The latest on land use, livelihoods and environmental services in the tropical forest margins.
By Rhiannon Crowe and Hoang Minh Ha, ICRAF – Vietnam
On November 4, 2009 the World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF) Vietnam, together with the General Department of Land Administration (GDLA) of the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources (MONRE) organized a consultation workshop on Reducing Emissions from All Land Uses (REALU). This workshop is one of the activities in Vietnam for the NORAD funded ASB-ICRAF project from July 2009 – July 2010.
The objectives of the workshop were to: (i) develop a common understanding of the REALU project concept; (ii) discuss the initial findings by REALU Vietnam team on analysis, strategy and policy development for Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD).in relation to all land uses in Vietnam landscape. The outputs of REALU will contribute to the climate change policy framework in the lead-up to Copenhagen in December 2009.
The REALU Architecture project will link knowledge with action by (i) providing analyses of cross-sectoral linkages in the tropical forest margins, based on long term engagement in Asia, Africa and Latin America, (ii) organizing multi-stakeholder events to explore implications for the design of an effective regime in the post-2012 context, and (iii) building the scientific and political basis for change through communicating and networking activities.
The goal of the project is to strengthen the ability of developing countries to build and implement effective strategies for reducing emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD) within a context of rural development, national sovereignty, respect for local and indigenous peoples’ rights and integrity of national and global greenhouse gas accounting systems.
In the half day workshop, 25 participants from international and national governments and NGOs in Vietnam listened to four presentations of experts from ICRAF, GDLA, and Sustainable Forest Management Institute (SFMI). The topics covered were (i) Introduction of REALU and concepts RED, REDD, REDD+ and REALU; (ii) Land use and emission – a cross-sectoral perspective; (iii) Opportunity costs Analysis, and (iv) SFM and REDD+. During the discussion sections, the participants talked about the readiness of RED, REDD, REDD+ and REDD++ in Vietnam.
In the afternoon, REALU Vietnam experts groups (GDLA, SFMI, ICRAF, SNV) met to discuss the findings from the morning sessions and will use these comments to improve their report and products to deliver at at the upcoming UNFCCC Conference of Parties in Copenhagen (COP 15).
There was much interest and participation at the workshop. All of the attendees provided useful and practical feedback for REDD and REALU mechanisms that can be used in moving forward in Vietnam. Encouragingly, at the end of the day, one SNV international expert said ‘we believe ICRAF is doing some excellent work in this area’.
Using Africa’s vast agricultural resources to help tackle climate change could earn the continent $1.5 billion a year, said the World Bank’s managing director Ngozi Okonjo-Iwealaa.
It is essential that climate change be viewed as a major development opportunity for Africa given the anticipated increase in the energy requirements as growth accelerates…Agricultural carbon sequestration could generate annual revenues of close to $1.5 billion,” she said, adding that agricultural land management would need to be included in future climate pacts so Africa could benefit from the carbon market.
Okonjo-Iwealaa was delivering a lecture at the London School of Economics.
via Tackling climate change could earn Africa $1.5 billion – 16/09/09 – 1545339 – elEconomista.es.
CARE international is seeking a senior advisor to support implementation of the carbon finance component of CARE’s worldwide climate change strategy. The Senior Advisor, Agriculture, Forestry and Other Land Use (AFOLU) will focus on provision of technical assistance, program development, tools for carbon finance programming, and capacity building. In the context of this position, AFOLU focuses on afforestation/reforestation, soil carbon, and reduced deforestation and forest degradation (REDD).
More information, visit CARE Careers.
Trees outside forests are an important, and often missing piece, of the carbon emissions reductions puzzle.
Although it’s always been clear that trees store carbon and provide benefits to people, how to institutionalize the role of trees in the fight against climate change is now a top question for the global community. The future of an international climate change agreement will be shaped at the upcoming 15th Conference of Parties to the UNFCCC, in Copenhagen this December. Research presented at the 2nd World Congress of Agroforestry can help generate practical policy options for harnessing the full potential of agroforestry and other non-forest land uses to reduce emissions, store carbon, and bring benefits to millions of smallholder farmers across the world.
Trees on farms hold tremendous potential for climate change mitigation
Incorporating trees into farming systems helps sequester carbon and diversify income
The report Trees on Farm: Analysis of Global Extent and Geographical Patterns of Agroforestry, launched at the 2nd World Congress of Agroforestry in August, shows that almost half of all farmed landscapes worldwide include significant tree cover. This is the first study to quantify the extent to which trees are a vital part of agricultural production in all regions of the world. It reveals that on more than 1 billion hectares-which make up 46 percent of the world’s farmlands and are home to more than half a billion people-tree cover exceeds 10 percent. This assessment provides a snapshot of the current state of trees outside of forests; but the future of agroforestry depends on many factors.
It is likely that a REDD-plus deal will take shape in Copenhagen. REDD-plus will create incentives for reducing deforestation, forest degradation (REDD), and increasing carbon stocks in forests (plus). However, the proposed REDD-plus mechanism is based on an unclear and narrow definition of ‘forest’, and may not fully take into account potential emissions reductions from trees outside of forests. Nor will it consider how planting trees on farms may reduce people’s motives to degrade natural forests to meet their daily needs. With appropriate incentives, agroforestry systems could help deflect deforestation along tropical forest margins, as farmers plant more trees on farms for timber, fuel and fodder.
A new climate change deal that allows for future whole landscape carbon accounting can achieve more effective and efficient emissions reductions.
Agroforestry and sustainable agriculture create multiple benefits and support climate change adaptation
Good news from the World Agroforestry Centre shows how indigenous trees can enhance soil fertility and boost food production in Africa. Planting species such as Faidherbia albida with crops such as maize, can help reduce reliance on chemical inputs, enhance food security, and create incentives for farmers to plant trees on farms. This natural solution to agricultural intensification can also reduce pressure on forests. Read more: Green fertilizers can boost food security in Africa (PDF).
Incentives for maintaining trees in areas outside of the ‘natural forest’, such as on smallholder farms, can put farmers on a path to sustainable development while also helping them to become more resilient to climate change impacts. Tree-based production systems can diversify sources of production and income, therefore create buffers in times of drought. Trees on farms can also reduce fertility loss and soil erosion, and improve water retention in soils.
In addition to helping mitigate climate change, agroforestry can make tremendous contributions to climate change adaptation. Innovative agroforestry systems with multiple benefits can be married to international mechanisms for mitigating climate change to achieve more effective and efficient emissions reductions.
The future: High Carbon-stock Pathways for Rural Development
Across the tropics, there is evidence that certain land uses can not only store carbon, but create sustainable benefits for smallholder farmers. At the Agroforestry Congress, the ASB Partnership hosted a symposium to look at cases in Asia, Latin America and Africa that show potential for smallholder farmers to contribute to fighting climate change and benefit from global carbon markets. Agroforestry systems such as multi-storey and intensive cocoa, and evolving swiddens in Indonesia, all store carbon, bring short term economic returns, and fit with local traditional practises. What is the potential for high carbon stock rural development in the tropics? Could a new climate change deal help shift land use towards a new “High Carbon Stocks Rural Development” paradigm? ASB is studying these land uses and the options and incentives that can drive high carbon-storing transitions.
With less than 100 days until Copenhagen, ASB’s message to negotiators is “Yes to REDD, and Yes to an agreement that opens the door for whole-landscape approaches to reducing emissions and increasing carbon stocks”
What do all those Plusses mean? The Brazilian Environmental Research institute of the Amazon (Instituto de Pesquisa Ambiental da Amazônia – IPAM) helps unravel the meaning of REDD, REDD+ and REDD++, in simple Portuguese.
Read more: Desvendando o significado de REDD, REDD+ e REDD++