Los Angeles Times

‘ The world is watching’ California’s climate plan

Proposal to help save rainforest­s divides experts and activists

- By Julia Rosen

Smoke is still rising from the Amazon as fires smolder in the world’s largest rainforest. The blazes triggered a wave of global outrage over the loss of precious trees. But California says it has a plan to keep tropical forests standing.

This week, state officials will consider a proposal to protect these forests by steering billions of dollars to countries such as Brazil. The money would fund government efforts to f ight deforestat­ion and promote sustainabl­e industries that don’t involve chopping down and burning trees. And it would come from companies that offset their own emissions by purchasing carbon credits through markets such as California’s cap- and- trade program.

Preserving tropical rainforest­s is essential to combat

ing climate change — around the world, roughly a third of the greenhouse gases released each year come from clearing forests. And backers say this plan is the best way to funnel muchneeded cash toward that crucial task.

Others agree on the pressing need to halt deforestat­ion, but they say California’s plan is a dangerousl­y misguided way to do it. In their view, it would simply allow polluters to keep on polluting without doing anything about the true drivers of forest loss: rising demand for products such as beef, soy and palm oil.

The issue has divided scientists, environmen­tal groups and indigenous leaders who say the Tropical Forest Standard, or TFS, has ramificati­ons far beyond the Golden State. California is a leader on climate change, and approving the TFS could inspire other states, countries and companies to adopt a similar approach.

“This is a critical moment,” said ecologist Christina McCain, who heads the Environmen­tal Defense Fund’s climate initiative­s in Latin America. “The world is watching.”

The TFS wouldn’t be the f irst attempt to fund forest protection through carbon offsets. Several internatio­nal programs have employed them as a way to preserve and restore forests while lowering the cost of reducing emissions in wealthy countries and funding sustainabl­e developmen­t in poorer ones.

Some of these projects succeeded, but others never came to fruition, leaving the fate of the carbon they promised to store in limbo. Many also spelled disaster for people who live in the forest.

Indigenous groups fell prey to unscrupulo­us “carbon cowboys” who used questionab­le methods to secure the rights to land — and its potentiall­y lucrative carbon. People were kicked out of their territorie­s by government­s eager to launch conservati­on projects without local interferen­ce.

In any event, the programs never attracted enough money to reach their intended scale, said Louis Verchot of the Internatio­nal Center for Tropical Agricultur­e, who has studied previous initiative­s.

“It wasn’t what you would call a real enabling environmen­t,” he said. “That’s where things are stuck right now.”

Can the Tropical Forest Standard do better?

Its backers certainly think so. They’ve spent the last decade trying to learn from past mistakes.

The TFS lays out criteria for certifying state, provincial or national government­s that want to sell forest offsets, leaving no room for carbon cowboys. Participat­ing government­s must commit to reducing deforestat­ion, and they’ll only receive credit for the forest they spare beyond their baseline goal.

Plans must be posted publicly, and progress must be closely monitored and independen­tly verified.

“There will be a ton of eyes on it,” said Jason Gray, the head of California’s capand- trade program.

Government­s also have to prove that local stakeholde­rs — especially indigenous groups — have a say in the program and stand to benefit from it. The Brazilian state of Acre, which has spent years developing partnershi­ps with tribes, is often cited as a model.

“Indigenous peoples are very well- informed and prepared not to let their rights be violated,” said Francisca Oliveira de Lima, a member of the Shawadawa People who works at Acre’s staterun Climate Change Institute. “We are in favor of this California program.”

The TFS tries to address other problems, such as leakage, which occurs when suppressin­g deforestat­ion in one place simply pushes it elsewhere. That would be difficult to get away with in a state that’s part of the program, said Steve Schwartzma­n, senior director of tropical forest policy at EDF, a leading supporter of the TFS.

In addition, the TFS mandates that participat­ing states and provinces pony up extra credits as insurance, in case f ires or other natural disasters accidental­ly release carbon that was stored for offsets.

With these safeguards in place, proponents argue the TFS could f inally allow real money to f low toward f ighting deforestat­ion. Today, less than 1.5% of funding to fight climate change goes to forest protection, according to a new analysis by a coalition of scientific organizati­ons and environmen­tal groups.

That has bred frustratio­n in countries such as Brazil, where the government had reduced deforestat­ion by upping enforcemen­t of protected areas but where low levels of investment have failed to create new economic opportunit­ies for farmers, loggers and miners who obeyed the rules, said Dan Nepstad, executive director of the Earth Innovation Institute.

With the TFS, offset money could fund things such as community centers, f ish ponds for aquacultur­e and government programs to support sustainabl­e farming practices.

For California, the reward is the chance to drive greenhouse gas reductions far beyond what the state could accomplish at home, Nepstad said: “The TFS lays out the framework for magnifying that tenfold.”

Critics of the TFS object to almost everything about it, starting with the very idea of offsets.

“It’s what we call soft climate science denial,” said Gary Hughes, California policy monitor for the nonprofit Biofuelwat­ch. “If you are allowing fossil fuel emissions to continue, it’s not doing anything about climate.”

He and other opponents say California’s cap- andtrade program already relies too heavily on offsets — polluters can use them to cancel up to 8% of their emissions in the state — and argue that the TFS would take things even further in the wrong direction. Chief among their concerns is the legitimacy of tropical forest credits.

Barbara Haya, who studies offset programs at UC Berkeley, worries that leakage will still be a problem, since activities shut out of a participat­ing state can still shift to other states or countries.

It’s also hard to ensure that the program will dole out credit only for carbon savings that wouldn’t have happened anyway. Haya examined two decades’ worth of data and found that a quarter of potential partners would have been able to generate offsets under the TFS’s rules due to declining deforestat­ion rates, even though their progress clearly wasn’t due to the program ( it didn’t yet exist).

Then there’s the fear that, despite the TFS’s insurance provision, the carbon that was supposed to offset a polluter’s emissions will end up in the atmosphere eventually, either in a bad f ire season or after a change in political leadership reverses a country’s deforestat­ion policies, as happened recently in Brazil.

Others contend that the TFS is based on f lawed economic reasoning. So far, the price of carbon offsets on exchange markets is just too low to compete against the forces of global commerce, which make land more valuable than trees, said Tracey Osborne, a geographer at the University of Arizona.

And while advocates for indigenous communitie­s applaud the TFS’s social safeguards, some of them say it will be nearly impossible to ensure they are being honored from afar.

Government­s in many tropical countries have a long history of corruption, said Alberto Saldamando, an advisor to the Indigenous Environmen­tal Network. He worries the TFS will only heighten the incentive to coerce or threaten indigenous groups to participat­e in programs that don’t always serve their interests.

“Carbon, instead of being a poison, is a value, and that perspectiv­e leads to all kinds of abuses,” he said.

Opponents raised all these issues last fall, when California’s Air Resources Board f irst met to consider the standard. It opted to delay a vote and asked legislator­s to gather input from both sides.

If the board endorses the standard when it meets Thursday, it won’t mean that credits generated under the TFS will be used in the state’s market right away; government­s that want to participat­e would first have to qualify, and then the air board would have to decide whether to accept tropical offsets, Gray said. The motivation to propose the standard now is “to set a very high bar” for forest offset programs in general, he said.

Regardless of whether California ever uses the TFS in its own cap- and- trade program, the air board’s approval would be a powerful endorsemen­t of forest offsets and a setback for efforts to zero out greenhouse gas emissions, opponents said.

Critics would rather see the state focus on other strategies for preserving forests, such as empowering indigenous groups to protect their lands and pressuring companies to rid their supply chains of goods associated with deforestat­ion. ( California lawmakers are considerin­g a bill that would require government contractor­s to do so.)

Haya and more than 100 other researcher­s laid out their objections to the TFS and submitted them to the air board.

 ?? Vic tor Moriyama Getty I mages ?? FIRES I N the Amazon decimated parts of the rainforest. A California proposal would put billions toward f ighting deforestat­ion. The funds would come from f irms that buy carbon credits to offset their emissions.
Vic tor Moriyama Getty I mages FIRES I N the Amazon decimated parts of the rainforest. A California proposal would put billions toward f ighting deforestat­ion. The funds would come from f irms that buy carbon credits to offset their emissions.
 ?? Eric Risberg Associated Press ?? GOV. JERRY BROWN holds up a climate bill extending California’s capand- trade program after signing it at a ceremony in San Francisco in 2017.
Eric Risberg Associated Press GOV. JERRY BROWN holds up a climate bill extending California’s capand- trade program after signing it at a ceremony in San Francisco in 2017.

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