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Can Forests Save the Climate

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Title: Can Forests Save the Climate


1
Can Forests Save the Climate?
  • by
  • Arild Vatn
  • Department of International Environmental and
    Development Studies
  • Norwegian University of Life Sciences
  • Presentation at the Thor Heyerdahl International
    Days 2009
  • Larvik, October 28-29

2
Introduction
  • Forests play an important role in the process of
    climate change
  • Forests also play an important role in the
    international climate policy negotiations ?
    Copenhagen (Dec. 2009)
  • Forests can be both sources and sinks of the
    climate gas CO2 (carbon dioxide). Growing forests
    accumulate CO2. If forests are burned CO2 is
    released. Cutting will also result in losses

Photo NASA
Photo Anne Sverdrup-Thygeson
3
Forests and the climate
4
Forests and the climate (cont.)Deforestation and
reforestation
  • FAO (2005)

5
Forests and the climate (cont.)Carbon emissions
from forests
Based on IPCC 2007
  • The losses from deforestation are uncertain
  • Between 2000 and 2005 it is estimated that about
    13 mill. hectares of forests disappeared per
    year. This is on average between 1 and 1.5 of
    the forest area

6
Forests and the climate (cont.)Sources and sinks
(billion tons of carbon per year)
Source
CO2 flux (billion tons C y-1)
Time (y)
Based on Le Quéré, unpublished Canadell et al.
2007 and 2008
7
Forests and the climate (cont.)Sources and sinks
(billion tons of carbon per year)
Source
CO2 flux (billion tons C y-1)
Sink
Time (y)
Based on Le Quéré, unpublished Canadell et al.
2007 and 2008
8
Forests and the climate (cont.)Sources and sinks
(billion tons of carbon per year)
Source
CO2 flux (billion tons C y-1)
Sink
Time (y)
Based on Le Quéré, unpublished Canadell et al.
2007 and 2008
9
Forests in the present climate regime
  • In the present climate regime the Kyoto
    protocol (1997 and onwards) forest projects are
    included under the so-called Clean Development
    Mechanism (CDM)
  • This means that countries that have reduction
    responsi-bilities (Annex I countries (OECD
    countries with some notable exceptions like the
    US)) may buy reductions in developing countries
    as an alternative to cuts at home
  • This concerns only so-called reforestation and
    afforestation (sinks). The parties to the Kyoto
    protocol has not be able to agree on the rules
    for including deforestation and forest
    degradation (source)

10
Forests in the present climate regime
  • The amount of forest projects under CDM is low
    about 1 of the total. Projects on
    hydro-electric power, wind energy N2O and CFCs
    dominate
  • Reason why there are so few forest projects
  • Demanding to establish contracts institutional
    issues (land rights), securing additionality,
    securing permanence etc.
  • The critical opinion against these projects
    eviction of people and reduced biodiversity
    (plantations)

11
The new agenda REDD
  • REDD Reduced emissions from deforestation and
    forest degradation
  • The idea of win-win-win Reduced emissions,
    reduced poverty and increased biodiversity
    protection
  • It is one of the great challenges for the climate
    negotiations in Copenhagen (December 2009)
  • Norway has played a core role in this process
    i.e., the Norwegian forest initiative. The
    climate agreement in the parliament including 15
    billion NOK to REDD over a five years period
  • Important issues
  • Why does deforestation and forest degradation
    happen
  • The North South dimension
  • The conflict over land
  • The problems of base lines and leakage
  • The ways of raising and distributing money

12
The new agenda REDD (cont.) Why deforestation
and forest degradation?
  • There are three main processes behind
    deforesta-tion/degradation
  • Agricultural expansions
  • Collection of fuel wood
  • Logging incl. illegal logging

13
The new agenda REDD (cont.) The North South
dimension
  • The Stern (2007) report emphasized that REDD
    would be a cheap way to reduce climate gas
    emissions
  • Raised the issue of whether the North should pay
    the South to reduce deforestation or rather do
    reductions at home. The South needs the forests
    for their develop-ment we have already cut
    ours. Economics vs. ethics
  • The REDD way North pays the South to compensate.
    Who should be compen-sated (legitimacy)
  • Poor people that lose their livelihoods
  • Logging companies
  • Countries that has not yet started to deforest.
  • The potential perverse incentives in this

14
The new agenda REDD (cont.) The conflict over
land
  • We need to reduce emissions of climate gases with
    about 80
  • Land is now really becoming a scarce resource ?
    conflicts. Who has the capacity to pay? Cf.
    countries like Saudi-Arabia and China buying or
    leasing land in Africa and Latin-America
  • We should increase food production till 2050 by
    100 (FAO 2009). 0ver one billion people are
    undernourished (2009). Population will increase
    till over 9 billion. Climate change seems to
    reduce our capacity to produce food (IFPRI 2009)
  • We need areas to produce energy to substitute for
    fossil fuels. Land is an important factor here.
    To illustrate If that was to be covered by
    biofuels from agricultural land, it would demand
    grossly estimated about 8 times present areas
    of arable land
  • We need to set aside more areas protect
    biodiversity
  • We need to stop deforestation and increase forest
    areas to capture more CO2

15
The new agenda REDD (cont.) Baselines and
leakage
  • What should the baseline be Should pay only for
    reduced deforestation that would not happen
    anyway
  • How to avoid leakage If one pay for reducing
    deforest-ation at one place, it may just increase
    deforestation somewhere else
  • Clear forests elsewhere to get land for
    agriculture
  • Logging companies just move to another region,
    country
  • Both these issues raises difficult questions for
    developing institutions for REDD the so-called
    REDD architecture including also the issues of
    fraud and corruption

16
The new agenda REDD (cont.) Raising and
distributing money
  • The way money is raised and distributed may have
    substantial effects on what is obtained both
    concerning emissions, poverty reduction and
    biodiversity protection
  • Raising money
  • 1. Voluntary outside the climate agreement
    i.e., reductions added to those that countries
    accept when ratifying the international climate
    treaty
  • 2. International carbon markets offering
    carbon credits
  • a) A system like the Clean Development Mechanism
  • b) International fund(s)
  • Distributing money
  • Actors in the North finance local REDD projects
    in the South (following 2a above)
  • Actors in the North pay countries in the South to
    organize programs to combat deforestation
    either via a separate fund or as direct budget
    support (1 or 2b above)
  • Differences concerning political legitimacy, the
    capacity to combat deforestation and reduce
    poverty

17
The new agenda REDD (cont.) Raising and
distributing money
  • Setting up institutions for facilitating REDD is
    demanding
  • One has either to build a market for a type of
    commodity that is both difficult to define and
    control, or establish systems for national
    administrations securing REDD activities on the
    ground
  • Many not least the Norwegian parliament and
    press have expected that the Norwegian
    initiative would give quick actions on the ground
    it should be so cheap
  • Instead one observes that a lot of structures
    need to be in place at both the international and
    national level to get the whole thing started
    e.g., the UN REDD readiness activities supporting
    countries in establishing national REDD policies
    and architectures

18
REDD a curse or blessing for the poor?
  • Payments from North to South should be good
  • There is, however, a danger of the South being
    trapped cf. not able to use the forest sector
    as an economic motor. Critics argue that the poor
    in the South looses access to necessary resources

19
REDD curse or blessing for the poor? (Cont.)
  • Issues concerning internal distribution in
    developing countries
  • Easy for funds to disappear on the way down
  • Payments demand secure property rights these do
    often not exist. Forest land is dominantly owned
    by states. Local people only have user rights ?
    land grabbing, exclusion of the poor
  • It is easier (cheaper per ton of CO2) to pay the
    larger land holders
  • REDD is a new option for land use. The price of
    land will increase may affect the poorest
    segment negatively
  • Relations to local values and norms
  • A lot of care is demanded when building
    institutions to secure that the policy delivers
    well also concerning distributional issues. Here
    the fund model is better than the market solution

20
Can forests save the climate?
  • Reduced deforestation is important to reach the
    goals for reduced climate gas emissions
  • REDD can by far not solve the problem alone it
    must not be an excuse for not doing all the
    other things needed
  • REDD raises also a series of questions concerning
    the relationships between North and South
  • REDD is demanding to establish and run in a way
    that is legitimate and effective. REDD could and
    should be an important part of a future climate
    regime and even help reduce poverty. It may,
    however, also go very wrong
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