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Earth

Ethiopia Plants 350 Million Trees in a Day To Help Tackle Climate Crisis (theguardian.com) 174

About 350 million trees have been planted in a single day in Ethiopia, according to a government minister. From a report: The planting is part of a national "green legacy" initiative to grow 4 billion trees in the country this summer by encouraging every citizen to plant at least 40 seedlings. Public offices have reportedly been shut down in order for civil servants to take part. The project aims to tackle the effects of deforestation and climate change in the drought-prone country. According to the UN, Ethiopia's forest coverage was just 4% in the 2000s, down from 35% a century earlier.

Ethiopia's minister of innovation and technology, Dr Getahun Mekuria, tweeted estimates of the number of trees planted throughout the day. By early evening on Monday, he put the number at 353 million. The previous world record for the most trees planted in one day stood at 50 million, held by India since 2016.

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Ethiopia Plants 350 Million Trees in a Day To Help Tackle Climate Crisis

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  • by Arthur Vandelay ( 4744457 ) on Monday July 29, 2019 @12:56PM (#59006352)
    I would guess that water table is going to be monitored very closely in the following decades
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      I would guess that water table is going to be monitored very closely in the following decades

      Don't worry . . . most of those trees will be felled for wood for cooking stoves.

      • They're likely a pathetic monoculture, anyhow.
        • by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 29, 2019 @01:52PM (#59006830)

          In fact it is great news. A poor country doing what is in its power to help to tackle a planetary problem. I wouldn't think they are able to make even minimal acts of governance like this one; I am surprised in a good way. You should be ashamed for not recognizing or appreciating their gesture.

          • More than what America manages to do.
            Yet people whine and are negative for no reason.

            Even if it's a limited selection of species there's lots of space for other species of plans and animals in-between.

            • by sjames ( 1099 )

              Perhaps it's shame that their much wealthier country can't seem to manage to do this.

            • I hope they were wise enough to plant a diverse selection of nitrogen fixers and fruit trees.

            • Comment removed based on user account deletion
              • by Anonymous Coward

                how many of that is mono-culture pulp paper trees?

                The US could contribute by just STOP FUCKING MOWING EVERYTHING.

                I've been in my house ~12 years. It was a typical "neat and tidy" dessert when I moved in. I simply set aside a few areas in the yard that I don't mow and now my house is surrounded by 20+ foot trees and the remaining lawn gets enough sun to thrive, but not so much that it gets burned brown under the southern sun.

                Stop mowing people. Nature will find a way-- at least anywhere east of the Mississip

            • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

              More than what America manages to do. Yet people whine and are negative for no reason.

              Mod correction. The OP should me correctly modded as -1, Troll.

            • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

              America plants more then 1.6 billion trees every year.

              https://www.bugwood.org/intens... [bugwood.org]

              That is 5 trees, for everyone that we use. That is around 5,000 trees every day. The only country that has planted more trees than the United States is China. (Didn't see that coming.)

              https://www.carbonbrief.org/ma... [carbonbrief.org]

              • How many of them survive?

                • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

                  Depends on why you are fishing around for this information. If you are looking for information to bash the US or China you are out of luck. A great deal of them survive in both the US and China.

                  • And what led you to assume anything about my intent?

                    A horticulturist I once new claimed to me that in bulk replanting, eg. after clearcutting, survival is 50% at best. Which is not bashing anything, but I do like to see statistics interpreted correctly.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Actually this is only one part of a huge turnaround for Ethiopia. The global angle is really hype but hey why not. The deforestation aspect is very real. These trees aren't just planted willy nilly. They serve as windbreaks. TREES RAISE WATER TABLES AND OVERALL WATER QUANTITY. So the prior water table comment is just ignorant hateful nonsense.

        The big thing not yet mentioned if that Ethiopia is finally building a dam. This takes some courage as Egypt has told Ethiopia if they ever dammed the Nile then Egypt

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday July 29, 2019 @03:57PM (#59007784) Homepage Journal

        At least they are trying. All you do is shit on other people's efforts to fix your mess.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by alvinrod ( 889928 )
      How many of these 350 million trees will still be alive in 20 years? I remember one Earth Day in school where every student got a tree to plant. I’m pretty sure most of them died within a few years.
      • by gmack ( 197796 )

        How many of these 350 million trees will still be alive in 20 years? I remember one Earth Day in school where every student got a tree to plant. I’m pretty sure most of them died within a few years.

        You are right, probably not as much survive as a professional tree planting operation, but it doesn't actually matter if most of them die as long as you keep doing it. When I was a child, one of my father's postings was on an army base that was strip logged into being a desert prior to World War 1. One day every year everyone one on the base, Military or dependent, went out and planted trees and it was working. There were some sandy parts left, but they were shrinking. In the forested parts, the older

      • by mark-t ( 151149 )
        My tree lasted 42 years. It was as tall as the house I grew up in when it had to be taken down.
      • by geekoid ( 135745 )

        " I’m pretty sure "

        And I"m pretty sure you say that to confirm you biased narrative.

      • If 1 in 5 of these trees were actually planted, and 1 in 7 of them survives, that's still ten million trees. About 20% of a tree's mass is roots. But if they cut a tree down and make stuff out of it, then large percentages of it will be sequestered... And even if they burn it, at least that's carbon neutral — in fact, slightly carbon-negative, because of the roots.

      • Ya, planting a tree on school grounds doesn't do much. What needs to be done is stop cutting down forests. Planting trees helps most if they're in an area likely to keep growing and not be disturbed, or to offset trees cut for lumber if managed long term. The problem is often with third world countries where trees are cut to get more lumber for more people, or more farmland for more people, so there is zero replanting or replenishing of the forests.

        But making the attempt is still a good attempt. If only

    • by Megol ( 3135005 )

      Utterly ridiculous.

    • But vegetation typically help hold water not the other way around.

    • by geekoid ( 135745 )

      Yes, but not because of this.

  • by bugs2squash ( 1132591 ) on Monday July 29, 2019 @12:58PM (#59006378)
    considering they invented the cause of man-made climate change: humans
    • There's evidence - I'm not sure how outdated - that goats herds were originally responsible for the Sahara. So yeah, pretty much humans.
      • Didn't Vikings remove just about all forest on Iceland in 100 years too?

        Still just have little.

      • Goat hooves are the problem.

        They were introduced to New Zealand about 150 years ago and they're causing _major_ erosion problems in the mountains there - the damage done by deer is nothing compared to goats, but goats aren't "sexy" to hunt.

        (This is defnitely a case where hating on people who hunt and kill the things is wrong - they're the wrong animal in the wrong place and letting them stay will destroy the ecosystem - making them into tasty meals is one way of encouraging their removal.)

  • Where from? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by macpulse ( 823760 ) on Monday July 29, 2019 @12:58PM (#59006380) Homepage Journal
    So uh, where do all the seedlings come from? Are there really enough tree farms around the country of Ethiopia to support planting 350+million of them?
    • Re:Where from? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Lab Rat Jason ( 2495638 ) on Monday July 29, 2019 @01:21PM (#59006572)

      Yeah, that's a pretty big number. This seems like the kind of stunt that eventually gets walked back by people making justifications and saying "well, we dropped a half million seeds from some planes, and we assume half of them will sprout... et voila!"

      • Yeah, that's a pretty big number. This seems like the kind of stunt that eventually gets walked back by people making justifications and saying "well, we dropped a half million seeds from some planes, and we assume half of them will sprout... et voila!"

        They planted "seedlings"

        • They planted "seedlings"

          Precisely why I questioned the large number. 350 million seeds? Sure. 350 million seedlings? In a ready-to-plant condition, transported all around the country, and then planted all on the same day by how many of the 105 million Ethiopians living there? No way. That is a logistics impossibility.

      • Yeah, that's a pretty big number. This seems like the kind of stunt that eventually gets walked back by people making justifications and saying "well, we dropped a half million seeds from some planes, and we assume half of them will sprout... et voila!"

        Exactly, it is a huge number. I also question the logistics of how such an undertaking could be coordinated. Ethopia has 105 million people. All 105 million would have to plant 3 tree seedlings each to meet the 350 million seedlings estimate. I doubt all 105 million people participated, and most likely didn't Addtionally, even if they did have 350 million seedlings in a ready-to-plant condition, how would they transport them around the country to be planted all in one day? Answer: they didn't, the logisti

    • by Anonymous Coward

      RTFA. There are 350 nuseries total in Ethiopia and each of them has cranked out 1 million seedlings. It goes without saying that these are the most productive nurseries the world has ever seen.

      • It goes without saying that these are the most productive nurseries the world has ever seen.

        In lie of more data, A) no it doesn't and B) STFU with your inane meaninglessness.

    • by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Monday July 29, 2019 @04:02PM (#59007814) Journal

      So uh, where do all the seedlings come from

      Think about how many seeds a tree makes in its lifetime. All those maple helicopters, for example, or all the fruit on a fruit tree in a season, at maybe five seeds per fruit. All that fuzz on a cottonwood, with a seed in every tiny puff.

      If TWO of them grow up into an adult tree, the size of the forest doubles in one generation.

      Most of that is seeds that never germinate, because they didn't end up in a spot with the right conditions.

      Now collect a BUNCH of those seeds and carefully place each in a small container of soil with suitable conditions - which you can do a LOT of in evem a small space.. Lots of 'em germinate - maybe much more than half if you get it right. In one generation a single tree can populate a large field, or a field's worth populate an enormous forest.

      Are there really enough tree farms around the country of Ethiopia to support planting 350+million of them?

      Already answered by another poster.

      • All those maple helicopters, for example, or all the fruit on a fruit tree in a season, at maybe five seeds per fruit. All that fuzz on a cottonwood, with a seed in every tiny puff.

        If TWO of them grow up into an adult tree, the size of the forest doubles in one generation.

        Most of that is seeds that never germinate, because they didn't end up in a spot with the right conditions.

        Now collect a BUNCH of those seeds and carefully place each in a small container of soil with suitable conditions - which you can do a LOT of in evem a small space.. Lots of 'em germinate - maybe much more than half if you get it right. In one generation a single tree can populate a large field, or a field's worth populate an enormous forest.

        I know what a seedling is, and that is precisely why I questioned the large number. 350 million is ridiculously large considering the effort to germinate and then transport. 350 million seeds? Sure. 350 million ready-to-plant seedlings? I'm not buying it.

        I also question the logistics of how such an undertaking could be coordinated. Ethopia has 105 million people. All 105 million would have to plant 3 tree seedlings each to meet the 350 million seedlings estimate. I doubt all 105 million people participate

    • Probably Israel. Ethiopia and Israel have a long history of cooperation/friendship, and Israel is very experienced with reforestation.

  • Overkill (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 29, 2019 @12:59PM (#59006390)

    640K trees ought to be enough for anybody. This is a solution looking for a problem.

    • If you had a two incher, would you go around flashing everybody?? Come up with something funnier.
    • 640K trees ought to be enough for anybody. This is a solution looking for a problem.

      Those trees have No wireless. Less space than a Nomad. Lame.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    It's an "estimate". Sort of like "alternative facts". It's the new reality, ya know.

    • Exactly. 350 million seedlings (not seeds) would be a logistics impossibility to both grow in advance, prepare to make ready-to-plant and then transport around the country to be planted all on the same day.
  • Good idea! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by duke_cheetah2003 ( 862933 ) on Monday July 29, 2019 @01:12PM (#59006502) Homepage

    At last! Real tangible action, real behavior change. Beats the heck out of just taxing people for flying.

    I tip my hat to you, Ethiopia. Well done. An example for others to follow.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      If ethiopians and ethiopia in general take this seriously, they can go far in expanding their tree canopy, which besides helping filter the air for them, will eventually help their land retain water. Even if it doesn't provide extra water for farming, it will provide canopy for other wildlife which may help supplement foraging in years where it was required.

      With a combination of reforestation and desalinating and pumping water inland on the african continent, it is quite possible that much of Africa could b

    • by geekoid ( 135745 )

      Because in Ethiopia, tress are free?
      Oh, right, taxes.

      And yes, people should have a high tax for flying. Somewhere around 30%

  • ...what could possibly go wrong. No rain, not seedlings grow up to be trees.
    • by Megol ( 3135005 )

      Strange that they then have had more trees in the past... Wonder what removal of trees does to a dry area, sadly there is no way to easily search for something like that...

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      You know the Ethiopian drought was in the 80s right?

      I've been to Ethiopia. Much of it is rainy and cold.

  • Estimates it to be 350 million, and how many of those are going to die in the first fucking week due to transplant shock, and the most of the rest in the first month because no one bothered to water them. Kudu's for trying though.
    • by geekoid ( 135745 )

      irrelevant.
      Because you do it again , and again.

      eventually it's done.

    • I've planted many thousands of trees, and been involved with migrant crews planting many tens of thousands.

      None were watered after planting, and we aimed for a 60-75% take rate, depending on site quality.

      I'll assume the drought tolerance of the species planted was at least looked at for such a massive project. Probably something native that's early successional.

  • Ethiopia is decimated by massive wildfires as billions of dried out trees burn for months on end.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Trees are good. Solar power is good, but they compete for sun with those trees. Windmills are good. Nuclear power is better.

    What about Chernobyl? That is a design unique to Russia, no one would have been allowed to build such a reactor anywhere else in the world. The RBMK reactors like it that didn't blow up, had construction halted, or were shutdown, had modifications to prevent such an event from happening again.

    What of Fukushima or Three Mile Island? TMI was a shiny new reactor that was destroyed w

  • It's a good start (Score:5, Insightful)

    by neo-mkrey ( 948389 ) on Monday July 29, 2019 @02:56PM (#59007298)
    Even if only one out of a hundred trees survives, that's still millions of trees.
  • There are 86,400 seconds in one day. So 350,000,000 / 86,400 = approx 4,050 trees planted EVERY SECOND. Given general knowledge of planting plants, even with hi-tech automated machinery, can this actually get accomplished in one day? And think of the area/acreage needed, etc. Just questioning the amount. What do you guys think? thanks.
    • There are 86,400 seconds in one day. So 350,000,000 / 86,400 = approx 4,050 trees planted EVERY SECOND. Given general knowledge of planting plants, even with hi-tech automated machinery, can this actually get accomplished in one day? And think of the area/acreage needed, etc. Just questioning the amount. What do you guys think? thanks.

      I had the same questions. Nevermind the logistics nightmare of preparing and transporting 350 million seedlings all over the country to put them in the hands of people to be planted... all in one day. Impossible. I'm calling bullshit.

  • A few years ago, Texas suffered a severe drought. Estimates were that 65 million trees were killed just in the city of Houston that summer. Even with that number of dead trees, it was never apparent to a casual observer that there was any thinning of the tree population.

    It's a good effort, but it's going to take a LOT of trees to bring back the green.

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