Eoghan Daltun: Ireland's forestry policy needs a radical rethink — here's why and how
Left: Eoghan Daltun's native rainforest in Beara, West Cork. Right: sitka plantation for outdoors
Last week, the EU approved the Irish government’s Draft Forestry Plan, which aims to increase our level of ‘ woodland’ cover from 11 to 18% of land area. Given that the planet is in a dire climate and ecological crisis, this might appear wonderful news, but it’s actually the very opposite. Why?
Because the vast bulk of the trees envisaged will be non-native conifers and, like 90% of what we already have, these won’t be forests at all, but industrial plantation deadzones.
![<p> The International Union for the Conservation of Nature says that “an ecosystem is collapsed when it is virtually certain that its defining biotic [living] or abiotic [non-living] features are lost from all occurrences, and the characteristic native biota are no longer sustained”.</p> <p> The International Union for the Conservation of Nature says that “an ecosystem is collapsed when it is virtually certain that its defining biotic [living] or abiotic [non-living] features are lost from all occurrences, and the characteristic native biota are no longer sustained”.</p>](/cms_media/module_img/9930/4965053_12_augmentedSearch_iStock-1405109268.jpg)