Finalizing the United Nations' forest conservation scheme is an obvious and critical step to agreeing a new global climate change pact, an economist at the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) has said.
The G8 and other major economies last week agreed to restrict global warming to 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit).
But they failed to persuade top emitter China and India to join a push to halve greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 -- a blow to efforts to secure a successor climate treaty to the Kyoto Protocol after its 2012 expiry.
"There should be a complete reversal of priorities and countries should get on with what they can agree on, which is curbing deforestation," Pavan Sukhdev, a senior banker at Deutsche Bank currently on secondment with UNEP, told Reuters on Tuesday.
"We should be rewarding countries that are reducing deforestation and improving their conservation practices; nobody disagrees with this."
Reduced emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD), the U.N.'s market-based forestry scheme, issues carbon credits as financial incentive to dissuade forest owners from logging.
Delegates from nearly 200 countries will meet for U.N. climate talks in Copenhagen in December to work toward a new agreement.
"I don't see the mainstream climate negotiation carrying big stories other than frustration and more frustration," Sukhdev said, adding that 24 percent of global carbon dioxide emissions and 18 percent of all greenhouse gas emissions come from deforestation.
"With REDD, it's sitting there staring at you, waiting for you to do the obvious," he said.
REDD trial schemes are now being run in developing countries like Cambodia, Indonesia and Brazil.
FOREST FUNDS
Distribution of REDD credit revenues still needs to be worked out, with the question addressed of how much cash will be invested in replanting in damaged or degraded areas.
Forest-rich governments should encourage developed nations to pledge some $20-30 billion per year to their REDD strategies, then create a fund to allocate the money to the best projects, Sukhdev said. "More money then will come from the private sector, but getting started is the problem," he added.
---The G8 and other major economies last week agreed to restrict global warming to 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit).
But they failed to persuade top emitter China and India to join a push to halve greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 -- a blow to efforts to secure a successor climate treaty to the Kyoto Protocol after its 2012 expiry.
"There should be a complete reversal of priorities and countries should get on with what they can agree on, which is curbing deforestation," Pavan Sukhdev, a senior banker at Deutsche Bank currently on secondment with UNEP, told Reuters on Tuesday.
"We should be rewarding countries that are reducing deforestation and improving their conservation practices; nobody disagrees with this."
Reduced emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD), the U.N.'s market-based forestry scheme, issues carbon credits as financial incentive to dissuade forest owners from logging.
Delegates from nearly 200 countries will meet for U.N. climate talks in Copenhagen in December to work toward a new agreement.
"I don't see the mainstream climate negotiation carrying big stories other than frustration and more frustration," Sukhdev said, adding that 24 percent of global carbon dioxide emissions and 18 percent of all greenhouse gas emissions come from deforestation.
"With REDD, it's sitting there staring at you, waiting for you to do the obvious," he said.
REDD trial schemes are now being run in developing countries like Cambodia, Indonesia and Brazil.
FOREST FUNDS
Distribution of REDD credit revenues still needs to be worked out, with the question addressed of how much cash will be invested in replanting in damaged or degraded areas.
Forest-rich governments should encourage developed nations to pledge some $20-30 billion per year to their REDD strategies, then create a fund to allocate the money to the best projects, Sukhdev said. "More money then will come from the private sector, but getting started is the problem," he added.
Rubeel
www.jzom.com
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