TREES are one of the most efficient systems of carbon capture and storage on  the planet. They breathe in carbon dioxide and breathe out oxygen, locking the  carbon into their roots, trunk, branches, twigs and leaves and the soil. They  are so good at this that about 20% of the greenhouse gases entering the  atmosphere can be attributed to deforestation. In the run-up to the climate talks in Copenhagen in December, bright minds around  the world are negotiating a formal scheme for reducing the loss of trees as a  way of lowering the world’s carbon emissions.
Avoiding deforestation means that many landowners must forgo the right to cut  down their trees, so that the world at large can benefit. As such, carbon  emissions from deforestation are a classic example of “environmental  externality”. So long as this remains the case, forests will continue to be cut  down. To resolve the problem, it has been suggested that the people who forgo  their rights are compensated. There is already a market for what are called  “voluntary” credits in avoided deforestation.
Companies and people can decide to offset their carbon-emitting activities by  buying credits in avoided deforestation projects. The voluntary market was worth  $705m in 2008, according to Ecosystem  Marketplace, a consultancy, more than twice their value of $335m in 2007.  Growth is expected to continue.
| State and Trends of the Carbon Market 2009 May, 27th 2009
 Despite the turmoil in the financial world, 2008 saw a doubling of the global carbon market, to an estimated value of more than US$ 126 billion, according to the latest State and Trends of the Carbon Market Report 2009, released today by the World Bank at Carbon Expo in Barcelona. 
 The report is based on data from the trading of European Union Allowances (EUAs) under the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme (EU ETS) and from transactions completed under the Kyoto Protocol’s flexible mechanisms—the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) and Joint Implementation (JI)—that allow industrialized countries to purchase greenhouse gas emission reductions in developing countries and in countries with economies in transition, as well as data from voluntary markets.   It finds that the value of transactions from CDM projects in developing countries declined by 12% to an estimated US$ 6.5 billion in 2008, with an average price of US$ 16.8. | 
 
At present, avoided deforestation projects and the credits they create are of  variable quality. Some companies stay clear of the market by generating their  own offsets. Marriott, a hotel group, has a project in the Juma rainforest reserve in Brazil. Anyone who  visits its hotels for ten days is offered the opportunity to offset the carbon  emissions associated with their stay for $10. Although Marriott customers can be  sure they are getting more than hot air for their money, the same is not true  everywhere. Money is being spent on credits of dubious ecological value.
As the world moves towards negotiating a deal to reduce carbon emissions that  may involve extensive cuts, there are calls to formalise the process of creating  avoided deforestation credits. It is important work. The climate bill going through the American Congress envisions  that large numbers of offsets would come from international forestry schemes.  The new mandatory trading market would be far larger than the tiny voluntary  market.
The process for setting up a formal trading scheme goes by the acronym REDD,  which stands for reducing deforestation and degradation. Landowners who forgo  their rights would be able to sell REDD credits that had been verified by  trusted third parties in accordance with recognised international standards.  Nonetheless there are huge issues to overcome, not least in verifying that  deforestation has been avoided. Michelle Chan of Friends of the Earth, a  pressure group, says that over the past few years many countries have been  funded to become “REDD ready”. When the mandatory market emerges, then, there  will be schemes that can supply them. She says that many poor countries with  forests are eyeing the scheme hopefully but there are problems with land tenure  and the rights of indigenous people.
Governments should be banned from selling carbon rights over the heads of  indigenous peoples in the proposed formal trading scheme. Negotiators will need  to be careful to create property rights that are enforceable. They also need to  be cautious about the growing practice among traders of developing derivative  products based on promises to deliver carbon credits for a specified price. This  is already happening for some REDD projects. In 2008, REDD projects made up 14%  of the forest carbon credits traded on voluntary markets, according to a report issued on May 27th by Ecosystem Marketplace. So even  though REDD credits do not formally exist, a way is being found to trade them.  REDD “credits” trade at a lower price than other kinds of forest carbon credits,  a signal that the market recognises their risk.
A survey of buyers of forest carbon credits by a company called EcoSecurities has found that 44% of customers would be willing  to buy options to purchase credits, prepay for credits or buy ownership in a  share of the project. Where REDD is concerned this may be risky, because it  remains to be seen which projects will qualify. Investors could end up with  worthless credits, which could harm the credibility of a scheme that has not  even really been born.
The world desperately needs a way of incorporating the cost of carbon into  the economic system. The cost, however, is to place global ecological security  in the somewhat shaky hands of the global financial marketplace.
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The University of Queensland has found paying  to preserve carbon stored in forests could protect endangered wildlife such as  Indonesia's orangutans.  UQ PhD student Oscar Venter is the lead author  of the study “Carbon Payments as a Safeguard for Threatened Tropical Mammals,”  published in the current edition of the journal Conservation Letters.  
The study concentrated on 3.3 million hectares of tropical forest in  Kalimantan (Indonesian Borneo), which is home to orangutans, elephants and other  endangered species. Based on prices now being paid for carbon dioxide  (CO2), the study compared the revenue that could be derived from protecting the  forest and avoiding carbon emissions to the revenue that would be derived if the  forest was converted to oil palm plantations. 
Mr Venter said the study  found that carbon payments, in the form of payments for Reduced Emissions from  Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD) could compete with oil palm at  carbon prices of $10 to $33 per tonne of CO2. He said if REDD was only  used to protect the most carbon rich areas, which would still be a great win for  forest conservation, the price of CO2 would drop dramatically, down to as low as  $2 per tonne. 
“What excites me most about our results is that those  areas that are particularly good for carbon and therefore most likely to receive  REDD protection, also house very high levels of threatened mammals, almost twice  the average number,” he said. “Countries with tropical forests, such as  Indonesia, are pushing hard to develop. Part of this development involves  clearing forests to make room for agriculture. “To them this makes  sense, standing forests have had no value in the past, you can't sell orangutans  and elephants on conservation markets, they don't exist. But carbon markets do  exist and they traded US $126 billion in 2008. 
“If REDD is successful at  harvesting some of these funds to protect tropical forests by giving them value,  this could fundamentally change conservation in these countries, and provide  benefits for mammals at a scale that we've never before seen.”  
Furthermore, the study discovered forest conservation in Kalimantan  would prevent 2.1 billion tonnes of carbon emissions. 
The collaborative  study includes researchers from the Center for International Forestry Research  (CIFOR), one of 15 centres supported by the Consultative Group on International  Agricultural Research (CGIAR), as well as scientists from UQ, The Nature  Conservancy and the Great Ape Trust of Iowa. 
The proposals to use carbon  payments to conserve forests is expected to be highlighted at The United Nations  Climate Change Conference scheduled for December in Copenhagen. Mr  Venter said he was working with The Nature Conservancy in Indonesia to help plan  for and implement REDD in areas that are slated for oil palm, as well as logging  concessions and forest-protected areas. 
“By showing how much value could  come from carbon payments, it becomes easier to demonstrate the benefits of  shifting oil palm expansion to areas that have no forests or only have degraded  forests, which contain less carbon and are less biologically diverse,” he said.  CIFOR Director General Frances Seymour said REDD offered important  win-win opportunities for climate and biodiversity protection.  
“Ultimately, our goal is to help fashion an agreement in Copenhagen that  will allow tropical forests to become a part of a more comprehensive climate  agreement – one that will reduce emissions as well as produce co-benefits,” Mr  Seymour said. “There is already a good case to be made for ending the  exclusion of existing forests in the next climate pact. This new evidence shows  just one of the many benefits that a REDD accord could have.”
Carbon payments as  a safeguard for threatened tropical mammals (p 123-129)
Oscar  Venter, Erik Meijaard, Hugh Possingham, Rona Dennis, Douglas Sheil, Serge Wich,  Lex Hovani, Kerrie Wilson, Published Online: May 1 2009 1:11AM, DOI:  10.1111/j.1755-263X.2009.00059.x
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Issue date: June 8, 2009 
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Progress on tropical forest scheme
A proposal that will ultimately include the world’s tropical forests in a  climate protection carbon trading scheme, is well received at UN-led  negotiations in Bonn.
Morten Andersen, en.cop15.dk
A carbon trading scheme aiming to protect the climate by halting tropical  deforestation is likely to be agreed at the UN conference on climate change in  Copenhagen this December.
“We are seeing a lot of areas of agreement that include both developed and  developing countries… there is a much stronger consensus in the room on this  that there are on some of the other issues,” Federica Bietta, Deputy Director of  the Coalition for Rainforest Nations (CfRN) tells BusinessGreen during this  week's UN-led negotiations in Bonn.
The proposal aims to introduce REDD (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation  and Forest Degradation) in three phases. Firstly forestry management in  rainforest countries should be scaled up. Secondly forestry protection  demonstration projects should be deployed. And thirdly the REDD projects should  get access to carbon markets to help finance projects.
Brazil remains sceptical about carbon credits as an appropriate tool in  rainforest conservation, but according to Federica Bietta the credits have  general support in Bonn:
“We know that if we are to have access to carbon market projects, we will  have to adhere to higher standards of auditing and management. But we believe  access to the market is the best way to get the financing at the required scale  (…) Some countries such as Papua New Guinea and Indonesia have already been  working on REDD for a few years and could introduce projects quite quickly,  while some other countries could take five years to get their first project up  and running.”
NOT READY for REDD?
Practicalities of trading carbon and protecting forests make meeting  high expectations for REDD hard, say Esteve Corbera and Manuel  Estrada.
It is clear that any effective international  'deal' on climate change must decrease emissions from deforestation and land-use  change that represent about a fifth of all emissions. An international mechanism  to fund such reductions, reducing emissions from deforestation and forest  degradation (REDD), is emerging as a global blueprint to achieve this, and  expectations are high. 
Many developing countries are keen to participate  because entering the regulated carbon market, which represented US$126 billion  in 2008, raises hopes of long-term income. 
Developed countries are  similarly enthusiastic. REDD offers them a relatively cheap way to meet their  commitments under the Kyoto Protocol (or any new climate change treaty) and  could also encourage developing countries to sign up to voluntary emission  reduction commitments at a sectoral level in the next round of climate  negotiations. 
But designing a framework that will live up to everyone's  expectations will be hard, given the divergent political, institutional,  technical and governance capacities within the developing  world.
Permanent commitment
One immediate problem  is that current proposals are for payment after emissions have been reduced. So  countries would have to design and implement carbon reduction policies with  their own resources — an unlikely course for those already facing significant  budgetary constraints and other more pressing issues, such as poverty, health  and education. 
Even if the carbon market could deliver up-front funding  through innovative financial mechanisms, whether it can ensure deforestation is  kept low in the long-term is debatable. 
Put simply, the carbon stored in  forests can only be counted as emitted to the atmosphere once — so avoiding  these emissions can only be sold and used against emissions reduction targets  once. Developing countries are essentially being asked to accept a one-off  payment for the carbon in their forests, in exchange for permanently committing  to avoiding land-use change. 
Indeed, if a 'seller's liability' approach  is used to define the rules for REDD, this commitment could even become a  financial obligation for developing countries — that is, they would have to pay  up for any carbon loss for which credits have already been issued and sold.  
Checks and balances
An even bigger problem for developing  countries is certification. To enter the carbon market, REDD initiatives must  generate real, measurable, long-term and additional emissions reductions that  are certifiable by a third party. But few developing countries have the  resources or expertise to collect enough data on land-use change or carbon  storage to fulfill such criteria. 
Sure, some individual projects have  been successful — emissions reductions from the Noel Kempff Mercado National  Park in Bolivia, for example, have been certified by the verification company  SGS. But national emissions inventories in most developing countries do not meet  the Kyoto Protocol's clean development mechanism (CDM) standards. For example,  Mexico's reported emissions for the land-use sector over the period 1993-2002  had different degrees of uncertainty depending on the data collection methods  and the reporting source, with uncertainty ranging between 4 and 34 per cent.  
Equally problematic is ensuring that individual REDD credits in the  carbon market are properly equivalent to each other (i.e. are fully fungible).  Regulations to ensure this, set by buyer countries, could limit demand for  credits and so reduce funding for REDD activities. 
The European  Emissions Trading Scheme's exclusion of credits from afforestation and  reforestation CDM projects is a good example of how a potentially large  mitigation option can be effectively nullified by regulation in buyer countries  (see Climate deals should reward wider forest management and Africa  needs agroforestry to cut forest emissions). If REDD is to be successful,  national regulations in buyer countries will have to meet rules agreed under the  UNFCCC.
Essential groundwork
So it seems unlikely  that large numbers of tradable REDD credits will be generated in the short term.  Pilot activities, but also massive capacity building, will be needed within the  next few years if countries are to pave the way for significant emissions  reductions. For example, specific and detailed assessments of what drives  deforestation at national and regional levels will be required to show where  REDD is most needed, how deforestation and degradation should be tackled and who  should be involved in conservation efforts. 
Meanwhile, governments and  research organisations should be building scientific and technical expertise so  that REDD's future architecture does not rely on developed countries'  consultants and private organisations, as has often been the case for CDM  projects.
Even assuming that the funding issues and technical problems  are solved, there are still significant management and governance hurdles to  overcome. For example, forest management programmes often fail due to limited  staff, equipment and training, corruption among government officers, and  misunderstandings about existing property and benefit-sharing arrangements with  rural communities. 
Informal and customary tenure makes it difficult to  set formal contracts with rural stakeholders, and particularly with the most  disenfranchised. This means that as well as building scientific and  technological capacity to measure, report and verify emission reduction  projects, REDD must help improve governance and fairly reward indigenous peoples  and communities. 
Identifying all the stakeholders, raising awareness  about REDD and consulting on how the scheme can or should work are crucial to a  successful mechanism for reducing forest emissions. All of these require time  and must not be rushed, simply to match the starting date of a post-2012 climate  policy regime, or the agenda of supporting organisations.
Esteve  Corbera is a researcher at the School of International Development, University  of East Anglia, and the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research in the United  Kingdom.
Manuel Estrada is an independent senior consultant on  climate change, Mexico. 
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Issue date: October 21, 2009 
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On the road to REDD
An emissions trading scheme gives forests a market value on the  basis of how much carbon they sequester. It could help to control global warming  — if developing nations meet their responsibilities.
 
Environmentalists have spent decades working to protect tropical  forests, both to promote biodiversity and to conserve nature's bounty. All too  often those efforts have fallen short in the face of economic forces that put a  higher price on timber and cleared land than on the forests themselves. But that  may soon change if international climate negotiators can include forest carbon  in a treaty to control global warming. The path forward will not be easy, as the  News Feature on Madagascar's forests on page 26 points out, but it is  surely a worthy experiment.
Forest carbon represents a new way of thinking about conservation,  one that measures forests in terms of the carbon they sequester in their biomass  and soil. The numbers are substantial: deforestation is currently responsible  for up to 20% of global carbon emissions, which means that protecting forests  could noticeably slow global warming. Doing so will be difficult, though, given  the social issues at play and the weak governance in many tropical nations. But  it should be relatively cheap compared with other methods of reducing carbon  emissions. And with carbon footing the bill, tropical forests might finally get  the kind of attention — and resources — they deserve.
 Governments must find ways to address the  social and economic problems that push people to cut down their forests.
Governments must find ways to address the  social and economic problems that push people to cut down their forests.
As the world prepares for the United Nations climate summit in  Copenhagen this December, negotiations over how a new climate treaty would  incorporate a market for forest conservation credits — a trading system known as  'reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation' (REDD) — have  been among the most fruitful to date. REDD negotiators might well be closer to a  deal than any of their treaty counterparts working on emissions targets,  financing and the like. Developed countries see REDD as a potentially cheap and  beneficial way to reduce emissions, and developing countries see it as a cash  infusion that could be used to promote a new model of sustainable  development.
At present, REDD pilot projects are sprouting up in communities  around the tropics, often using government funds or in some cases carbon credits  that have been issued on voluntary carbon markets. As helpful as these  individual projects might be for improving people's livelihoods and preserving  local biodiversity, however, it's not clear that they measurably reduce  global-warming emissions. To realize the full promise of REDD — and to tap into  the much larger flows of private money expected in future carbon markets —  nations must ultimately manage their forests on a national scale. This means  that they will need to beef up their science and regulatory infrastructure in  order to inventory all their forest carbon, show that they can control land use  at the local level and prove that their emissions are declining. Exactly how  they achieve this will probably vary by country, and that is fine. As long as  forests are left standing and emissions are going down, nations should have some  flexibility to set up systems that most benefit their own people.
Many pitfalls lie ahead. As the situation in Madagascar shows,  political instability can derail environmental reforms; continuing poverty and  bad policy, as well as droughts and fires, could do the same. But governments,  climate negotiators and environmentalists are working on solutions to these  challenges, and there is no evidence yet that they cannot be overcome.
One thing is clear: it is at the local level that forest  protection will either succeed or fail. Governments must find ways to address  the social and economic problems that push people to cut down their forests, as  well as instituting laws against doing so. And although it would be foolhardy to  think of REDD as a panacea, the idea certainly dovetails nicely with development  goals. Indeed, those nations that are able to spread the wealth in such a way  that local communities see benefits are the most likely to succeed.
 
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Issue date: November 9, 2009 
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