ONE HUNDRED MILLION TREES WILL BE SECURED IN HAWAI'I BY 2030, BY PLANTING, GROWING AND RESTORATION. The State of Hawai'i made its pledge public today, in concert with the World Economic Forum initiative, One Trillion Trees.
The One Trillion Trees pledge aims to make trees front and center in the removal of carbon from the atmosphere and the combating of global warming. The State of Hawai'i made the pledge in a video announcement by Gov. David Ige on internationally streamed Global Citizen Live events in Los Angeles and New York today.
The lead agency for securing 100 million trees in Hawai'i will be the state Department of Land & Natural Resources, with support from the state Department of Defense and Department of Transportation.
The pledge is to plant, conserve or restore ten million trees a year in Hawai'i for the next decade.
State of Hawai'i pledges to secure ten million trees a year over the next decade through planting, restoring and growing to expand forests. Photo from One Trillion Trees |
DLNR announced seven action areas: Protect existing forests; conserve private land through legal protections; plant trees to restore existing forest lands; plant trees to reclaim unused rural lands where forests used to exist, plant trees to advance agroforestry, plant trees in urban areas and facilitate natural regeneration.
State Department of Defense Adjutant General Kenneth Hara said, "DOD is pledging to plant 1,200 trees annually and is proud to be part of this global initiative."
World Economic Forum announced that it has received support for its One Trillion Trees initiative from countries, NGOs and companies, with commitments for 2.5 billion trees, as of Sept. 23. See more at 1t.org where the organizers explain:
"Healthy and resilient trees and forests are one part of the efforts needed to combat climate change. Studies have shown trees can reduce urban heat island effects by up to 5°C and energy costs by $7.8 billion a year. Globally, sustainable management of forests could create $230 billion in business opportunities and 16 million jobs worldwide by 2030. From a health perspective, trees absorb 17.4 million tons of air pollutants a year, helping to prevent 670,000 cases of asthma and other acute respiratory symptoms annually. The chance of extreme wildfires occurring also decreases dramatically when forests are managed properly by, for example, growing specially-selected tree species in burned areas and using novel planting techniques for resilience to future wildfires."
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A MANUFACTURING DAY 2021 event will be Tuesday, Oct. 19 from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.. Entitled A Collaborative Future, it is sponsored by Chamber of Commerce of Hawai'i, Innovate Hawai'i and the Manufacturing Institute. Attendance is available online. The Chamber announced:
"Manufacturing Day is a national celebration of the 12 million men and women who work in manufacturing nationwide and is supported by a proclamation from Gov. David Ige. This event will feature speakers Dana Shapiro from the Hawaii Ulu Cooperative (See eatbreadfruit.com) and representatives from La Tour Bakehouse (See latourbakehouse.com) who will speak about the importance of manufacturing in Hawai'i and their visions of a collaborative future. They will also give a virtual tour of their facilities and partake in a Q&A session with the audience. Gary Yoshioka, president of Diamond Bakery and the Hawai'i Food Manufacturers Association will moderate.
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DERECK LEE HUDDY is the identity of the 59-year-old Nāʻālehu man who died Friday on Kaalaiki Road near the Makino Junction above Nāʻālehu. According to police, he was not wearing a seat belt at the time of the one vehicle crash.
Police responded to a 4:25 p.m. call Friday when a camouflage 2021 Polaris Ranger XP1000 utility vehicle heading east made a right turn when the driver lost control of the vehicle which rolled over.
Police responded to a 4:25 p.m. call Friday when a camouflage 2021 Polaris Ranger XP1000 utility vehicle heading east made a right turn when the driver lost control of the vehicle which rolled over.
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