Kyoto Protocol Could Accelerate Forest Destruction
11/09/00
OVERVIEW & COMMENTARY
Following is excellent additional information regarding concerns that efforts being pursued to promote forest plantations as carbon sinks at the soon to commence Hague climate meeting may speed up global warming while increasing native forest destruction. Please take the time to send an email to the United Nations on this matter from:
http://forests.org/emailaction/oldcarbon_oct_00.htm
g.b.
RELAYED TEXT STARTS HERE:
ITEM #1
Kyoto Protocol could accelerate forest destruction, warn WWF and Greenpeace
WWF Press Release
November 9, 2000
London, UK - Relying on forest plantations to store carbon pollution from the atmosphere and combat climate change could accelerate the destruction of old-growth native forest around the world, according to a report commissioned by Greenpeace and WWF, the conservation organization. The report, released today, challenges the assumption that carbon storage in trees will yield environmental benefits. It concludes instead, "the economics of the developing carbon sequestration market is becoming an additional driver for clearing native forests."
Whether industrialised nations will be allowed to gamble on forests as temporary carbon stores rather than reduce emissions of global warming gases at source is one of the most controversial topics in two weeks of intergovernmental negotiations on the Kyoto Protocol that open in The Hague, Holland, on Monday 13 November. Under the Protocol, industrialized nations have to reduce their emissions 5 per cent below their 1990 levels by 2008-2012. The United States, Japan, Australia and Canada want to avoid domestic efforts to control their rapidly growing carbon emissions from energy use by counting forest carbon storage and so claim to be meeting their Kyoto targets.
Furthermore, the Protocol contains a perverse incentive in allowing countries to claim a carbon credit for planting trees but not incur a carbon debit for deforestation.
Today's report, entitled "The Clearcut Case: How the Kyoto Protocol Could Become a Driver for Deforestation", examines a number of Australian projects as case studies of what could emerge as a dangerous new international threat to forests and the species they support. (1)
The report outlines how Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), Japan's largest power utility, is implicated in the destruction of native forest in the Tamar Valley in the Australian state of Tasmania, and its replacement by fast-growing eucalyptus plantations intended for carbon credits under the Kyoto Protocol. TEPCO's investment of Aus$10 million (ca. US$5 million) in Tamar Tree Farms accounts for 3,000 hectares of eucalyptus plantation which are expected to yield TEPCO 130,000 tonnes of carbon credits that could be offset against rising carbon emissions in Japan. The report shows how this project is not an isolated incident but is compatible with the forest-clearance programmes of the Australian and Tasmanian authorities.
"Claiming credit for carbon stored in trees is a blatant attempt by some countries to cheat on their Kyoto commitments," said Bill Hare, Greenpeace's Climate Policy Director. "This report shows that it is also bad for the environment, leading in some cases to the destruction of old-growth forest to make way for 'carbon-sink' plantations."
"The only way to combat climate change is through deep cuts in emissions of global warming gases," said Jennifer Morgan, Director of WWF's Climate Change Campaign. "The Tasmania project is an example of what could go terribly wrong for forests around the world if Japan, Australia, Canada and the United States get their way. We could see native forest destruction accelerate but still see no benefit for the global climate. This is potentially the largest of a number of loopholes in the Kyoto climate treaty that governments urgently need to close."
The threat to forest conservation will be exacerbated if decisions on Kyoto's "Clean Development Mechanism" promote 'carbon sinks' projects by industrialised nations in developing countries, where gathering of accurate data on forests would be considerably more difficult than in Tasmania.
Greenpeace and WWF are calling on the 184 Parties to the Climate Convention to exclude reliance on carbon sinks from the Kyoto Protocol, and from its Clean Development Mechanism. The organizations want industrialized nations to achieve their Kyoto commitments through domestic reductions in global warming gases.
"The global forest commons is facing its biggest challenge since the Industrial Revolution," said report author Tim Cadman of the Native Forest Network. "Many forest-dependent species are on the brink of destruction. How ironic it would be if the Kyoto Protocol were complicit in sending some of them over the edge."
Proposals for relying on plantations to soak up carbon overlook the vulnerability of forests to global warming, and the urgency of cutting emissions. According to the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change whose Second Assessment Report from 1995 is the current international scientific consensus on climate change, one third of the world's forests will undergo major changes as a result of global warming. Entire forest types may disappear and large amounts of carbon could be released into the atmosphere during transitions from one forest type to another. (2)
For further information:
WWF
Robert Kihara, Press Officer, WWF International. Tel: +41 22 364 9553; E-mail: rkihara@wwfint.org
Andrew Kerr, Public Affairs Manager, WWF Climate Change Campaign. Tel: +31 6 5161 9462 (mobile); E-mail: rrek@compuserve.com
Greenpeace
Jon Walter, Press Officer, Greenpeace International, Tel: +31 20 524 9608; E-mail: jwalter@ams.greenpeace.org
Bill Hare, Climate Policy Director, Greenpeace International. Tel: +31 6 2129 6899 (mobile); E-mail: bhare@ams.greenpeace.org
Native Forest Network
Tim Cadman, Tel: +61 2 6655 9841; E-mail: tcadman@nfn.org.au
NOTES
(1) The Clearcut Case: How the Kyoto Protocol Could Become a Driver for Deforestation by Tim Cadman, Native Forest Network. Commissioned and published by Greenpeace International and the WWF Climate Change Campaign. November 2000
(2) Climate Change 1995. Contribution of Working Group II to the Second Assessment Report of the IPCC. Summary for Policymakers,
Section 3.1.
ITEM #2
Green group says close climate loopholes at The Hague
Copyright 2000 Reuters
November 10, 2000
BRUSSELS - The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) said yesterday an international agreement to combat climate change could prove worse than useless unless governments agreed to close potential loopholes.
WWF told a news briefing the 1997 Kyoto Protocol might not have the desired effect of reducing the industrial world's greenhouse gas emissions and could have the reverse effect of boosting environmentally undesirable industries.
"Fossil fuel burning lies at the heart of the Kyoto Protocol but there are a range of loopholes that will allow individual countries to meet their targets without reducing their emissions," WWF's Liam Salter told a news conference.
The U.N.-sponsored protocol commits developed countries to reduce emissions of six greenhouse gases by five percent from 1990 levels by 2008-2012.
But the the agreement allows for "flexible mechanisms" which would allow countries to achieve emissions reduction credits without actually reducing emissions on their own territory.
How these will work in practice is one of the key questions to be solved at an intergovernmental meeting starting on Monday in The Hague - dubbed by some the "Climate Summit".
The protocol's Achilles' heel, according to WWF, is the concept of "carbon sinks" - the use of forestry to absorb carbon dioxide (CO2), the main greenhouse gas, to offset emissions.
WWF says, as well as being difficult to monitor, the use of sinks could lead to environmentally-damaging monocultures being classed as environmentally sound and do nothing to protect wildlife-rich forests.
The protocol could also give a boost to nuclear power and large hydro-electric dams which, although they do not produce CO2 and could potentially receive emissions reduction credits, are considered environmentally unsound by WWF.
"We need an up-front ban on (the use of) these technologies (under the Kyoto Protocol)," WWF's Stephan Singer said.
Another potential loophole, the group says, is "emissions trading" where a country that has reduced its emissions beyond its target can sell the "extra" pollution it has saved to a country that has not met its goal.
WWF wants both buyers and sellers of emissions credits to be made legally liable in case their certificates are found not to represent a genuine emission reduction.
It also wants a restriction on the amount of credits that can be sold by Russia and the Ukraine, whose industrial decline during the 1990s means they will have plenty of spare "hot air". "We have never been opposed to the system of (emissions) trading but we are opposed to buying hot air and trading in sinks," Singer said.