Insurer Unveils Million Tree Plan

Zurich Insurance is to sponsor the planting of 1 million trees to restore a South American rainforest.

The group said it will sponsor a targeted, sustainable reforestation project in Brazil to convert barren farmland back into native forest that is rich in plant and animal life.  The scheme is seeking to replant 1 million trees in what was Brazil’s Atlantic Rainforest which saw large areas of the forest cleared for cattle.

“Tree planting can be a powerful tool for curbing climate change and preserving the variety of animals, plants and ecosystems we have on our planet,” said Alison Martin, Zurich’s CEO Europe, Middle East & Africa and Bank Distribution. “It’s not always about how many trees you plant, but about their quality and ability to support other forms of life. With this project, we are contributing to an aspect of climate change mitigation that is often overlooked: biodiversity.”

“Successful reforestation requires planning, management and engagement. Over the next eight years, we want to inspire colleagues, customers and local communities to further recognize the importance of biodiversity.”

The eight-year project will help to restore Brazil’s Atlantic Forest, the ‘other’ Brazilian rainforest, by planting 1 million carefully selected native trees in collaboration with non-profit Instituto Terra.  The insurer said the scheme was part of the commitment made last year when Zurich became the first insurer to sign the UN Business Ambition for 1.5°C Pledge. Healthy forests based on native species help to avoid ‘green deserts’ or monoculture plantations that cannot support functional ecosystems.

The firm said it was determined to remain a champion of the growing need to address climate change in connection with biodiversity loss. It said the two are mutually reinforcing each other as numbers of animal and plant species decline faster than ever. Diversity within and between species and ecosystems is key to addressing climate change, long-term food security, as well as preventing future pandemics, according to the 2020 United Nations’ (UN) Global Biodiversity Outlook 5.

Zurich warned none of the 20 objectives to preserve this diversity set out by the UN for the period 2010 to 2020 has been met, according to the same report.

“The Atlantic Forest initiative will complement Zurich’s long-standing cooperation with conservation project Rimba Raya in Indonesia and strengthen Zurich’s engagement in ecological conservation in some of the hardest hit areas of deforestation globally,” it said.

The trees will be planted over the next eight years to recreate a self-sustaining subtropical forest on land in Minas Gerais province that was cleared for cattle farming in the 20th century. Just 7 percent of Brazil’s original Atlantic Forest remains. Zurich’s contribution to the reforestation project will put 80 to 120 different species of tree on 700 hectares of land (equivalent to >850 soccer fields), gradually increasing the forest’s biodiversity and capturing carbon from the atmosphere.

The project was started in 1998 by Instituto Terra, a private, non-profit organization founded by the internationally renowned and award-winning photographer, Sebastião Salgado, and his wife Lélia.

A tree will be planted for each of Zurich’s 55,000 employees, with the remainder available to customers through offers to plant trees when they purchase insurance policies.

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