Tropical Rainforest

Rainforest Gets Protected Status

Vast tracts of rainforest in Brazil are to get a new protected status. The segments of land in the northern Para state together cover 15 million hectares (57,915 sq miles), an area of land that is bigger than England.

Thousands of wildlife species inhabit the pristine forest, including jaguars, anteaters and colorful macaws.

Campaigners say the decision made by Para Governor Simao Jatene is one of the most important conservation initiatives of recent years.

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Rain forest carbon credits poposal

BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Request for forest carbon credits.

Rainforest protection should be added to measures to prevent global warming, a seminar of climate experts from more than 150 countries has heard in Bonn.

The proposal, from Papua New Guinea, could open the way to a major expansion of the attempts to limit climate change.
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ISLAND OF NEW GUINEA
                      

               

               
                     
                   

Has world’s third largest rainforest,
after Amazonia and Congo

The German meeting, organised by the secretariat of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), is the first international attempt to look into what to do when the Kyoto Protocol expires in 2012.

Plush red armchairs on the podium, for TV-style question and answer sessions after each clutch of presentations, underline the deliberately informal style of discussions here.

It is all part of the effort to avoid the diplomatic rancour that usually seems to afflict such get-togethers.

It’s all carbon

The forestry proposal from Papua New Guinea ran counter to the pattern of most of the discussions.

While other developing countries rejected any spreading of responsibilities beyond the industrialised countries already signed up to the Kyoto Protocol – "you caused the problem, so you show us how to fix it first" being the essence of the argument – Papua New Guinea actively welcomed the chance to be held accountable for greenhouse gas emissions attributable to the destruction of its rainforest.

Its position comes down, in part, to the success of the carbon emissions trading scheme launched in Europe earlier this year.

A tonne of carbon saved from the atmosphere now comes
with a price tag – and Papua New Guinea argues that its rainforest
carbon is as good as any coal or oil burnt in the West.

"A tonne is a tonne is a tonne," declared the PNG
ambassador to the UN. But at the moment, there is no way developing
countries can trade avoided rainforest destruction on the international
market.

The role of forests in moderating climate change has long been recognised. Trees absorb some of the carbon dioxide that causes global warming; and cutting them down removes that benefit. What is more, the burned wood and degraded land left behind becomes a source of additional greenhouse gases.
   

In the past, however, the complexity of quantifying the
amount of rainforest destruction, let alone any change in the rate of
destruction, led to the issue being sidelined under the Kyoto Protocol.

There may be reluctance to re-open an issue that has
been extensively debated in the past. But the Papua New Guineans say
the response has been strong, and they believe many other rainforest
countries are interested in the scheme.

‘Fair and equitable’

It has been estimated that perhaps a quarter of all
greenhouse gas emissions can be attributed to the destruction of
rainforest
; and that if aims to limit global warming to 2C (the
European target) are to succeed, forestry has to be included in the
discussion, PNG believes.

We want to save our rainforest, runs the PNG argument, but you have to help us pay for it.

And PNG does not want to wait until 2012 – "there won’t be any rainforest left to save if we do," it says.

"Kyoto does not allow developing nations that reduce
deforestation emissions to get credit. Kyoto unfairly discriminates
against rainforested developing nations who seek to participate within
the world carbon market," ambassador Robert Aisi told the meeting.

"Tropical rainforest nations deserve to be treated
equally. If we reduce our deforestation, we should be compensated for
these reductions, as are industrial countries.

"The compensation we seek is access to the world’s carbon markets, but on a fair and equitable basis."