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The danger of one-sided approaches. Underestimating the
stabilizing impact of forests threatens climate stability both
of the planet as a whole as well as, in the first place, of the world's
largest forest regions including Russia.
Latest publications of model-derived scenarios "predict" global cooling
for a completely deserted Earth and already
begin to warn against considering forest recovery as a way out of the
climatic crisis [15].
World mainstream media started spreading the idea that, even though the
least disturbed natural forests are efficient carbon dioxide
absorbers as well as huge carbon pools [16,17], carbon absorption could
be possibly organized by different means,
especially taking into account that the world is increasingly short of
agricultural land [18]. Opinions have been circulating
that time has possibly come for the international programs aimed at
forest conservation in poor countries to close [19]. Soon, it appears,
one can expect even more specific model-based recommendations as to
where forests should be done away
with to ease the consequences of global warming elsewhere.
[15] Winckler J., Lejeune Q., Reick C.H., Pongratz J. (2019) Nonlocal effects dominate the global mean surface temperature response to the biogeophysical effects of deforestation. Geophysical Research Letters 46: 745-755.
[16] Griscom B.W. et al. (2017) Natural climate solutions. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 114: 11645-11650.
[17] Lewis S.L., Wheeler C.E., Mitchard E.T.A., Koch A. (2019) Restoring natural forests is the best way to remove atmospheric carbon. Nature 568: 25-28.
[18] The new plan to remove a trillion tons of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere: Bury it. Washington Post 12.06.2019
[19] Is REDD ready for its closeup? Reports vary. Mongabay.com 12.06.2019
Regional cataclysms. Those regions where the approval or indifference of the international community will allow for an extensive extermination of forests are to be hit first and hardest by climatic cataclysms. When it becomes clear that, contrary to model predictions, the loss of the regulatory function of natural ecosystems has also increased the vulnerability of the global climate as a whole, it can be too late to remedy the situation. It is necessary to make use of the existing priority in the understanding of the global situation and to use the precautionary principle. To provide for state security in the current situation of environmental and climate change it is necessary to take the following urgent measures on identifying, preserving and studying the intact (mildly-perturbed) forest landscapes in Russia.
One-fifth of the world’s forest ecosystems are located in Russia. Until recently, the main influence of the forest on climate was considered to be emission (during cutting and fires) or absorption (during forest restoration) of carbon dioxide. The absorption of excess atmospheric carbon by Russian forests largely compensates for the carbon emissions associated with the extraction of oil, gas, and coal by Russian companies (Romanovskaya, Federichi, 2015). However, today, according to the latest IPCC report (IPCC, 2019), for forests of high latitudes, including Russian ones, their influence on the reflectivity of the planet is increasingly emphasized (Andrews et al., 2017; Winckler et al., 2019a, b). The argument is put forward that the heating of the planet’s surface due to the absorption of solar radiation by the forest cover in winter can exceed the cooling due to the absorption of excess carbon dioxide by the forest. If this type of calculations is, despite their high uncertainties up to the sign change, included into official schemes for assessing the climatic impacts of different countries,– and such attempts are already under way (see, e.g., Duveiller et al., 2020), – then Russian carbon footprint and the corresponding economic sanctions will rise substantially. Russia will officially lose its climate buffer.
The possibility of such a negative scenario derives from the fact that, for the first, natural intact forests of Russia have been studied significantly less intensely than the tropical forests of Brazil or Indonesia. For the second, Russian undisturbed forests are unique. Forests that have an age of the last disturbance exceeding several hundred years do not have analogues in the world; they are preserved in the oldest nature reserves or in hard-to-reach locations. The climatic impact of Russian forests is therefore estimated on the basis of global and regional models/parameterizations, which, as IPCC experts themselves recognize, are characterized by large uncertainties.
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