1993 US Northwest Forest Plan Turns Public Forests into Carbon Sink


Enacted in 1993, before climate change was so prominent in the public media eye, the US Northwest Forest Plan’s primary goal was the conservation of old growth forests on public land, and thereby also protecting threatened and endangered species, such as the northern spotted owl. Forest harvests in those public forests dropped precipitously, by 82%, the next year. Nearly two decades later, it turns out that the Plan has yielded unintended, though no less favorable results in terms of mitigating the effect of increasing carbon dioxide emissions.


One response to “1993 US Northwest Forest Plan Turns Public Forests into Carbon Sink”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *