Forest & REDD
Forest conversion halt to begin next year
Tuesday, 19 October 2010 20:11    PDF Print E-mail

Indonesia will formally begin a two-year moratorium on forest and peatland conversions next year, paving the way for the country to receive a US$1 billion grant from Norway.

Forestry Minister Zulkifli Hasan said the government was preparing a new regulation in order to implement the forestry moratorium, which would effectively halt the issuance of new permits for primary forest and peatland conversions for two years.

“I hope we can issue the [Presidential decree] by the end of this month so we can officially implement the moratorium,” he told The Jakarta Post on Monday.

Zulkifli said the moratorium was part of the government’s efforts to reduce Indonesia’s greenhouse gas emissions to 26 percent by 2020, as targeted by the National Action Plan on Climate Change (RAN-GRK). “With the two-year moratorium we hope we can reach our target,” he said.

Emission reductions could reach 41 percent with foreign support, the government said.

Zulkifli said the moratorium would not affect local residents because they could still cultivate other areas.

“They will still be able to cultivate idle forest areas other than primary forests and peatlands,” he said, adding that the moratorium aimed to save Indonesia’s forests and make them more sustainable.

According to the Forestry Ministry, Indonesia still has about 40 million hectares of primary forest and eight million hectares of peatlands.

Zulkilfi said the moratorium would be carried out in three provinces — Papua, Kalimantan and Aceh — due to their vast unexploited primary forests and peatlands.

The proposed moratorium will be enacted according to the letter of intent (LoI) signed between the governments of Indonesia and Norway.

The $1 billion in deforestation funds pledged by Oslo under the LoI signed in May is likely to be disbursed once the moratorium is implemented.

Norway is committed to providing $200 million in the first phase, with a planned disbursement of $30 million in 2010, followed by further disbursements of $70 million in 2011 and $100 million in 2012.

The remaining $800 million of Oslo’s pledge would be provided gradually after 2013 based on forestry sector emissions reductions.

Zulkifli said the moratorium had actually been prepared long before the agreement was signed with Norway, as a national program to maintain the sustainability of the country’s forests and peatlands.

“With or without the LoI, the moratorium on new permits for the conversion of primary forests and peatlands is part of our national action plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions,” he said.

The Forestry Ministry’s forestry production development director general Hadi Daryanto also said Monday that the ministry had prepared the moratorium three years ago.

“We were preparing the moratorium as part of our commitment to protect the forests as mandated
by law,” he told the Post over the telephone.

According to Indonesian Law, the government should manage the use of plantation forests by prioritizing the use of unproductive forests in part of its efforts to protect natural forests, he said

On the implementation of the LoI, the Forestry Ministry would soon hand a list of five pilot project candidate areas — Jambi, Riau, East Kalimantan, Central Kalimantan and Papua — to the Office of the Coordinating Minister of the Economy, he said.

“A pilot project will then be chosen based on biophysical, social, economic and cultural criteria,” he said, adding that the selection of the pilot project area would also put more focus on the availability of measuring, verifying and reporting schema. (ebf)

Source: The Jakarta Post

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World needs urgent action to stop species loss: U.N
Tuesday, 19 October 2010 20:00    PDF Print E-mail

(Reuters) - The world cannot afford to allow nature's riches to disappear, the United Nations said on Monday at the start of a major meeting to combat losses in animal and plant species that underpin livelihoods and economies.

The United Nations says the world is facing the worst extinction rate since the dinosaurs vanished 65 million years ago, a crisis that needs to be addressed by governments, businesses and communities.

The two-week meeting aims to prompt nations and businesses to take sweeping steps to protect and restore ecosystems such as forests, rivers, coral reefs and the oceans that are vital for an ever-growing human population.

These provide basic services such as clean air, water, food and medicines that many take for granted, the United Nations says, and need to be properly valued and managed by governments and corporations to reverse the damage caused by economic growth.

More resilient ecosystems could also reduce climate change impacts, such more extreme droughts and floods, as well as help fight poverty, the world body says.

"This meeting is part of the world's efforts to address a very simple fact -- we are destroying life on earth," Achim Steiner, head of the U.N. Environment Programme, said at the opening of the meeting in Nagoya, central Japan.

Delegates from nearly 200 countries are being asked to agree new 2020 targets after governments largely failed to meet a 2010 target of achieving a significant reduction in biological diversity losses.

A U.N.-backed study this month said global environmental damage caused by human activity in 2008 totaled $6.6 trillion, equivalent to 11 percent of global gross domestic product.

Greens said the meeting needed to agree on an urgent rescue plan for nature.

LIFE-SUPPORT

"What the world most wants from Nagoya are the agreements that will stop the continuing dramatic loss in the world's living wealth and the continuing erosion of our life-support systems," said Jim Leape, WWF International director-general.

WWF and Greenpeace called for nations to set aside large areas of linked land and ocean reserves.

"If our planet is to sustain life on earth in the future and be rescued from the brink of environmental destruction, we need action by governments to protect our oceans and forests and to halt biodiversity loss," said Nathalie Rey, Greenpeace International oceans policy adviser.

Developing nations say more funding is needed from developed countries to share the effort in saving nature. Much of the world's remaining biological diversity is in developing nations such as Brazil, Indonesia and in central Africa.

"Especially for countries with their economies in transition, we need to be sure where the (financial) resources are," Eng. B.T. Baya, director-general of Tanzania's National Environment Management Council, told Reuters.

"It's not helping us if you set a lot of strategic targets and there is no ability or resources to implement them."

Poorer nations want funding to protect species and ecosystems to be ramped up 100-fold from about $3 billion now.

Delegates, to be joined by environment ministers at the end of next week, will also try to set rules on how and when companies and researchers can use genes from plants or animals that originate in countries mainly in the developing world.

Developing nations want a fairer deal in sharing the wealth of their ecosystems, such as medicines created by big pharmaceutical firms, and back the draft treaty, or "access and benefit-sharing" (ABS) protocol.

For poorer nations, the protocol could unlock billions of dollars but some drug makers are wary of extra costs squeezing investment for research while complicating procedures such as applications for patents.

Conservation groups say failure to agree the ABS pact could derail the talks in Nagoya, including agreement on the 2020 target which would also set goals to protect fish stocks and phase out incentives harmful to biodiversity.

Japan, chair of the meeting, said agreement on an ambitious and practical 2020 target was key.

"We are nearing a tipping point, or the point of no return for biodiversity loss," Japanese Environment Minister Ryu Matsumoto told the meeting.

"Unless proactive steps are taken for biodiversity, there is a risk that we will surpass that point in the next 10 years."(By Chisa Fujioka; Reporting by Chisa Fujioka; Editing by David Fogarty)

Source: Reuters

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UN summit aims to shape global strategy to save world’s biodiversity
Tuesday, 19 October 2010 19:54    PDF Print E-mail

18 October 2010 – Delegates from across the world have gathered in the Japanese city of Nagoya today for a United Nations conference to discuss a new strategy to halt the alarming loss of the Earth’s biodiversity, driven largely by human activity, a trend experts warn threatens the planet’s capacity to sustain human well-being.

“Here there is an opportunity to shape the landscape and the trajectory of humanity’s response to the loss of its natural and nature-based assets in profound and transformational ways,” Achim Steiner, the Executive Director of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), told the opening session of the 12-day Conference of Parties to the UN Convention on Biodiversity (CBD).

“Here and together we can begin to put in place the kinds of far sighted policy-responses and smart mechanisms that have been incubating for years in many countries and communities,” he added.

During the event, more than 15,000 participants – the highest number ever recorded for such a meeting – representing the 193 Parties and their partners are expected to wrap up negotiations on a new strategic plan on biodiversity for the 2011-2020 period.

That plan will be submitted to the high-level segment of the conference, which will begin on 27 October and will be attended by several world leaders and more than 100 environment ministers.

Ahmed Djoghlaf, the Executive Secretary of CBD, said that species extinction rates are now as high as a thousand times the natural rate, and that the world is nearing a “tipping point” where there could be irreversible loss.

“Let’s have the courage to look in the eyes of children and admit that we have failed,” he said.

Mr. Steiner highlighted the findings of the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment of 2005 which concluded that 60 per cent of the services provided by the world’s ecosystems that support human well-being are now either degraded or are nearing degradation.

It also found that changes in biodiversity as a result of human activities have been more rapid in the past 50 years than at any other time in human history.

The UNEP chief said that the report “underlined that rather than exercising the brake, the world continues to choose the accelerator.

“This is hurtling us all on a collision course towards an extremely sobering destiny. The issue in front of this meeting is whether human beings have the collective intelligence, wisdom and common humanity to read the writing on the wall.”

Mr. Steiner underlined the need for humanity to recognize that the stability and human well-being in the 21st century will rest on the fate of all life on Earth.

“Science tells us that we are currently going through the sixth wave of extinctions,” he said, questioning how long until human beings are included on the list of threatened species issued by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

“If that is what science is telling us, what will this meeting tell the world it is doing about it?

The plants and animals, fungi and micro-organisms that produce and clean our air, generate drinking water, hydro-power and irrigation; provide food, shelter and medicines and also bring to many joy and a spiritual dimension to our daily lives need a big helping hand from this 10th Meeting of the Conference of the Parties – if not for their sakes, but for ours.”

In a related development, UNEP announced today that a mapping exercise to identify where countries’ carbon stocks overlap with areas that are rich in wildlife and important for local peoples’ livelihoods is under way in Asia, Africa and Latin America.

The project aims to support international efforts to conserve forests in order to combat climate change, in a way that delivers other benefits, including conservation of economically-important ecosystems linked with water, fertile soils and other crucial services.

Under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), governments are negotiating a mechanism to provide payments for the so-called UN REDD+ scheme, which seeks to create incentives to reverse the trend of deforestation and conserve forests’ carbon stocks.

According to UNEP, nearly 20 per cent of greenhouse gas emissions result from changing the way land is used, mainly through deforestation.

Source: UN News Centre

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No retreat on logging moratorium, NGOs warn
Friday, 15 October 2010 21:03    PDF Print E-mail

Civil society groups are stepping up pressure on the government to honor its pledged moratorium on exploiting forests despite protests from corporations, especially forestry businesses.

Eleven NGOs, including Greenpeace, the Indonesian Forum for the Environment (Walhi), Sawit Watch, Indigenous People’s Alliance of the Archipelago (AMAN) and Forest Watch Indonesia (FWI) issued a joint statement on the moratorium to the government on Thursday.

The two-page document outlined principles, criteria and steps to implement the moratorium.

The groups also condemned the Indonesian government for barring Greenpeace’s flagship Rainbow Warrior from entering Indonesian waters. The Greenpeace vessel was scheduled to dock in Jakarta on Wednesday enroute to Wasior, West Papua, on a humanitarian mission.

The NGOs called on the government to issue a legal basis for the implementation of the moratorium, review permits on forest exploitation and withdraw permits for those found running illegal businesses.

Walhi executive director Berry Forqan, who read out the statement, said the groups were aware of efforts by business entities to stop the planned moratorium.

“There is no reason to cancel it. Disasters in recent years have partly been caused by massive deforestation,” he said.

The group said the moratorium should not have a time limit, but should be imposed until the country met good forest management practices.

Indonesia and Norway signed a US$1 billion climate deal in May requiring Jakarta to impose a two-year moratorium on exploiting natural forest and peatland by 2011. However, there are still no government regulations to implement the moratorium.

Indonesia is required to set up independent institutions on reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD), financial and measurable, reportable and verifiable (MRV) schemes.

A senior Forestry Ministry official said there were no plans to extend the moratorium. “We appreciate the input from NGOs but we should focus on a two-year term for the moratorium,” the director of forest products management at the ministry, Bambang Sukmananto, said.

Visiting Greenpeace International executive director Kumi Naidoo said the moratorium offered a golden opportunity for Indonesia to improve forest governance.

“Use the moratorium to make space to engage the public, conduct proper research and look at alternatives [on forest governance],” he said. (By Adianto P. Simamora)

Source: The Jakarta Post

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This week in Forest Carbon
Friday, 15 October 2010 20:54    PDF Print E-mail

14 October 2010 | In Tianjin, China, REDD+ Partnership talks came apart at the seams. Although it’s a small wonder nobody lost any eyes with the number of fingers pointing around the room, most of the fingers seem to be leveled at Papua New Guinea. As co-chair of the Partnership, PNG is purported to be strenuously resisting the integration of meaningful stakeholder consultation into the Partnership’s governance. As a result of all the discord, side events that were to be held in Nagoya, Japan during the 10th Conference of the Parties to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity later this month were cancelled and will be rescheduled to take place during the climate talks in Cancún.

On the project development front, we caught wind of several shaky starts.

Coincidentally timed with the release of a new report from Mongabay’s open access journal cautioning against engaging commercial and industrial entities to manage payment for ecosystem services (PES) projects, Indonesia announced a new public-private partnership for forest conservation with twelve major companies. Top on the list is Asia Pulp and Paper, a subsidiary of palm oil giant Sinar Mas.

Meanwhile in Africa, Aussie-based Shift2Neutral’s earlier proclamation of a country-wide REDD deal with the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is now in shambles following the release of a letter from DRC’s Minister of Environment explicitly pronouncing the deal “illegal” and “void.”

As PNG’s leadership at the REDD+ Partnership meetings failed to steer clear of a rocky shore, project development in PNG may have completely run aground. Prime Minister Michael Somare is reported to have issued a letter saying voluntary carbon schemes should be put out to pasture after a string of unsavory prospective projects have emerged within the country.

—The Ecosystem Marketplace Team
If you have comments or would like to submit news stories, write to us at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

Source: Ecosystem Marketplace

 


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