Tropical forests turn down the planet’s heat by 1C, scientists find

Forests should be valued not only for their role in curbing emissions and as a source of carbon credits but also for the direct benefits they offer to communities, researchers say.

A fisherman rows his boat on a peatland river in the Kerumutan protected forest , Indonesia
A fisherman rows his boat on a peatland river in the Kerumutan protected forest near Teluk Meranti village in Pelalawan, Indonesia's Riau province, November 11, 2009. Image: REUTERS/ Beawiharta

Tropical forests cool the world by more than 1 degree Celsius, increase rainfall, and shield people and crops from deadly heat, researchers said, showing the climate benefits of trees go beyond sucking planet-warming carbon dioxide out of the air.

In a new study released on Thursday, they outlined different ways the Earth, its climate and its inhabitants rely on forests.

As every tenth of a degree of warming fuels threats from extreme weather and rising seas, lead author Deborah Lawrence said it is key to “acknowledge that tropical forests have a very important role in maintaining temperatures at a safe level”.

Cutting down forests puts at risk the Paris climate accord’s goal of capping the rise in global average temperatures at “well below” 2C and ideally 1.5C above pre-industrial times, as trees absorb about a third of carbon emissions produced worldwide.

The planet has already heated up by about 1.1C, bringing more extreme weather and higher sea levels.

Besides cooling, forests - including in tropical countries like Indonesia, Malaysia, Brazil and the Democratic Republic of Congo - also provide food and livelihoods, clean the air, support human health and are an essential habitat for wildlife.

But in 2020, an area of tropical forest the size of the Netherlands was lost, according to monitoring service Global Forest Watch.

During the hottest seasons, forests reflect sunlight back into space, absorb heat and release moisture that cools the air and helps form clouds, creating rainfall and conditions that protect local people and crops, the new study found.

Forests should be valued not only for their role in curbing emissions and as a source of carbon credits but also for the direct benefits they offer to local communities, said Lawrence.

The University of Virginia professor, who first began researching forests on the island of Borneo, called for more tree-planting initiatives in both urban and rural areas.

“Tropical forests are like a big insurance policy for the planet,” she said. “We give them up at our peril. We need to keep these forests around.”

Danny Marks, assistant professor of environmental politics at Ireland’s Dublin City University who did not contribute to the study, said healthy forests are vital to fighting climate change - both to limit emissions and adapt to a warmer world.

More should be done to stop rising deforestation in its tracks, he said, including providing new financing and placing a higher value on the services provided by forests.

Marks cited Costa Rica as a good example, where a tax on fossil fuels has enabled payments to protect nature and forests.

Beyond capturing carbon, the list of benefits tropical forests offer is endless, said Damian Fleming of green group WWF’s global forest practice.

Research shows forests can also lower blood pressure, reduce the risk of lung disease and improve mental wellbeing, he said, adding the new study’s finding that tropical forests keep the planet 1C cooler is “staggering”.

“That’s a significant feat, which proves how illogical it is that rainforests are one of the most endangered habitats on Earth and most vulnerable to deforestation,” he added.

This story was published with permission from Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, climate change, resilience, women’s rights, trafficking and property rights. Visit http://news.trust.org/climate.

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