Demand for carbon offsets is growing from large Western
businesses. Companies want to be seen to be green by paying
others to cut emissions of greenhouse gases on their behalf. Mobilising such private sector finance to protect forests is
gathering support. Deforestation accounts for about one fifth of
global greenhouse gas emissions, while rising populations and
demand for biofuels and timber are piling pressure on remaining
trees.
Environmental organisations grouped under the Global Canopy
Programme (GCP), and including Friends of the Earth Brazil and
Care International, on Wednesday called for such funding under a
successor to the Kyoto Protocol after 2013.
"(We want) the protection of standing forests included in
all national and international carbon markets," they said.
"Halting deforestation is an opportunity to score a big win
against climate change," Andrew Mitchell, founder and director
of the GCP, said in a statement.
Environment ministers from around the world meet in Bali,
Indonesia in December to try to lay the groundwork for a
successor agreement to the UN-sponsored Kyoto pact, whose
present commitments expire in 2012.
At present forest protection does not qualify for tradeable
carbon offsets under the pact, unlike projects for example to
install renewable power like wind and solar.
The World Bank has announced it plans to pilot projects in
Papua New Guinea, Costa Rica, Indonesia and elsewhere, allowing
countries earn offsets in return for not chopping down their
forests.
On Monday, an informal meeting of policymakers in Berlin,
led by UN climate change envoy and former Chilean President
Ricardo Lagos, called for forest protection to "be included in a
post-2012 climate change regime", for example using carbon
markets.
Last week the World Wildlife Fund and the International
Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) urged the same.
"The growing market for carbon offers great opportunities
for linking greenhouse gas mitigation with conservation of
forests and biodiversity, and the generation of local
livelihoods," WWF and IIED said in a briefing paper, adding it
was important local people, and not just speculators, benefited.
Trees, often cleared to provide land for livestock or
biofuel crops like rapeseed, are around 50 percent carbon and
release carbon dioxide (CO2) when they rot or burn.
-- Additional reporting by Gerard Wynn