GOVS SHOW INDONESIAN FORESTS THE MONEY:
4 BILLION FUND FOR FOREST PROTECTION


Environmental Panorama
International
May of 2010


The money came in the form of a 4 billion USD fund contributed to by seven wealthy countries - US, UK, Norway, Germany, Australia, Japan and France - to be used for forest protection globally as part of REDD (reducing carbon emissions from deforestation and degradation). A program where developed countries provide funds to help developing ones protect their forests. (Deforestation contributes up to a fifth of global carbon emissions - so this money doesn't just protect trees it protects our climate too!) In addition to the global fund, Indonesia will also receive 1 billion directly from Norway.

The love was an announcement by Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono of a two year ban on handing over new pieces of Indonesian forest and carbon-rich peatlands to companies for logging and deforestation.

This two year ban was a requirement of the money put forward by Norway - but it does not include the millions of hectares of forests already on the chopping block.

Real love would be an official decree by the Indonesian President making the ban effective immediately (not months from now) and also extending it to cover all of Indonesia's rainforests and peatlands - including those areas already owned by companies like Sinar Mas and in imminent danger of being deforested and degraded, like this:

Now that Indonesian forests are starting to see the money - will the President show them some real love?

Following on the success of the Kit Kat campaign in convincing Nestlé to give Indonesia's rainforests and peatlands a break - it would be amazing for the President to announce a complete ban on the decimation of these areas immediately.

Let's put the question out there. Will the Indonesian President declare true love for rainforests and carbon-rich peatlands by banning deforestation and degradation completely?

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Do orang-utan's party when their forests are saved?

OK peeps, help us settle a discussion we had in the office yesterday about how we're visually celebrating our win of the Kit Kat campaign. (You know, the one where Nestlé agreed to stop buying palm oil from those who level Indonesian rainforests to plant palm oil trees, helping to kill our climate and making orang-utans homeless in one fell swoop?)

We posted a graphic of an orang-utan in party regalia. A few voices (well, one in particular anyway, who shall remain nameless but happens to have a deep scottish burr) found it an insult and unfunny, but admitted that he had a pet peeve about anthropomorphizing images of animals. Some of us sort of agreed, some of us (non)violentally disagreed, all were in accord that it was an interesting question. So you tell us: funny? Not funny? appropriate? off? You can fill out the tweetpoll below or leave a comment. Whatcha think?

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Landmark pact reached to protect Canada's Boreal Forest

Feature story - May 18, 2010
Today the biggest, most ambitious forest conservation deal ever has been announced: The Canadian Boreal Forest Agreement. After more than seven years of hard-fought campaigning to end the on-going destruction of Canada's Boreal Forest, Greenpeace and eight other non-governmental organisations have agreed to a truce with the logging industry: we will suspend the battle for the Boreal.

In return, 21 of the biggest logging industry players from the Forest Products Association of Canada (FPAC) have agreed to an immediate moratorium on logging in nearly 29 million hectares of forest that covers virtually all the critical habitat for the threatened woodland caribou. The long-term agreement includes a commitment from the parties to work over the next three years to undertake conservation planning for the entire area covered by the agreement. This unusual alliance of logging companies and environmental groups will work together to ensure long-term protection within 72 million hectares of forest - an area twice the size of Germany - that stretches right across Canada.

This agreement is the result of almost a decade of hard hard-fought campaigning, intense market pressure and peaceful direct action. It is the best chance we have to permanently protect vast areas of wilderness and biodiversity, protect the threatened woodland caribou and secure billions of tonnes of stored carbon which would otherwise contribute to climate change if the forest was logged.

This agreement would not have happened without public support and pressure. Last year, Greenpeace won a key victory when Kimberly-Clark - maker of Kleenex and the largest tissue manufacturer in the world - agreed to a progressive forest policy in response to our Kleercut campaign. The role of consumer activism in transforming Kimberly-Clark set a precedent for the rest of the industry - it showed other companies that involvement in forest destruction will ultimately hurt their bottom line.

Today is just a start, there is still more work to do to ensure that the agreement leads to permanent protection for large areas of intact wilderness in Canada's Boreal Forest, one of the most important forested areas in the world. Greenpeace, together with the other groups and companies involved, will continue to play a leading role to make sure it is put into practice in a way that really protects forests, biodiversity and the global climate from the impacts of destructive logging.
*Go to Boreal Resources for a complete set of documents on the Canadian Boreal Forest Agreement.

 
 

Source: Greenpeace International
Press consultantship
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