In just a single day, Indians have planted an impressive quarter-billion tree saplings in their quest to clean the air.

Whereas mass tree planting operations around the globe are receiving more and more skepticism for their actual impacts on climate stabilization, the last four major plantings in the state of Uttar Pradesh have climbed to an impressive average sapling survival rate of 80%.

As per Peter Wohlleben, the renowned German forester and author of The Secret Life of Treesour woody neighbors need an average 50 years of growth before their full “sequestration” potential can be achieved—but the fact that many of Uttar Pradesh’s new trees are now going on five means there’s a much better chance for them surviving any pests, drought, or other perils to become contributing members of tree society.

Along riverbanks and highways, and on farms, schools, and in forests, Sunday saw millions of residents of the most-populous Indian state continue what is now a yearly tradition (a year ago, 20 million saplings were planted along the Ganges).

“We are committed to increasing the forest cover of Uttar Pradesh to over 15% of the total land area in the next five years,” said state forest official Manoj Singh.

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According to DW, the forest cover of the state has increased over the last few years.

“There has been an increase of 127 square kilometers [79 square miles] in the forest cover in Uttar Pradesh as compared to 2017,” a state government spokesperson was quoted as saying in The Indian Express newspaper.

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Mass tree plantings have been launched as an easy and inexpensive method of drawing carbon from the atmosphere, with hundreds of millions of trees being planted in countries around the world, including in ChinaPakistan, India, Madagascar, and the nations of the Sahel, especially Ethiopia and Senegal, GNN has reported.

Geo-tagged with QR codes, forest officials can monitor plantation survival rates and maintain records of success and failure at individual sites.

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Such efforts will be indispensable in India, which plants to expand its tree cover by 95 million hectares by 2030.

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1 COMMENT

  1. This is such a wonderful story as it shows that these people are taking it into their own hands to provide for their children and grandchildren. The news about the deforestations of the Amazon is so frightening. I know that Western countries and others provide financial help to the Amazon countries but they continue to destroy their natural habitat. Maybe it is time we put a proviso on those funds. We will give you half of it now and when you show us that you are not logging off and planting more trees we will give you the rest. I realize this sounds like we are bullying them and trying to take over running their country but it is also our planet that we all have to live on.

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