carbon storage is the wrong strategy. That’s because many of our forests are not healthy. Unhealthy forests tend to lose carbon due to high levels of tree mortality and wildfire. About 80 million acres of National Forest System lands are at risk of catastrophic wildfires or abnormal levels of insect and disease impacts and need forest management treatments. Like congressionally designated Wilderness areas, “Strategic Forest Reserves” would restrict the use of active forest management tools - such as logging - under the premise these areas would “store the most carbon and help the most species.” The reserves would ultimately span millions of acres across 11 western states. As a proponent claimed: “The key to this is that it needs to be permanent. That means you’re going to keep the carbon there. You’re not going to cut the forest. The high carbon density forests are mature and older forests.” This argument suggests forested ecosystems are static, meaning if these forests are left alone, old trees will live and store carbon forever. But as we’ve witnessed in recent years, this is simply not the case as climate-driven drought, insect infestations and disease have killed millions upon millions of trees. Dead trees do not store carbon, they only emit carbon, and dead trees serve as fuel for severe wildfires that are emitting tons of carbon into the atmosphere. Wilderness-style “protections” do not save older forests. For example, wildfires in California this year killed nearly a fifth of the planet’s giant sequoia trees, including continued on page 72 >>

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FEBRUARY 2022


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Articles inside

A Shortcut to the $750,000 Women’s Rodeo World Championship

4min
page 109

In the Arena: Cutting & Reined Cow Horse

3min
pages 110-111

Marketplace

5min
pages 98-103

San Juan County 4-Hers Make Splash at National Livestock Shows

1min
page 108

Migrants Held in Texas ICE Detention Facilities Have Highest Rates of COVID-19

3min
pages 84-86

Home at the Ranch: Old Days & Old Ways

5min
pages 78-79

Winning Youngsters

1min
pages 82-83

AZ Regulators Reject New Clean-Energy Rules After Years of Debate

4min
pages 76-77

‘Strategic Forest Reserves’ the Wrong Strategy for Climate Change

2min
pages 70-71

SCOTUS to Hear WOTUS Case

5min
pages 66-69

Understanding & Evaluating Carbon Contracts

14min
pages 60-65

In Memoriam

11min
pages 48-51

Politics, Cattle & Beef

3min
pages 58-59

New Mexico Federal Lands Council News

3min
pages 54-55

Beef It’s What’s for Dinner Recipe

2min
pages 56-57

Riding Herd

4min
pages 46-47

View From the Backside

4min
page 35

Ranching Realities, Part 3

3min
pages 44-45

New Mexico CowBelles Jingle Jangle

5min
pages 16-17

Court Orders Beef Packer to Process Niman Ranch Cattle

4min
page 21

Just the Facts ... and Then Some

4min
page 12

New Mexico Ranches, Rangeland Benefit from State’s Healthy Soil Program

5min
pages 24-27

Arizona Livestock Self Inspection Program Are You Up for Renewal?

3min
page 28

Request for Public Comment: NM Wildlife Corridors Action Plan

2min
pages 22-23
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