Tree planting at higher latitudes is no climate solution

In a paper recently published in Nature Geoscience, a group of international researchers including some NordBorN members argue that tree planting at high latitudes will accelerate, rather than decelerate, global warming.

As the climate continues to warm, trees can be planted further and further north, and large-scale tree-planting projects in the Arctic have been championed by governments and corporations as a way to mitigate the worst effects of climate change. However, when trees are planted in treeless tundra and mires, as well as large areas of the boreal forest with relatively open tree canopies, they can make global warming worse. In northern regions, tree planting can result in net warming due to increased surface darkness (decreased albedo) that can counteract potential mitigation effects from carbon storage. In addition, tree planting disturbs pools of soil carbon, which store most of the carbon in cold ecosystems, and has negative effects on native Arctic biota and livelihoods. Although there might be other reasons for planting trees, tree planting is not a valid climate-warming-mitigation strategy and we warn against a narrow focus on biomass carbon storage.

You can read the full paper here.

Reference: Kristensen, J.Å., Barbero-Palacios, L., Barrio, I.C., Jacobsen, I.B., Kerby, J.T., López-Blanco, E., Malhi, Y., Le Moullec, M., Mueller, C.W., Post, E. and Raundrup, K., 2024. Tree planting is no climate solution at northern high latitudes. Nature Geoscience17(11):1087-1092. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-024-01573-4


Photo: conifer plantations in Greenland (credit: Mathilde Le Moullec)

Save the date! Second NordBorN meeting in Aarhus

The second NordBorN meeting will be hosted by our colleagues from Aarhus University on March 25-27, 2025!

Niels and Efrén are working on securing the venue they wanted for those dates, and will come back with some more details soon, including a recommendation for a nice hotel nearby, along with a small excursion to a rewilding center not far from Aarhus. Stay tuned!

The NordBorN family keeps growing!

It is a pleasure to welcome a new NordBorN member to the team: Elias Koivisto.

Elias started his PhD journey at UEF in Joensuu in the beginning of August. He holds a BSc in Biology-Earth sciences and a MSc in Geomatics from Stockholm University. His main research focus is studying the greening and shrubification of the Arctic region utilizing multispectral, UAV-RGB and LiDAR remote sensing data as well as field data with machine learning. A part of his research is also connecting these changes to reindeer herding patterns in Northern Fennoscandia and Yamal peninsula.