U.N. REDD scheme “nearly done”

COPENHAGEN,  (Reuters) – A U.N.-backed system to pay  poorer nations for saving or replanting their forests has made  significant progress at climate talks in Denmark, the official  who chairs talks on the scheme said yesterday.

Reducing emissions from deforestation and degradation, or  REDD as the scheme is called, has wide support from many nations  because it puts a price on preserving and rehabilitating  forests.

The scheme, for the first time, would provide an incentive  to save tropical forests that soak up large amounts of  planet-warming carbon dioxide, instead of cutting them down for  timber or valuable cash crops.

REDD is a core issue of the talks in Copenhagen aimed at  trying the lay out the roadmap for a broader, and tougher, deal  to fight climate change. It has been one of the few bright spots  in otherwise troubled climate talks.

“I consider this more or less agreed text except in a few  places,” said Tony La Vina, the chair of the REDD negotiations.
REDD was adopted in U.N. climate talks in Bali, Indonesia,  two years ago as an area negotiators should explore and develop  ways to promote early action.

If finally adopted, it could lead to billions of dollars  flowing to developing countries and forest communities from the  sale of carbon offsets that rich nations would buy to meet  mandatory emissions reduction obligations at home.

Deforestation is responsible for nearly a fifth of mankind’s  greenhouse gas emissions and curbing forest loss is regarded as  a key way to brake the pace of global warming.

The carbon market sees great potential in investing in  forests through the sale of valuable carbon offsets and dozens  of REDD early action projects have started in nearly 40  countries, the U.N. says.

Greens say the scheme has to be carefully designed to ensure  money flows to communities to give an extra incentive to save  forests and to ensure forest protection in one area doesn’t lead  to deforestation in another, a concept called leakage.

La Vina, from the Philippines where deforestation is a major  concern, said the draft text had improved safeguards on  protecting the rights of indigenous forest people and conversion  of natural forests into plantations.

It also affirms that developing countries should undertake  transparent efforts to govern the scheme and take steps to  ensure that emissions cuts from REDD projects can be measured,  reported and verified, a key requirement for investors.
But the draft text doesn’t mention earlier options to set a  target to halt and reverse loss of forest cover, something that  greens say is needed to give nations a clear goal.

La Vina said there were still a number of “live options”,  such as all nations aiming to halt deforestation by 2030 and  reducing deforestation and degradation by developing nations by  half by 2020.
Governments must decide the final target, he said.

Financing was also still unclear but the United States  pledged $1 billion as part of a $3.5 billion scheme as initial  financing towards slowing deforestation, a U.S. government  statement said yesterday.

La Vina said there was still debate on the concept of “sub  national” activities. Most countries back a national approach to  REDD to ensure any emissions reductions from REDD projects are  accounted on a national level.

Greens see this as a loophole and fear sub-national projects  could drive deforestation elsewhere in a country or region.
“Will developed countries provide financing to developing  countries to stop deforestation at a national level and help get  us the reductions the science say is needed?” said Roman  Czebiniak of Greenpeace.

“Or will REDD be a loophole that allows big corporations to  continue to pollute so long as they set up a small forestry  project in a developing country?” he told Reuters.

La Vina said the dispute was unlikely to be resolved in  Copenhagen but thought it might me settled during 2010.