More rain, fewer droughts – rainfall effects from targeted forestation can reduce climate change | PIK

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© Ahmet Kurt

INSIGHT by the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK)


By prioritizing increases in rainfall, forestation programs may not only mitigate global climate change itself but also reduce its concrete negative effects such as droughts. That is the conclusion of a new study by a team of researchers including the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK).

 

“As climate change is creating or intensifying droughts across the globe, targeted ecosystem restoration is an effective countermeasure through planting trees that generate their own rainfall.”

-Nico Wunderling, scientist at PIK and one of the authors of the study published in the journal Global Change Biology

 

As such, forestation promotes rainfall by enhancing evapotranspiration which in turn increases the moisture in the atmosphere. If done wisely, forestation could be used to reduce climate change-induced drying over downwind regions that are in need of water, the authors find.

Focus areas for forestation with targeted rainfall enhancement could be the southern Amazon, Mexico, eastern China and Mediterranean Europe – as these regions are projected to become drier due to global climate change.

Regardless of their positive hydrological effects, massive increases in forest growth should not come at the expense of native well-functioning ecosystems such as natural grasslands nor should they endanger local water resources, the authors of the study stress.

Full article: Targeted rainfall enhancement as an objective of forestation. 

 


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