| Time to deal with 25% of global carbon emissions
Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd
Deforestation contributes between 18-25% of annual greenhouse gas
(GHGs) emissions. The lack of incentives for forest protection under
the Kyoto Protocol and the EU emissions trading scheme (EUTS) are
undermining our ability to stabilise the climate by mid-century.
Deforestation is by far the largest source of emissions from
developing countries, contributing an amount greater than total US
fossil fuel emissions. Indonesia and Brazil are now the world’s third
and fourth largest emitters almost entirely because of deforestation.
The reason is simple: it is more profitable to cut down a tree than to
leave it standing. For forest communities and landowners, felling trees
for timber, fuel and agriculture, however destructive, generates real
income. In contrast, no one pays them to protect and restore the
forests on which they, and we, rely.
Call for reform of CDM
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Preservation and restoration of of tropical
forests and the planting of new forests is
essential to the developing world |
Deforestation is excluded and afforestation and reforestation only
partially included under the Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development
Mechanism (CDM) and the rules are so onerous that there are no
operational commercial projects. The mechanism needs to be radically
reformed to encourage afforestation and reforestation. World demand
for timber will not simply disappear. If we want reduced deforestation
there must also be afforestation and reforestation to compensate for the
lost supply.
Following a two-year consultation, COP 13 will see critical decisions
taken for land use and forestry in the developing world. Linking emission
reductions from avoided deforestation to the carbon market and
allowing for early action crediting are essential to curb deforestation, to
climate stabilisation and to the realisation of a post-2012 treaty.
The preservation and restoration of tropical forests, together with the
planting of new forests, represent the single largest means of reducing
GHG emissions over the next half-century. Payments for carbon
sequestration offer the only realistic opportunity to incentivise a shift
from the current paradigm of exploitation to one of stewardship. At
least US$15-20 billion is required annually to reduce tropical
deforestation by 50%. This is far greater than the total global public
sector and not-for-profit expenditure on conservation.
Indisputable role of forests
Forests are a long-term store of carbon. They have covered vast
areas of the earth’s surface for millennia, and contain 60% of terrestrial
carbon. Avoided deforestation, reforestation, re-vegetation, afforestation
and sustainable management all reduce emissions and generate
emissions reductions. Photosynthesis is by far the most efficient carbon
storage technology and the only means we have of absorbing carbon
from the atmosphere. Burning the forest both releases carbon into the
atmosphere and reduces the Earth’s ability to re-absorb it. Forests also
provide livelihoods for the poorest and a means of adaptation to the
most vulnerable, preserve watersheds, protect soils and biodiversity. By
crediting forest activity, the carbon market channels the enormous sums
required to provide a real alternative to continued forest and species
loss and the attendant human suffering.
To avoid irreversible damage to the planet the temperatures must
not increase more than 20C. This implies that annual emissions
cannot exceed 31 Gt CO2e. Achieving that target requires significant
emission reductions which cannot be achieved at an acceptable cost
without forestry offsets. McKinsey has found that at a cost of €40 t
CO2e offsetting emissions through tropical forestry accounts for a
larger share, 25%, of potential abatement than any other sector,
including the power sector: 50% from avoided deforestation and 50%
from forest restoration and afforestation.
This new awareness of the role forestry must play has generated
momentum for the inclusion of forest credits in the carbon market at
COP 13. The Coalition for Rainforest Nations has galvanised efforts
worldwide to ensure the inclusion of emission reductions from avoided
deforestation. The Forests Now Declaration, sponsored by the Global
Canopy Programme, was launched in Brazil in September 2007 calling
on governments to take immediate action to include forest credits in all
carbon markets. The declaration has been endorsed by over 260
prominent individuals and leading nongovernmental organisations,
including: E.O.Wilson, Ghillean Prance, Peter Raven,Tom Lovejoy,
Conservation International, Flora and Fauna International,Wildlife
Conservation Society and Care International. Wangari Maathai, Nobel
Peace Prize Laureate and Founder of the Green Belt Movement, said in
support of the Declaration:
“We need a mechanism that will assist people in developing
countries, certainly in Africa, to protect their standing forests and
plant trees, to protect their soil, protect biodiversity and protect
livelihoods while reducing carbon emissions for everyone.”
In short, the entire world now recognizes the importance of tropical
and sub-tropical forests; it is time to realise their potential.
Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd was formed in 1999 by leaders
in emerging market business development, conservation and human
rights advocacy to realise the opportunity to channel large scale
private sector investment into tropical and sub-tropical forests on a
sustainable and ethical basis. The SFM Group of companies is active
in Africa, Latin America, and Australasia. SFM is establishing itself as
the world’s leading company in ethical and sustainable land use
incorporating emerging environmental markets. It is building a global
portfolio of forest assets to become a leading supplier of carbon and
other environmental credits and services to the world’s emissions
and environmental trading markets.
W: www.sfm.bm |