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Rainforest scientists urge UN to change its definition of 'forest'
25/06/2010 13:19
The month on June comes to and end with two important news for tropical forest conservation in the print. The Economist magazine, very popular in the coffee tables and desks of the private sector fauna, published a story on how palm oil is destroying in one hand tropical forests and in the other the reputation of big companies. GCP's Forest Footprint Disclosure project is mentioned as one of the tools business have in hands to discover to which extent their procurement policies for palm oil, soya,timber, beef,leather and biofuels are linked to deforestation. To read the full story, click here.
GCP team would also like to highlight and give its full support to the latest resolution of The Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation (ATBC) demanding the UN to change its definition of 'forest', which presently makes no dissociation between a natural forest ecosystem and a monoculture plantation of trees. Jeremy Hance, from Mongabay website, has written a piece on the decision that we reproduce below.
Rainforest scientists urge UN to correct "serious loophole" by changing its definition of 'forest'
Author: Jeremy Hance Source: mongabay.com Date: June 24, 2010
The Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation (ATBC) has released a resolution urging the UN to change its definition for 'forest', before the controversial definition undermines conservation efforts, biodiversity preservation, carbon sequestration, and the nascent REDD (Reducing Emissions through Deforestation and forest Degradation).
Currently, the UN definition of 'forest' doesn't designate between a natural forest ecosystem and a monoculture plantation, such as palm oil or pulp and paper. In addition, the definition allows degraded or partially-logged forests to still be considered 'forest' so long as they have the requisite canopy cover.
Calling the definition a "serious loophole", ATBC recommends the UN "clarify natural forest definitions on a biome basis (such as 'cool-temperate', 'wet tropical', and 'peat-swamp forest') to reflect the wide-ranging differences in carbon and biodiversity values of these different biomes, while clearly distinguishing between native forests and those dominated by tree monocultures and non-native species."
The resolution points out that if the definition remains unchanged, nations could take advantage of it in REDD programs by claiming carbon funds for monoculture plantations or partially-logged forests, landscapes which have emitted significant greenhouse gases due to forest clearing and suffered a loss in biodiversity.
The organization "strongly recommends that developing and developed nations immediately implement these new forest definitions to ensure that they are incorporated in ongoing and future REDD negotiations."
ATBC is the world's largest professional society devoted to studying and conserving tropical forests with thousands of members spanning over 100 nations
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