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New money may be last hope for
rainforests
NICK MATHIASON misplaced
optimism over climate change initiatives
INDUSTRIAL clearance of rainforests accounts for 20% of greenhouse
gases. Every second of each day, a portion of jungle the size of a
football pitch is destroyed.
As timber is carted off for export, giant agribusinesses often move in.
And so spins the nightmare cycle – a growing release of carbon dioxide
into the atmosphere which in turn alters weather patterns and destroys
delicate ecosystems.
Climate-change economists believe that slowing the speed of rainforest
destruction is the most cost-effective way to fight global warming.
In his report into the economics of climate change last year, British
treasurer Sir Nicholas Stern said US$5 billion was needed to provide
rainforest nations with funds to ensure what remained was kept intact.
Many say he is unduly optimistic and put the real price at US$15
billion.
Even so, that seems a small cost for what appears to be a solid proposal
to fight climate change.
The issue facing countries such as Brazil, Indonesia and Sudan is how to
replace the huge cash windfalls they get from the 13 million hectares of
jungle destroyed every year.
For instance, logging in the Congo, which has the second largest
rainforest after the Amazon, rose significantly after relative stability
returned to the region five years ago.
It was encouraged by the World Bank, which saw deforestation as a route
to economic stability.
However, in about a month’s time, world leaders will start work in the
Indonesian island of Bali on a framework to replace the UN Kyoto climate
change agreement.
Bali is crucial if the world is to stop a catastrophic 2C rise in
average global temperature.
Encouragingly, there are signs that a rainforest breakthrough may be
within reach.
But, when asked how close a global deal was to incentivise countries to
protect rainforests, British environment secretary Hilary Benn preferred
to spell out the dilemma: “Congo has just emerged after a desperate
period of war. It now has a democratically elected government and needs
revenue to create stability.”
Any optimism is mainly due to an initiative by Papua New Guinea and
Costa Rica nearly two years ago, which has grown into a coalition of
more than 20 rainforest countries.
The coalition wants to develop a mechanism to enable carbon saved
through reduced deforestation in developing countries to be traded
internationally.
A country would establish a national baseline rate of deforestation and
reductions below the baseline could then be sold under Kyoto or other
carbon markets.
No trading would be allowed if emissions were above the baseline.
The idea has been accepted by most rich nations, including the US which
traditionally opposes climate change measures, but insiders say it dare
not do so this time.
The proposal came from developing countries and the US would incur
international ridicule if it did.
But not all countries are united around the idea. Brazil wants a
specific fund, paid for by rich nations, to be channelled to rainforest
countries.
Many believe that rich countries will not commit to this and it seems
that Brazil is being isolated after the World Bank said recently that it
was preparing to establish carbon trading funds worth US$600 million,
specifically targeted at rainforest nations.
But it admitted the funds had not yet had cash allocated to them.
In a statement, the coalition warned: “If these outcomes cannot be
attained together, it is unlikely that either objective will be attained
individually.”
There is concern about whether governments in fragile democracies will
have the resources to ensure forests are properly managed and if they
can create sustainable forest industries.
There are other potential solutions.
In the next few days a major, as yet unnamed, bank will begin research
into assessing if it is possible to launch a bond on the back of incomes
derived through sustainable forestry.
The scheme is being developed by Simon Petley, a former bond trader, now
head of EnviroMarket, who believes this model could contribute “hundreds
of millions of dollars” which would go to rainforest countries to
replace lost timber revenues.
“The aspiration is that the work we’re putting into this process –
forest-backed securities – can be duplicated,” he said.
Chatham House associate fellow Duncan Brack, who has spent eight years
working on policies to combat illegal logging, argues that governments
must use their power as bulk purchasers of timber products to demand
proof that the wood comes from legitimate sources.
The UK is one of six European countries that have opted to do this.
Brack reckons governments should also make it a requirement for the
building industry and retailers to use timber from sustainable forests.
He says firms such as Balfour Beatty, Ikea and John Lewis are beginning
to do this, but the government failed to include this agenda in its new
house-building programme.
Most experts still pin increasingly forlorn hopes on including
rainforest nations in a carbon trading scheme.
John Lanchbery, principal climate change adviser with the Royal Society
for the Protection of Birds, said: “This is not going to solve the
problem, but it’s our last hope. It’s not perfect, but there’s nothing
else.” – The Guardian
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