|
|||||
Greenpeace Report Threatens
Author: Daniel NepstadClimate Change Mitigation And Tropical Forests Related LinksThis article was originally published on the Mongabay website. Click here to read the origianl.Tweet 26 September 2012 | From 2008 through 2010, deforestation in the states of the Brazilian Amazon declined steeply, lowering reductions in CO2 emissions to the atmosphere by approximately 1.5 billion tons. During this same period, the 30 nations that participate in the world’s largest carbon market—the European Union’s “Emissions Trading Scheme” (EU ETS)—reduced emissions by about 1.9 billion tons. There is an important difference between these two extremely important steps towards emissions reductions. The first was achieved through climate-related donations of approximately US$ 0.47 billion. The second involved financial transactions of US$ 411 billion—roughly 875 times more money. Greenpeace’s new report , Outsourcing Hot Air, could help to slow—or reverse—the progress of tropical states and provinces around the world in reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation. (REDD) If Brazilian Amazon states are to continue their remarkable progress in slowing deforestation and mitigating climate change, they urgently need a signal that their efforts are recognized and that some portion of their costs will be recovered. California’s “Global Warming Solutions Act” (AB32) is one of the few possible sources of finance for rewarding the performance of state-wide REDD programs. If progress is going to spread beyond Brazil to the major deforesting provinces of Indonesia and to the forest states of Mexico, Peru, and Nigeria, then the four-year-old collaboration among these governments through the Governors’ Climate and Forests Task Force (GCF) must be strengthened and expanded. This collaboration shares approaches to state- and province-wide land-use planning, policy reform, law enforcement, moratoria on illegal activities, improved forest monitoring, benefit allocation, and stakeholder participation.
The report’s logic is simple but flawed. It assumes that that there will be a one-for-one trade-off through the REDD offset measure, with, at best, a neutral impact on the atmosphere. It singles out the Lacandon Maya conservation payment scheme as the illustration of its critique. The report criticizes an emerging emission offset system that is in the early stages of development and years from implementation. California’s AB32 REDD offset provision, if it survives attacks and the California budget crisis, is intended to link California companies with jurisdictional REDD programs. Projects such as the one in the Lacandon Maya forest would not qualify for offsets unless there is a measurable, verifiable impact on emissions reductions. The California AB32 REDD offset mechanism is one of several options under consideration within the GCF for deliver benefits to governments and critical sectors of society who are keeping forests standing and improving the livelihood of economically marginalized communities. If it survives, it could provide a crucial proof of concept that could send an extremely powerful message to tropical governments and societies around the world—that successful programs for significantly lowering tropical deforestation and forest degradation will be recognized and rewarded. It is in the context of the “REDD Offset Working Group” (ROW), involving representatives from the California, Chiapas, and Acre State Governments, together with experts from several fields, that possible designs for this system are under development and will soon be available for public review. These designs will be compatible with the REDD+ decisions taken within the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. UN-driven climate change mitigation is now 20 years old and is not progressing fast enough. We must pragmatically identify all of the near-term potential pathways to large-scale emissions reduction that can also protect and restore native ecosystems and other forms of natural capital while improving the lives of economically marginalized communities. A handful of tropical states are mitigating emissions at the scale of the Kyoto Protocol, virtually off the radar of the UN policy processes (Nepstad et al. 2012). It is time to recognize and reinforce the innovation that is behind this progress and make sure that it is built into the policy regimes that will be needed to slow climate change over the long term. ![]() Please see our Reprint Guidelines for details on republishing our articles.
Keyword Search:
|
































