BIODIVERSITY DEFENSING AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE


Environmental Panorama
International
June of 2008


08 Jun 2008 - Climate change is happening, and we must develop ways for all life to be able to cope. WWF Vietnam Programme is looking at this through the development of resilient multifunctional landscapes that also work as forest corridors, assisting with species dispersal and adaptation, by changes in land-use practices.

The Central Annamites forests, an area known to have existed as continual forest despite climatic fluctuations of the past, stretches from evergreen forests in Vietnam and to the drier parts of the Annamite chain, which has encouraged high degrees of biological diversity. The landscape has become regarded internationally as a critical conservation priority in Southeast Asia as this biological diversity may be the key to mitigating the effects of climate change.

Population pressure on top of fragmented forest habitats mean that species trying to move and adapt to rapid climactic changes may have little option. At the same time, continuing forest loss means that people are losing important watersheds and protection from new more violent weather patterns.

Mitigating climate change: Creation of a robust landscape

WWF has been conducting a number of activities as part of the pilot Central Annamites Initiative. The aim of this fledgling initiative is to create partnerships - from local communities to international organisations – for working together to secure biodiversity conservation and sustainable development in the Central Annamites.

In order to create resilient ecosystems and livelihood opportunities for local people, a mosaic of protected area, watershed forest, and production forest is being created, combining existing nature reserves and three new protected areas in central Vietnam, which strengthens forest conservation through the creation of protected area forest corridors. This is particularly strong in Hue and Quang Nam Province where there is an east-to-west corridor connecting the coastal areas of Vietnam to the forests of Lao PDR.

However, the area also has large spaces of degraded and bare land, and there is a need to promote restoration that encompasses ecological approaches, livelihood and income generation, carbon storage, and improvement of landscape connectivity.

With large tracts of diverse forest systems, both protected and revitalized, the robustness and resiliency of the land will be maintained. This will help to ensure a more stable environment for the people, the plants, and the animals in the face of ever more unstable climactic events.
Chris Dickinson
CTS Technical Advisor
WWF Greater Mekong - Vietnam Country Programme

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Reducing deforestation: Lao PDR and carbon trading

08 Jun 2008 - A new opportunity has developed for Lao PDR to be involved in the international carbon trading market. Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD) was recently endorsed at the Conference of Parties 13th <!--[endif]-->of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in Bali to provide incentives for reducing emissions from deforestation and degradation by providing finances for the sustainable development of forests and biodiversity conservation.

REDD is one of the key schemes under consideration for the second commitment period post Kyoto Protocol for reduction of greenhouse gasses that will aid around 20 developing countries to make credible estimates of their national forest carbon stocks and develop strategies to reduce deforestation and land degradation.

Lao PDR’s Department of Forestry has engaged various stakeholders, including WWF, to prepare Lao PDR’ proposal for inclusion in REDD. The country’s extensive national protected areas and protection forests provide a strong basis for initial REDD strategies as they encompass about 50 percent of national forest cover, requiring strengthened management capacity.

Under REDD, this country aims to raise public awareness of national and global benefits of participating in carbon trading. Land-use planning and titling programmes are stepping stones to engage village communities in emission reduction including the phasing out of slash-and-burn agriculture.

In Champassak Province, where WWF is engaged with Government and communities in the ADB funded Biodiversity Corridor Initiative (BCI), could potentially be a pilot area for the REDD initial development. The area has undergone extensive land-use planning and delineated areas of protection forest. Also potential is the conservation forest area within the XEFOR II Project site in Xekong Province. The creation of the Forest and Trade Network could play a role in REDD by ensuring sustainable forest management of production forests.

WWF’s experience and knowledge of protected area management will be critical in supportting Lao PDR’s government to implement REDD strategies. Strengthening protected area management at all levels, especially the inclusion of rural communities will be important to ensure a possible future commitment under REDD.

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Stop the madness of wasteful paper consumption – make a ‘SHRINK’ pledge

09 Jun 2008 - A network of more than 50 European environmental non-governmental organisations today launches “Shrink”, a joint project addressing the madness of over-consumption of paper. Individuals as well as corporate and institutional paper users are invited to pledge to cut their paper consumption, on the new website www.shrinkpaper.org.

“Almost everyone in industrialised countries uses paper every day, but we have become careless. For example, 65% of print-outs and photocopies, many of which could be read on screen, land in the bin before the end of the day, and junk mail and catalogues are clogging our mailboxes,” said Mandy Haggith of the European Environmental Paper Network (EEPN). “Paper production and use is directly linked to grave negative impacts on forests, biodiversity, on water resources, on the global climate and on human rights, through irresponsible producers. All of us can help to change this, starting today by making a pledge on shrinkpaper.org.”

The website enables people to make a personal pledge to use less paper and commit to simple actions, such as signing off junk mail and printing double-sided if printing cannot be substituted by electronic channels. It provides useful tips for running a comprehensive paper use reduction programme in an office, and how to save costs by doing so. The website will provide a running tally of the amount of trees, water, pollution and climate change emissions saved through the pledges made. Helma Brandlmaier from WWF International said, "Responsible paper production practices are necessary and possible. But we also need to tackle our careless and wasteful consumption. People in developed countries are using way more than their share while children in developing countries do not have paper to write on or books to read."

Industrialised countries consume more resources than the world can supply while staying within its carrying capacity: if everyone on earth had the consumption habits of Europeans we would require more than two planets. The madness of over-consumption of paper is just one example of many where people need to cut waste, leading the way so governments and corporations can follow.

Coinciding with the global launch of “Shrink” is a specific communication focus by the EEPN in the UK to some of the UK’s biggest paper consumers – banks, magazine publishers, catalogue companies and supermarkets – inviting them to show global responsibility and to commit to paper use reductions following the example of individual pledges on www.shrinkpaper.org.

“Unnecessarily huge volumes of paper are distributed by large corporations as packaging, mailings and publications, so we are asking some of the biggest paper users to commit to reducing their paper footprint. Our aim is to generate a society-wide understanding of the need to cut wasteful paper use and to help both big and small consumers to take action to make real reductions,” said Judy Rodrigrues of Greenpeace International.

“The environmental impacts of paper consumption are vast”, said Otto Miettinen of Friends of the Earth Finland. “Making 1kg of paper requires 98kg of other resources, uses vast amounts of energy and water and causes pollution. Almost half (42%) of all industrially logged timber is pulped to make paper products, much of it sourced from old-growth and other endangered and high conservation-value forests. The paper industry’s climate change emissions, including forest impacts, production, transportation and disposal, are more than three times those of global aviation. Europeans use four times as much paper as the global average so we are responsible for a disproportionate share of those impacts. We must use less paper.”

“In addition to problems created for biodiversity, the paper industry also has negative social impacts, so saving paper is also an ethical issue”, said Peter Gerhardt of Robin Wood. “In some cases deforestation or chemical emissions by the pulp and paper industry endanger people’s livelihoods and have negative impacts on the health, well-being and stability of local communities. In some areas, forests or other natural ecosystems are being cleared for conversion to plantations with limited ecological value, employing toxic chemical herbicides and fertilisers,and with devastating consequences for local people.”

“By using paper more efficiently, companies and individuals can cut paper purchases and related costs such as toner, storage, handling time and disposal, so as well as the environmental and social benefits of saving paper, it can also save money” said Jim Ford of ClimateForIdeas.org.
Mandy Haggith

Notes for Editors:

(1) Access the Shrink website on http://www.shrinkpaper.org

(2) The European Environmental Paper Network consists of more than 50 non-governmental organisations (NGOs) who share a Vision for Transforming the European Paper Industry. The Vision was launched in 2006, and it sets out a series of goals to limit the negative impacts of paper production and use: to reduce paper consumption, source fibre responsibly, maximise recycled fibre, ensure social responsibility and ensure clean production. The NGO Paper Vision can be accessed on www.shrinkpaper.org/our-vision.htm. A complementary network with its own vision in North America is the Environmental Paper Network, www.environmentalpaper.org.

(3) Europe’s overall ecological footprint is 2.2 times its biological capacity, and has risen by 70% since the early 1960s. The footprint of all individual EU countries is above the world’s sustainable level, which indicates the need to reduce consumption across all sectors of the economy, to less than half current levels.

(4) The Shrink project is partly funded in the UK by the Esme Fairbairn Foundation.

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
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