The mangroves are coming back. After decades of chainsaws and shrimp farms, the green fringe along tropical coastlines is thickening. A new report, released this morning, claims a 23% increase in mangrove cover across eight pilot countries since 2015. The UK's Overseas Development Institute is taking a victory lap. They provided the funding. They provided the satellite data. They provided the experts on the ground.
The headlines will be kind to Whitehall. They will say 'UK-backed conservation saves the planet.' They will not mention that British banks financed half the shrimp farms that chewed up the original forests. They will not mention that the same government now patting itself on the back was, a decade ago, handing out export credits for palm oil plantations that drained the peat. This is how the game is played. You break it. You pay to fix it. You claim the moral high ground.
But let's look at the numbers. The report is careful. It says 'pilot countries.' That means Bangladesh, Indonesia, Kenya, a few others. The big ones. The ones where the destruction was worst. The recovery is real. In the Sundarbans, the tiger's last stronghold, the saplings are three feet taller than they were in 2018. In the Mekong delta, the locals are planting again. They are doing it because they see the value. The shrimp catches are better where the mangroves are healthy. The storms do less damage. The carbon credits are a bonus. The money from London just speeds things up.
Behind the scenes, there is a quiet row. The conservation NGOs are happy. The local governments are happy. But the Foreign Office is nervous. They want the headlines. They do not want the scrutiny. A source in the department tells me the Minister is planning a press conference next week. They will be joined by a Hollywood actor who flew in on a private jet. The optics will be perfect. The emissions from the jet will be offset by the mangroves. This is the sort of circular logic that keeps the system running.
The real story is not the trees. It is the power. Who gets to claim the carbon credits? Who gets the money from the World Bank? Who gets the glory? The report hints at tensions. It mentions 'benefit-sharing agreements' are still being negotiated. Translation: the local communities are fighting for a slice of the pie. The UK government wants the credits to count towards their net-zero target. The private investors want a return. The villagers want their land back. Someone will lose. It is usually the villagers.
The polling on this is clear. The British public loves a good news story about the environment. They are tired of doom. The government knows this. They are betting that the headline 'Mangroves saved' will drown out the noise about the Rwanda asylum plan or the crumbling schools. It might work. It usually does. But the people who know the coastlines are watching. They remember the chainsaws. They remember the promises that were broken. They will take the trees. They will smile for the cameras. But they will not forget.
So yes, the mangroves are healing. It is a rare piece of good news in a world of bad. But do not mistake it for a happy ending. The game continues. The players change. The rules stay the same.










