Forest communities said key to climate fight

COPENHAGEN, (Reuters) – Saving tropical forests is  crucial to fighting climate change but efforts to halt  deforestation could go awry without safeguards to protect and  compensate local communities, officials and academics said yesterday.

Forests act like “lungs” of the atmosphere, soaking up large  amounts of mankind’s greenhouse gas emissions. Billions of  people also rely on them for food and livelihoods.

Paying developing nations to preserve forests is a central  issue at U.N. climate talks in the Danish capital aimed at  securing the outlines of tougher global deal to curb greenhouse  gas emissions from 2013.

“Forests and climate issues have never been higher on the  political agenda,” Gro Harlem Brundtland, U.N. Special Envoy for  Climate Change, told a meeting on the sidelines of the talks.

Yet forests were still being destroyed at an alarming rate,  with no observable decrease in the pace of destruction since  1987, she said.

“We are still on our way to destroy an area the size of  India by 2017,” she said.

Tropical forests from equatorial Africa to Brazil and  Indonesia contain some of the world’s richest reserves of carbon  and species but are under increasing threat for their timber and  for the land to grow food for an ever-expanding human  population.

Indigenous groups in the vast Amazon basin and deep in the  jungles of Borneo island fear losing more of their lands to  cattle ranchers or to palm and soy oil plantations.    \Delegates at the talks are close to finalising the framework  of a U.N.-backed financial scheme that would allow developing  countries to earn carbon offsets in return for saving,  rehabilitating and improving the management of their forests.

The scheme, called reducing emissions from deforestation and  degradation, could potentially earn poorer nations billions of  dollars annual in offset sales to rich nations.

It would, for the first time under the United Nations, put a  price on the carbon saved from being emitted by keeping forests  standing with some of the money flowing back to communities.

Speakers at the conference said enshrining the rights of  indigenous people was crucial to the scheme’s success, along  with a transparent payment scheme that would help fund  alternative livelihoods and promote forest protection.

“If local people and indigenous people in the developing  world are not recognised and assigned clear rights, we could end  up with more deforestation,” said Elinor Ostrom of Indiana  University and 2009 winner of the Nobel Prize in economics.

There was a risk of violent evictions of communities and  corruption in preservation schemes unless safeguards were  enforced, she said.

Greens at the conference say the language of the draft REDD  text is weak because it does not require nations to comply with  the U.N. Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples,  although it does refer to the treaty. Conservationists also say the current draft fails to set a  final date or target to halt and reverse forest loss in poor  countries and has not finalised a funding amount or timeframe to  deliver that money from developed nations.

But it does promote steps to avoid the conversion of natural  forests and to enhance social benefits of the scheme.

Brundtland said REDD in practice should not create  incentives for converting natural forests into agricultural  plantations, such as palm oil estates.

Millions of hectares of forest has been cut down in  Indonesia to plant palm oil estates. While providing jobs, the  spread of palm oil plantations has also displaced large numbers  of people reliant on forests.

She said 1.6 billion people relied heavily on forests for  their livelihoods.