IN THE SHADE OF A TRILLION TREES
The Venture Magazine|March 2020
What reforestation means for Australians
A. Selway Ryan
IN THE SHADE OF A TRILLION TREES
The smile or the sneer—that’s the Janus-face that greets new action on climate change. As we try to wrap our broad, collective consciousness around something that’s broader still, whatever is proposed seems both brightly welcome and misguidedly inadequate. The fires have raged across Australia and will rage again. What can be done about it that’s truly enough?

In the wake of a much-talked-about report last year, there’s been a new call to put trees front and center in the fight against climate change. The science seemed encouraging: According to the study, large-scale reforestation had the potential to capture some 25% of the atmospheric carbon pool. That would be a big step toward reduction targets.

More encouraging still, it was quickly recognised that tree-planting could command the kind of support other initiatives couldn’t—most critically, from the business community. After all, it wasn’t the kind of nagging plea to reduce emissions that moneyed interests were used to resisting; it was a call to plant more trees in a world that was watching them burn. Trees are popular.

This story is from the March 2020 edition of The Venture Magazine.

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This story is from the March 2020 edition of The Venture Magazine.

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