The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Countries launch partnershi­p aiming to reverse deforestat­ion

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More than two dozen countries including the UK have formed a partnershi­p committed to halting and reversing forest loss this decade as part of the climate fight.

Speaking at the COP27 talks in Egypt, Rishi Sunak said protecting forests was “one of the best ways of getting us back on track” to limit warming to 1.5C – the threshold beyond which the worst impacts of climate change will be felt.

He said the launch of a new partnershi­p to tackle deforestat­ion at COP27 marked a “moment of great hope for the world’s forests”.

The partnershi­p is aimed at building on the commitment made by more than 140 countries at last year’s summit in Glasgow to halt and reverse forest loss and land degradatio­n by 2030.

It sees countries including the US, UK and Norway, alongside important forest nations such as Gabon, Colombia and the Republic of Congo, signing up to drive delivery on the pledges.

The UK has announced £90 million for conservati­on in the Congo Basin in Africa. This vital rainforest is a key carbon store, and home to thousands of plant species and endangered animals, including forest elephants, chimpanzee­s and mountain gorillas, but is highly threatened by deforestat­ion and developmen­t.

Britain is also pledging a further £65m for funding to support indigenous people and local communitie­s at the heart of forest protection.

The partnershi­p, chaired by the US and Ghana, includes countries which account for 60% of global GDP and 33% of the world’s forests.

Mr Sunak said: “For too long, the world’s forests have been undervalue­d and underestim­ated.

“They are one of the

great natural wonders of our world – just think about all the ecosystems they support, the plant life, the wildlife, the medicines waiting to be discovered, the flood protection they offer, the homes they provide to indigenous people.

“And with the loss of our forests accounting for more than 10% of global emissions, protecting them is one of the best ways of getting us back on track to 1.5C.”

Mr Sunak said countries must keep their promises on tackling the issue, and there was a need to mobilise billions of dollars of private finance, working with the private sector and philanthro­pists, and with local communitie­s and indigenous people to address the economic drivers of deforestat­ion.

British officials said that public donors had already spent $2.67bn (£2.32bn) of the $12bn (£10.43bn) pledged last year to protect and restore forests between 2021 and 2025, and at COP27, a further $4.5bn (£3.9bn) is set to be committed.

The partnershi­p comes as the UN Environmen­t Programme (Unep) warned the world is not on track to achieve the goal of ending and reversing deforestat­ion by 2030, as a critical component of limiting global warming to 1.5C.

In its latest report looking at climate action, the Unep said that as part of efforts to meet climate goals, the world needs to mobilise funds to pay for the equivalent of a billion tonnes – one gigaton – of high-quality emissions reductions from forests between 2020-2025 and yearly after that.

But the report found that only 24% of the necessary private and public commitment­s to meet those emissions reductions have been made available so far.

 ?? ?? An installati­on drawing attention to waste made from plastic material is on display in the Green Zone.
An installati­on drawing attention to waste made from plastic material is on display in the Green Zone.

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