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Indians plant millions of saplings amid mass campaign

Indians plant millions of saplings amid mass campaign

Indian labourers plant saplings as part of an annual tree planting campaign on the outskirts of Prayagraj, in northern Uttar Pradesh state, India, Jul 4, 2021. (Photo: AP/Rajesh Kumar Singh)

LUCKNOW: More than a million people on Sunday )Jul 4) began planting 250 million saplings in India’s most populous state, part of an annual mass tree planting campaign to reduce carbon emissions and mitigate the effects of global climate change.

Lawmakers, government officials and volunteers from social organisations swarmed riverbanks, farms, forests, schools and government buildings, planting saplings at designated spots. The effort spans 68,000 villages and 83,000 forest sites in northern Uttar Pradesh state.

India has pledged to keep a third of its total land area under forest and tree cover, but a growing population and increasing demand for industrial projects has placed greater stress on the land.

READ: Bhutan’s tree warrior - Spreading life in the world’s most climate conscious nation

Social organisations planted a large number of “peepal” trees (Ficus religiosa) in Lucknow, the state capital, which is recovering from a devastating surge of coronavirus infections.

“This tree is known to release maximum oxygen. So this plant is the ‘need of the hour’, as we are reminded of its importance after facing the oxygen shortage crisis when the outbreak was at its peak,” said Shachindra Sharma, an activist.

India, a country of nearly 1.4 billion people, crossed the grim milestone on Friday of more than 400,000 people lost to the coronavirus. That number is thought to be a vast undercount because of a lack of testing and reporting.

New cases are on the decline after exceeding 400,000 a day in May, but authorities are preparing for another possible wave and are trying to ramp up vaccination.

India on Sunday recorded 43,071 new infections in the past 24 hours, raising the total cases to 30.5 million. Uttar Pradesh state reported 128 new cases in the same period.

“We are committed to increasing the forest cover of Uttar Pradesh state to over 15 per cent of the total land area in the next five years. In today’s campaign, over 100 million trees will be planted,” said Manoj Singh, a senior state forest official.

COMMENTARY: Planting trees is a safe climate action but are its benefits inflated?

Indian forest department officials plant saplings as part of an annual tree planting campaign on the outskirts of Prayagraj, in northern Uttar Pradesh state, India, Jul 4, 2021. (Photo: AP/Rajesh Kumar Singh)

Since the launch of the tree-planting drive four years ago, the forest cover of Uttar Pradesh - home to 230 million people - has gone up by more than 3 per cent, compared to the national average of 2.89 per cent, said state Forest Minister Dara Singh Chauhan.

The long-term survival of trees planted in such mass campaigns remains a concern. Usually, only 60 per cent of saplings survive, with the rest succumbing to disease or lack of water, he said.

However, Chauhan said the survival rate of saplings in the past four years has gone up to 80 per cent, thanks to better care and methods such as geotagging trees with QR codes in order to monitor their growth.

India’s federal government is encouraging all 28 states to expedite tree-planting drives to increase forest cover, part of commitments made at the 2015 climate change summit in Paris.

The government designated more than US$6.2 billion for tree planting across the country, in keeping with its pledge to push India’s forest cover to 95 million ha by 2030.

Source: AP

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