GBM Efforts

Climate change effects on deforestation.
 "We have a responsibility to protect the rights of generations, of all species, that cannot speak for themselves today. The global challenge of climate change requires that we ask no less of our leaders, or ourselves.” Prof Wangari Maathai


Climate change is caused by the emission of greenhouse gasses (GHGs) released from burning fossil fuels and from land use change, particularly the removal of forests which accounts for almost 20% of global emissions (more than the transport industry). The countries that developed first, for example the UK, US and France, have emitted vastly more GHGs then the countries currently called ‘developing’, such as Kenya, Namibia and Bangladesh.


Consensus is that an average surface temperature rise of the planet by more than 2° Celsius would have catastrophic effects for the biosphere and humanity’s place in it. In order to avoid temperature increases of more than 2° Celsius and dangerous runaway climate change we must reduce emissions by something in the region of 80% by 2050. Given population increases over this time this is really the same as saying we must become carbon neutral.


Failure to act now will be catastrophic. This means that we are the only generation of humans ever who are able to effectively respond to this challenge. The decisions we make today will have a greater impact on the future of the planet then the decisions made by any previous generation. We have to get it right!




The role of forests


Ecological systems are key components of the carbon cycle. For example, forests are enormous stores of terrestrial carbon. Removing forests causes GHG emissions and makes the land vulnerable to further degradation. Conversely afforestation sequesters carbon and provides a natural buffer against desertification and other environmental problems associated with changing climates. Planting and protecting forests will be a crucial part of the global response to climate change both in terms of mitigation (actions to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and to enhance sinks aimed at reducing the extent of global warming) and adaptation (initiatives and measures taken to reduce the vulnerability of natural and human systems against actual or expected climate change effects). However, to get this right the peoples living in and around the land to be forested must considered appropriately and involved in the change of land use.


REDD


REDD stands for Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation. Deforestation accounts for nearly 20% of global annual carbon emissions - greater than the entire transport sector emissions combined. Deforestation is one of the most pressing areas to tackle in the fight against climate change. REDD is a proposed mechanism under the UNFCCC to slow the loss of forests in order to mitigate against climate change, address rural poverty and preserve biodiversity. The concept is a simple one: countries that are willing and able to reduce emissions from deforestation should be financially compensated for doing so.




Challenges Ahead:


How REDD will work in practice is proving controversial, raising complex issues including national sovereignty, human rights, effective measurement, adequate and corruption. Lacking vital safeguards against logging and failing to protect intact natural forests and the rights of indigenous people, who live and depend on the forests. There is a lot of work still to be done to make sure REDD works for the forests and the people who depend on them, rather than for business as usual which includes international logging companies.

 
We must ensure that REDD policy works in practice and promotes equity, biodiversity and the rights of local communities. It is vital that benefits gained are for the people to whom forest is life. Development plans for the Congo Basin need a solution that firmly puts people, not timber, at its heart. That is why any REDD discussions must allow all stakeholders a seat at the table."

GBM has over 30 years experience rehabilitating degraded lands in Kenya through tree planting and supporting small holder farmers to increase yields and sustainability. This experience is invaluable to the international response to climate change.


Sites:


United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
Seal the Deal (UN)
tcktcktck
Billion Tree campaign- UNEP
COP 15
CO2 Now
10:10
One Hundred Months
Clinton Climate Initiative (CCI)
Stop Climate Chaos
© The Green Belt Movement International

3 comments:

  1. In the "Climate Change" section, you comment on 'the outcome of Copenhagen' and such - if you could clarify what the significance of Copenhagen is, that would be great!

    Also, this section is pretty dense (in terms of having lots of separate branches of information), it might help if you found some way to separate them more or organize them better, it would really help. (:

    Otherwise, great research!

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  2. I agree with Victoria, this page has a lot of really great information but I think if you added in some pictures, or figures that it could really break it up nicely. You could even possibly break this up into a couple pages if you wanted to. Great info though, great job overall.

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  3. This is taken directly from http://greenbeltmovement.org/w.php?id=98 without attribution!

    ReplyDelete