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Eucalyptus: licences allow for “even more planting until end 2019”

eucalyptusFollowing the devastating wildfires of 2017, PS Socialists pledged to limit the planting of fire-spreading eucalyptus. But media reports have revealed there are licences still in place allowing for the planting of “even more” of these trees until the end of 2019.

This is because the licences were obtained under a law that only ‘fell’ on December 31, 2017 and gave pulp producers two years of planting authorisation.

The fact that a new law prohibiting any proliferation of eucalyptus plantations came into effect on the very next day has not changed the permissions one jot - leaving a whole year now for pulp companies to plant to their hearts’ content.

Making the situation even worse is the fact that eucalyptus trees grow wherever their seeds have fallen - and in wildfires seeds can be projected for over 100 metres.

President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa highlighted this dilemma late last year, saying it was a huge challenge that can only be overcome by local communities rolling up their sleeves and tackling the ‘enemy’ head on (click here).

With thanks to the Portugal Resident http://portugalresident.com/

 

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Comments  

+1 #6 liveaboard 2019-01-17 11:35
Quoting Peter Booker:
In my experience, pines of whatever variety are enormously combustible.
.

That's exactly what I mean; everyone is repeating the refrain about the problem being eucalyptus, but all dry organic material can burn.
Native trees too.
Even if the forest isn't being kept for financial gain, it burns just the same.
+1 #5 Peter Booker 2019-01-16 14:11
Quoting liveaboard:
I don't let these evil foreign trees grow on my land; just lots of good native Atlantic pines.
They self-seed too. At least to 50 meters.
Perfectly safe I'm sure.


Are you sure, liveaboard? In my experience, pines of whatever variety are enormously combustible.

People concentrate on eucalyptus, but on our land I am concentrating on a pest which has similar characteristics to eucalyptus, and that is the acacia. That too grows quickly, is difficult to eradicate and burns fiercely.
+1 #4 liveaboard 2019-01-16 12:29
I don't let these evil foreign trees grow on my land; just lots of good native Atlantic pines.
They self-seed too. At least to 50 meters.
Perfectly safe I'm sure.
+1 #3 Peter Booker 2019-01-15 10:43
Whom does the President mean when he refers to the enemy? The trees? The pulp companies? Or the government which allows replanting against the public will?

As you rightly show, Ed, it is not enough merely to stop the planting. Both self-seeding and the ability of tree stumps to spring back to life will keep this issue live for years to come.
+4 #2 Darren 2019-01-15 09:22
Certainly we all saw Prezzie Rebelo roll up his sleeves last year on TV and make weak tugs at tiny eucalyptus spriglets that were already a metre embedded in the ground. Presumably on public ground, certainly with the landowners permission so not needing his police protection. But how does Mr Ordinary get stuck into the eucalyptus on neighbours land threatening their homes and lives? Without triggering the inevitable feud; great stress and court action ? (Incidentally, for anyone with rolled up sleeves; beheading a baby eucalyptus as shown on TV does not kill it - just gets it excited.)
+2 #1 charly 2019-01-14 19:51
Less euchalyptus trees ? That must have been a slip of the tongue, you know !

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