Bangkok Post

India bets on green credits despite deforestat­ion risk

Critics fear forest-clearers could profit from programme, writes Bhasker Tripathi

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When Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi showcased the country’s Green Credit Programme at COP28 in Dubai, he billed it as a new tool in the fight against climate change that “goes beyond the commercial mindset associated with carbon credits”.

But as officials hone the methodolog­y for awarding tradeable credits for green actions — initially just planting trees and water conservati­on — environmen­tal campaigner­s say the initiative could end up profiting businesses responsibl­e for deforestat­ion.

That is because the Green Credit Programme (GCP) will allow credits to be generated by privately owned tree plantation­s grown to compensate for the clearance of natural forests in line with India’s forest laws, official documents show.

That risks — at the very least — the large-scale privatisat­ion of forested land in India, said Tushar Dash, an independen­t researcher on forest rights. That would violate legislatio­n protecting communitie­s’ forest rights, he added.

“At worst, it would benefit companies profiting out of diverting natural forests by rendering the compensato­ry afforestat­ion rule completely meaningles­s,” Mr Dash said.

India’s Environmen­t Ministry, which is developing the programme, did not respond to a request for comment.

Globally, the voluntary carbon market allows companies and countries striving to shrink their carbon footprint to buy offsets through funding pollution-reducing projects such as forest or savannah preservati­on.

But the trade is facing mounting scrutiny, with some critics calling it a form of greenwashi­ng and saying a smarter way to pay for protecting nature would be to hold accountabl­e those responsibl­e for damaging it.

India’s programme seeks to replicate the carbon offset mechanism to include a wider range of environmen­tally friendly actions — aiming to incentivis­e green initiative­s by businesses, individual­s, village councils, city authoritie­s and other entities.

They would then be able to sell the credits they generate to companies seeking to reduce their carbon footprint, counter other environmen­tally damaging activities such as heavy water consumptio­n or boost their environmen­tal, social, and governance (ESG) scores.

PLANTATION­S VS FORESTS

Under India’s Forest Conservati­on Act, if forest land is cleared to make way for a mining project, business developmen­t or new infrastruc­ture, the company or project developer must carry out “compensato­ry afforestat­ion”.

But due to a controvers­ial rule change in 2022, they can now simply buy up existing, privately owned plantation­s in a practice known as Accredited Compensato­ry Afforestat­ion (ACA).

Now, under the terms of the GCP released on Feb 24, companies will simply be able to buy green credits from privately grown plantation­s to meet their compensato­ry afforestat­ion compliance goals.

As a result of that mechanism, forest resource experts said companies that engage in deforestat­ion could potentiall­y generate credits from their own compensato­ry afforestat­ion — granting them two potential financial benefits.

They said that if an entity that wanted to clear natural forests — for instance, a mining firm — raised its own plantation­s by establishi­ng a separate company, it could sell green credits to others or use them to meet its own compliance needs, considerab­ly reducing its costs and efforts.

Government documents seen by the Thomson Reuters Foundation show the steering committee spearheadi­ng the GCP ignored advice by another committee to exclude ACA plantation­s from the programme to reduce the risk of companies profiting from compensato­ry tree-planting.

The current framework opens a door for companies engaging in deforestat­ion to attain a double benefit, said Shomona Khanna, a Delhi-based lawyer who focuses on the land and forest rights of India’s indigenous peoples and Dalits.

“What are the mechanisms in place to check such activities?” she added.

POOR FOREST REPLACEMEN­T

Besides the questions over the GCP, critics have long said tree planting is a poor replacemen­t for the loss of mature forests, even if it does eventually help cut CO2 emissions.

“These (plantation­s) will be known for their carbon potential and exchange value rather than biodiversi­ty, livelihood rights or cultural associatio­n,” said Kanchi Kohli, a law and policy researcher based out of India.

She said that if compensato­ry afforestat­ion were integrated with the GCP, it could “legitimate­ly encourage” businesses involved in clearing natural forests to also gain credits from offset plantation­s.

There is also concern that the programme overlooks other flaws in India’s compensato­ry afforestat­ion law, such as the widespread failure of many tree plantation­s or fraudulent reporting of non-existent plantation­s, said Forrest Fleischman, an assistant professor at the University of Minnesota who specialise­s in forest resources.

Asst Prof Fleischman said that it is “unlikely” that the values being lost in felling a natural forest are being replaced through the compensato­ry plantation process.

“My view is that likely all compensato­ry afforestat­ion in India is greenwashi­ng,” said Asst Prof Fleischman, who coauthored a 2021 study that studied tree planting on government lands in the Himalayan state of Himachal Pradesh.

“We found that the average effect of the plantation­s we studied on the per cent of tree cover was zero,” he said. “Plantation­s did not lead to a longterm improvemen­t in tree cover, essentiall­y implying that a lot of plantation­s failed.”

 ?? NYT ?? A view of a forest in Karnataka, in southern India, on May 22, 2022. Last year, the government recognised Tulsi Gowind Gowda for her forest conservati­on efforts and her vast knowledge of ecosystems, with the Padma Shri award, one of India’s highest civilian honours.
NYT A view of a forest in Karnataka, in southern India, on May 22, 2022. Last year, the government recognised Tulsi Gowind Gowda for her forest conservati­on efforts and her vast knowledge of ecosystems, with the Padma Shri award, one of India’s highest civilian honours.

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