Details about publication

Author(s):Swallow B, M van Noordwijk and L Verchot
Title:Avoided Deforestation with Sustainable benefits: A Simple way to Reduce Carbon Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation
Publication:Brochure - Avoided Deforestation with Sustainable benefits
Year:2007
Type:Other Public awareness and information products
Abstract:Climate Change and its global impacts can no longer be ignored. While cutting emissions from fossil fuel consumption obviously deserves continued attention by all levels of the global society, the approximately 20% of emissions that are due to loss of forests and peatlands cannot
remain outside the purview of climate change mechanisms.
Recognizing this, the Conference of the Parties to the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change invited a discussion “on issues relating to reducing emissions from deforestation in developing countries, focusing on relevant scientific, technical and methodological issues, and
the exchange of relevant information and experiences, including policy approaches and positive incentivesEin its eleventh session on agenda
item 6 (FCCC/CP/2005/L.2).

The World Agroforestry Centre (also known as the International Centre for Research in Agroforestry EICRAF) prepared a submission for consideration in the discussion. The submission is based on extensive research across the humid tropics by a consortium of international
and national organizations operating within the ASB Partnership for the
Tropical Forest Margins (ASB), with key research results generated by Brazil, Peru, Cameroon, Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines.

This brochure summarizes the case for avoided deforestation with sustainable benefits as a simple way to reduce carbon emissions from deforestation and degradation.
Keywords:Avoided Deforestation, sustainable benefits, CO2, Climate Change, deforestation and degradation, carbon emission, reduction
Corresponding Author:asb@cgiar.org
Download publication:Download   pdf   (964 KB)
Region:Amazon   Congo Basin   Southeast Asia   Global  
Topic:Climate Change   Biodiversity   Sustainability   Poverty, Policy and Deforestation