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Important safeguards to protect rainforests lacking in REDD negotiating text
mongabay.com
November 06, 2009




Important safeguards to protect natural forests are still lacking in negotiating text on REDD, a proposed mechanism for mitigating climate change by paying developing countries to keep trees standing, reports an alliance of activist groups.

The Ecosystems Climate Alliance (ECA) — a group made up of Global Witness, the Rainforest Action Network, The Wilderness Society, the Environmental Investigation Agency, Wetlands International, the Humane Society International, Rainforest Foundation Norway, and Rainforest Foundation UK — warns the latest text (Non-Paper No. 39), released on Thursday afternoon, "contains no provisions to monitor vital safeguards in developing countries which will receive funding to implement REDD, nor any explicit language that will ensure an objective of protecting intact natural forests in those countries."

A statement released by the group says that a key safeguard "against the conversion of natural forests to forest plantations" — which vanished at the Bangkok talks in October — has been reinstated but "severely weakened" while protections against ongoing degradation of peatlands, which store massive amounts of carbon and account for 3 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions, are lacking.

"Still missing is the vital objective of protecting intact natural forests in REDD," Peg Putt of The Wilderness Society said in a statement. "Without this safeguard, REDD monies projected to preserve tropical forests could instead allow industrial-scale logging and replacement of forests with pulp or palm oil plantations."

"A REDD mechanism that does not provide adequate incentives to protect and rewet organic soils ignores very high and ongoing emissions that result from deforestation and forest degradation," said Susanna Tol of Wetlands International. "It could also stimulate and reward plantations on yet deforested and drained soils (and other ecosystems) with significant carbon stocks resulting in large emissions."

ECA says the text includes "decidedly weak" language on the rights and participation of indigenous and forest dependent peoples under REDD. The group also warns that developed countries are revising the text so they too can cash in on forestry-related credits.

"Parties have put forward various loopholes in the LULUCF [Land Use, Land-Use Change and Forestry] text that will allow each to arbitrarily adjust its own reference level for measuring greenhouse gas emissions from forest management, undermining their emissions targets under the Kyoto Protocol," said the ECA statement.

"Developed countries will bring their Christmas wish lists to Copenhagen," said Rebecca Ettlinger of Nepenthes, "so developing nations must plan to scrutinize their requests closely to avoid these undermining the integrity of the climate deal by hiding emissions or claiming fraudulent credits."

ECA says REDD must include "safeguards for transparent forest governance structures and support mechanisms; safeguards for the rights of indigenous peoples and local communities; safeguards on conservation of biological diversity and enhancement of ecosystem services; [and] an objective for protecting intact natural forests."







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  • Key REDD Posts

    In light of the UNFCCC meeting in Copenhagen, below are some recent important posts on REDD

  • New REDD text is weak, say activists (12/12/2009)
  • Google Earth to monitor deforestation (12/10/2009)
  • Developed countries plan to hide emissions from logging (12/09/2009)
  • Primer: Changing drivers of deforestation provides new opportunities for conservation (12/08/2009)
  • Brazilian tribe owns carbon rights to Amazon rainforest land (12/08/2009)
  • Primer: Destruction of old-growth forests looms over climate talks (12/08/2009)
  • Brazil could halt Amazon deforestation within a decade (12/03/2009)
  • Cheap REDD isn't the best conservation strategy for biodiversity (12/03/2009)
  • In absence of measures to address consumption, REDD may fail to protect forests (12/02/2009)
  • Brazil to push for 10% limit on REDD carbon offsets (12/02/2009)
  • Ethnographic maps built using cutting-edge technology may help Amazon tribes win forest carbon payments (11/29/2009)
  • Ecological benefits of REDD boosted by inclusion of private landowners, potentially harmed by plantations (11/17/2009)
  • Emissions from deforestation overestimated; 12% rather than 17% (11/04/2009)
  • Without reinstatement of key provision, REDD could subsidize large-scale forest destruction (11/02/2009)
  • Curtailing tropical deforestation vital to U.S. interests (10/08/2009)
  • Prince Charles making progress in effort to save rainforests, says leading British environmentalist (09/22/2009)
  • Concerns over deforestation may drive new approach to cattle ranching in the Amazon (09/08/2009)
  • Limit palm oil development to lands that store less than 40 tons of carbon/ha - study (08/06/2009)
  • Are we on the brink of saving rainforests? (07/22/2009)
  • Palm oil companies trade plantation concessions for carbon credits from forest conservation (07/22/2009)
  • Indonesia releases revenue sharing rules for REDD forest carbon projects (07/13/2009)
  • Big REDD (07/08/2009)
  • A New Idea to Save Tropical Forests Takes Flight (06/29/2009)
  • Fate of world's rainforests likely to be determined in next 2 years (06/19/2009)
  • Amazon deforestation doesn't make communities richer, better educated, or healthier (06/11/2009)
  • Climate pact must halt deforestation and industrial logging of old-growth forests, exclude carbon credits for forest conservation, say activists (06/09/2009)
  • Brazil's plan to save the Amazon rainforest (06/02/2009)
  • Excluding forest carbon from climate policy will spur massive deforestation (05/28/2009)
  • Indigenous people serve as guardians of forest carbon, must be involved in climate solutions (04/22/2009)
  • Avoided deforestation projects highly desirable for carbon offsets finds survey (04/21/2009)
  • How satellites are used in conservation (04/13/2009)
  • Can carbon credits from REDD compete with palm oil? (03/30/2009)
  • Norway emerges as champion of rainforest conservation (03/19/2009)
  • 37,000 sq km of Amazon rainforest destroyed or damaged in 2008 (03/19/2009)
  • Pricing emissions from farming, logging could shift land use towards conservation (02/15/2009)
  • Kerry, Lugar: U.S. has opportunity to lead on climate, forest conservation (02/10/2009)
  • Guidelines on how to establish an avoided deforestation project (01/22/2009)
  • How to save the Amazon rainforest (01/04/2009)
  • New standards ensure forest carbon projects protect indigenous people, biodiversity (12/08/2008)
  • Carbon conservation schemes will fail without forest people (10/16/2008)
  • UK government: rainforests are weapon against global warming (10/15/2008)
  • Biofuels 200 times more expensive than forest conservation for global warming mitigation (08/27/2008)
  • Markets could save rainforests: an interview with Andrew Mitchell (08/17/2008)
  • Investors seek profit from conserving rainforest biodiversity (08/13/2008)
  • Carbon tax will ease transition to sensible climate policy (08/13/2008)
  • Investing to save rainforests (04/02/2008)
  • Shift from poverty-driven to industry-driven deforestation may help conservation (08/06/2008)

    More REDD articles

    DEFORESTATION DATA

  • Country statistics
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  • Primer on deforestation
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  • Deforestation info for kids




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