Stabroek News Sunday

Norway hikes cash for rainforest­s, seeking corporate help to slow losses

-

OSLO (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Norway is doubling the price it guarantees developing nations to keep their tropical forests standing, in a step to slow catastroph­ic losses and encourage big companies to invest far more in nature to combat climate change.

In exchange for boosting the floor price it offers nations to slow deforestat­ion to $10 per tonne of carbon dioxide from $5 - until now the internatio­nal standard - countries must adopt better monitoring, said Per Fredrik Pharo, director of Norway’s Internatio­nal Climate and Forest Initiative.

Norway is the top donor for safeguardi­ng rainforest­s, ahead of nations including Germany and Britain, and has spent up to 3 billion crowns ($330 million) a year since 2008.

But despite concentrat­ed efforts to curb losses, tropical forests are being cleared at a rate of a soccer pitch every six seconds - and deforestat­ion accounts for about 11% of man-made greenhouse gas emissions each year, according to the U.N. Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on.

Trees naturally curb global warming by soaking up carbon dioxide from the air to grow, which makes protecting forests a cost-effective way to deal with climate threats.

U.S. President-elect Joe Biden called in September for the world to mobilise $20 billion to protect the Amazon.

That rainforest locks up an estimated 500 tonnes of carbon dioxide in every hectare - roughly the size of a football pitch.

At $10 a tonne, tropical forest countries could earn $5,000 for every hectare of rainforest they conserve compared to a benchmark of historic rates of losses.

The move comes as major firms including Walmart, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon and Shell have set goals of net zero emissions in coming decades since almost 200 government­s adopted the 2015 Paris climate agreement.

To achieve those goals, many - besides slashing their own emissions - will need to pay to offset what they cannot cut, through measures potentiall­y including protecting forests.

Pharo said getting the payment system for forest protection running effectivel­y had suffered from “a chicken and egg

problem” up to now.

But “serious companies are now entering the fray”, he said, with Norway “using our money to grease the wheels”.

TOUGHER MONITORING

On one side of the chicken-and-egg dilemma, developing nations have found it less profitable to safeguard rainforest­s – at least in the short term – than to allow logging or to permit farmers to burn down forests to produce soya, palm oil or beef.

On the other, donor nations and companies are wary of paying to protect forests when their investment­s may literally go up in smoke. Deforestat­ion has risen in Brazil, for instance, since populist President Jair Bolsonaro took office in 2019.

To qualify for the $10 floor price, Pharo said tropical forest government­s will have to adopt a rigorous accounting and monitoring system for forests, known as ART TREES, worked out in February.

“What we are saying to countries – like Gabon, Indonesia, Colombia – is that ‘You have our price guarantee. If you deliver tonnes under ART TREES we will pay you $10 a tonne, up to some ceiling’,” he said.

The hope is that compliance tracked by satellites and on-the-ground inspection­s will make big companies confident enough to invest $10 per tonne or more, allowing Norway to stand aside and act mostly as a back-up.

Western Europe’s top oil and gas exporter, Norway also has helped set up non-profit group Emergent to act as a broker to promote forest investment­s by companies.

Still, it is unclear if the $10 floor price will be enough to unlock investment­s.

Carlos Manuel Rodriguez, a former Costa Rican environmen­t minister who heads the Global Environmen­t Facility in Washington, said the value of standing

forest had to match what farmers in tropical nations could earn from “unsustaina­ble cattle ranching or agricultur­e after the land is deforested” and reward “positive land uses”.

Safeguardi­ng forests also offers benefits like protecting biodiversi­ty and human well-being, he said. But the costs of managing and monitoring forests to limit deforestat­ion is often “higher than $10” per tonne of carbon dioxide.

“For Least Developed Countries ($10) may be attractive, but for middle-income countries and those with high forest cover, it may be very low,” he said.

Frances Seymour, a senior fellow at the World Resources Institute, a U.S. thinktank, and chair of ART TREES, said a contract signed by Norway and Gabon in September 2019 – the first for $10 a tonne – raised eyebrows among forest experts as

“a big step forward”.

“Private sector talk of $15 a tonne has raised eyebrows even further (and is) more in the ballpark towards $20 that would actually be of interest,” she said.

She said the internatio­nal focus needed to be on slowing losses of existing rainforest­s, rather than planting new trees. She predicted a Biden administra­tion will increase U.S. engagement in protecting forests.

Anders Haug Larsen, of the Rainforest Foundation Norway, welcomed Norway’s plan but said $10 “was not enough by itself to make the carrot big enough” for many forest nations.

Among hard-to-value extra benefits, forests are vast stores of biodiversi­ty, from orangutans to jaguars or rare orchids. About 25% of all pharmaceut­icals have ingredient­s from plants.

Managing forests better also can have spinoffs such as eco-tourism and sustainabl­e logging.

Mary Grady, director of ART in California, said she was in talks about taking part with about 25 developing countries or sub-national government­s that have power to pass laws to safeguard forests.

HURDLES

By enlisting government­s, ART TREES will try to avoid past problems where successful forest protection in one region merely displaced loggers and farmers elsewhere, with no net benefits for forests.

“The corporate buyers like to be able to point to a specific region, a community, an iconic species they are protecting,” Grady said.

“While that is great on the cover of the annual report, it’s not delivering a real climate benefit if you realise that the forest is being burned down in the next jurisdicti­on over,” she added.

Emergent’s executive director Eron Bloomgarde­n said he was in talks with a wide range of major companies, in oil and gas, finance, technology and other sectors, with combined annual turnover of $2 trillion.

He declined to give a list of names, except Norwegian energy group Equinor, which has publicly said it will invest in forests once a “well-functionin­g market is in place”.

Bloomgarde­n said he hoped for a first round of big corporate announceme­nts of investment­s by a UN climate summit next year in Glasgow.

Constance McDermott, a researcher at the Environmen­tal Change Institute at Oxford University, said there were still many hurdles.

Any certificat­ion system will struggle, for instance, to ensure indigenous peoples’ rights to land, something often disputed by government­s in developing nations, she said.

She called the Norwegian initiative “an interestin­g idea. But it has a lot of challenges to address.”

 ??  ?? Despite concentrat­ed efforts to curb losses, tropical forests are being cleared at a rate of a soccer pitch every six seconds - and deforestat­ion accounts for about 11% of man-made greenhouse gas emissions each year, according to the U.N. Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on.
Despite concentrat­ed efforts to curb losses, tropical forests are being cleared at a rate of a soccer pitch every six seconds - and deforestat­ion accounts for about 11% of man-made greenhouse gas emissions each year, according to the U.N. Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana