|
|
Peru to raise payment to indigenous communities for Amazon forest conservation Rhett A. Butler, mongabay.com August 03, 2009 The $3.30-per-hectare figure is low by international standards. Under a proposed mechanism that compensates countries for reducing deforestation (REDD), forest land could be worth $800 or more per hectare for its carbon (225 tons of carbon/ha), depending on its level of threat. Forests in areas of high deforestation would be compensated at a higher rate than inaccessible forests at low-risk of development. But Brack left open the possibility that communities could receive higher payment if parties agree to include REDD compensation in a future climate framework.
The initiative could generate nearly $37 million for indigenous communities which control 11 million hectares of forest in the country. Presently indigenous communities are said to receive $30,000 per year in direct international support for forest conservation. The announcement comes less three months after Japan agreed to loan Peru $120 million to protect 55 million hectares (212,000 square miles) of Amazon rainforest over the next ten years. Germany has also pledged 5 million euros ($7 million) to forest conservation in the country. The measure is expected to avoid emissions of 20 billion tons of carbon dioxide, or more than 60 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions in 2005. “One of the worst problems about global warming is that mankind in the last 500 years has destroyed 50 percent of forests on the planet and that is a very serious problem indeed,” Brack was quoted as saying. “Up to now development has consisted of the woodland practice of slash and burn to clear land for crops and livestock, but that has given mediocre results because of the 10 million hectares (39,000 square miles) where that has been done, 8 million hectares (31,000 acres) are unproductive. It’s shameful and we can’t keep doing it." he said, adding that programs aims “to save these forests and at the same time see how we can give a basic income to these communities for the woodland they preserve.”
Peru — home to the fourth largest extent of tropical rainforests after Brazil, Congo, and Indonesia — has historically had one of the lowest annual deforestation rates in the Amazon basin, but forest loss has been increasing in recent years due to illegal logging, mining, agriculture, and expansion of road networks, including the paving of a highway that provides access to a remote and biologically-rich region in southeastern part of the country. In 2005 — the most recent year for which data is available — at least 150,000 hectares of forest was lost, while a similar area was degraded through logging and other activities. Conflict between developers and native communities has been escalating over the past year. In June more than 30 were killed in a clash between indigenous protesters and federal police over the government's plan to promote energy development in the Amazon rainforest. More than 70 percent of the Peruvian Amazon is now under foreign concession.
SHARE THIS ARTICLE:
News index | RSS | News Feed | Twitter | Home Advertisements: Organic Apparel from Patagonia | Insect-repelling clothing
|
|
|
MONGABAY.COM
WEEKLY NEWSLETTER INTERACT
STORE SHIRTS HIGH RESOLUTION PHOTOS / PRINTS
CALENDARS
CANVAS BAGS
| | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Copyright mongabay 2009 |