Africa The Great Green Wall of Africa is a ~5,000 mile forest being planted across the
continent to stop the spread of the
Sahara Desert to the south.
Australia In
Adelaide,
South Australia (a city of 1.3 million as of June 2016), Premier
Mike Rann (2002 to 2011) launched an urban forest initiative in 2003 to plant 3 million native trees and shrubs by 2014 on 300 project sites across the metro area. Thousands of Adelaide citizens participated in community planting days on sites including parks, reserves, transport corridors, schools, water courses and coastline. Only native trees were planted to ensure genetic integrity. Rann said the project aimed to beautify and cool the city and make it more livable, improve air and water quality, and reduce Adelaide's greenhouse gas emissions by 600,000 tonnes of a year.
Canada In 2003, the government of
Canada created a four-year project called the Forest 2020 Plantation Development and Assessment Initiative, which involved planting 6000 ha of fast-growing forests on non-forested lands countrywide. These plantations were used to analyze how afforestation can help to increase
carbon sequestration and mitigate greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions while also considering the economic and investment attractiveness of afforestation. The results of the initiative showed that although there is not enough available land in Canada to completely offset the country's GHG emissions, afforestation can be useful mitigation technique for meeting GHG emission goals, especially until permanent, more advanced carbon storage technology becomes available. On 14 December 2020, Canada's Minister of Natural Resources
Seamus O'Regan announced the federal government's investment of $3.16 billion to plant two billion trees over the next 10 years. This plan aims to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by an estimated 12
megatonnes by 2050.
China levees in
Hubei province
Doubling of forest coverage between 1980 and 2021 China had the highest afforestation rate of any country or region in the world, with 4.77 million hectares (47,000 square kilometers) of afforestation in 2008. According to the 2021 government work report, forest coverage will reach 24 percent based on the main targets and tasks for the 14th Five-Year Plan period.
Tree-planting laws and school-children A law in China from 1981 requires that every school student over the age of 11 plants at least one tree per year.
Other From 2011 to 2016, the city
Dongying in
Shandong province forested over 13,800 hectares of
saline soil through the Shandong Ecological Afforestation Project, which was launched with support from the
World Bank. In 2017, the
Saihanba Afforestation Community won the UN
Champions of the Earth Award in the Inspiration and Action category for "transforming degraded land into a lush paradise". The successful afforestation of the
Loess Plateau involved collaborative efforts by international and domestic professionals alongside villagers. Through this initiative, millions of villagers across four of China's poorest provinces were able to improve farming practices and increase incomes and employment, alleviating poverty. In addition, the careful selection of trees ensured a healthy, self-sustainable ecosystem between tree and soil which facilitated a net
carbon sink. The Loess Plateau, although successful, was costly, reaching almost US$500 million. to one of the lowest in the world. Regarding the effects of afforestation on long-term carbon stocks and
carbon sequestration these decrease when trees are less than 5 years old and increase quickly thereafter. This means trees from monoculture planting that do not survive never reach full potential for carbon sequestration to offset China's carbon output. Overall, there is a possibility for afforestation to balance carbon levels and aid
carbon neutrality, but several challenges still remain which hinder an all encompassing effort. The Chinese government requires
mining companies to restore the environment around exhausted mines by refilling excavated pits and planting crops or
trees. Many mining companies use these recovered mines for
ecotourism business. The
European Union (EU) has paid farmers for afforestation since 1990, offering grants to turn
farmland into forest and payments for the management of forest. As part of the Green Deal, the EU program "3 Billion Tree Planting Pledge by 2030" provides direction on afforestation of previous farmland in addition to reforestation. According to
Food and Agriculture Organization statistics,
Spain had the third fastest afforestation rate in Europe in the 1990–2005 period, after Iceland and Ireland. In those years, a total of 44,360 square kilometers were afforested, and the total
forest cover rose from 13.5 to 17.9 million hectares. In 1990, forests covered 26.6% of the Spanish territory. As of 2007, that figure had risen to 36.6%. Spain today has the fifth largest forest area in the European Union.
India As of 2023 the total forest and tree cover in India was 22%. The forests of India are grouped into 5 major categories and 16 types based on
biophysical criteria. 38% of the forest is categorized as
subtropical dry
deciduous and 30% as tropical moist deciduous and other smaller groups. In 2016 the Indian government passed the CAMPA (
Compensatory Afforestation Fund Management and Planning Authority) law, allowing about 40 thousand crores rupees (almost $6 Billion) to go to Indian states for
planting trees. The funds were to be used for treatment of
catchment areas, assisted natural generation, forest management, wildlife protection and management, relocation of villages from protected areas, management of human-wildlife conflicts, training and awareness generation, supply of wood saving devices and allied activities. Increasing the tree cover would also help in creating additional carbon sinks to meet the nation's Intended Nationally Determined Contribution (INDC) of 2.5 to 3 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent through additional forest and tree cover by 2030 - part of India's efforts to
combat climate change. In 2016 the
Maharashtra government planted almost 20,000,000 saplings and pledged to plant another 30,000,000 the following year. In 2019, 220 million trees were planted in a single day in the Indian state of
Uttar Pradesh.
Israel With wood production as a main objective, monocultures of
Aleppo pine were vigorously planted between 1948 and the 1970s. Following a massive collapse of this species in the 1990s, due to attacks by the insect pine blast scale, the Aleppo pine was gradually replaced by
Pinus brutia. Since the 1990s there has been a trend towards more ecological approaches planting mixed forests combining pines with broadleaf Mediterranean species e.g. oak, pistachio, carob, olive, arbutus and buckthorn. About 250 million trees have been planted through the
JNF across Israel since 1990. Tree coverage increased from 2% in 1948 to over 8% at present.
Japan United Kingdom In January 2013, the
UK government set a target of 12% woodland cover in
England by 2060, up from the then 10%. In
Wales the National Assembly for Wales has set a target of 19% woodland cover, up from 15%. Government-backed initiatives such as the
Woodland Carbon Code are intended to support this objective by encouraging corporations and landowners to create new woodland to offset their carbon emissions.
Scotland Charitable groups such as
Trees for Life (Scotland) contribute to afforestation and reforestation efforts in the UK.
United States In the 1800s people moving westward in the US encountered the
Great Plains – land with fertile soil, a growing population and a demand for timber but with few trees to supply it. So tree planting was encouraged along homesteads.
Arbor Day was founded in 1872 by
Julius Sterling Morton in Nebraska City. By the 1930s the
Dust Bowl environmental disaster signified a reason for adding significant new tree cover. Public works programs under
the New Deal saw the planting of 18,000 miles of
windbreaks stretching from North Dakota to Texas to fight soil erosion (see
Great Plains Shelterbelt). ==See also==