Forest - Wald

Dienstag, 7. November 2006

Brazil Proposes Fund to Protect Amazon

CLIMATE CHANGE/RAINFOREST NEWS TODAY

Climate Ark and Rainforest Portal projects of Ecological Internet, Inc.

http://www.climateark.org/ -- Climate Ark Climate Change Portal http://www.rainforestportal.org/ -- Rainforest Portal

November 11, 2006

OVERVIEW & COMMENTARY by Dr. Glen Barry, Ecological Internet

The World and Brazil in particular have come a long way in recent years regarding acknowledging the need to protect the world's rainforests and climate, and developing policy sufficient for doing so. Not so long ago Brazil's government railed against any suggestion by the international community that the Amazon should be protected. Now at the international climate talks in Kenya the Brazilian government has asked "rich nations to back a plan to help it slow deforestation". Along with other tropical rainforest rich countries like Papua New Guinea and Costa Rica, it has proposed that a fund be established "that developing countries can tap after they prove they have slowed initial deforestation rates".

This proposal definitely represents progress towards solving two of the world's most dire ecological crises - terrestrial habitat loss and global warming/heating. But as always with such proposals, the devil is in the details. Forest diminishment such as what is caused by "selective" logging and other industrial developments permanently lowers the ability of ancient forests to hold carbon. To be truly effective, such climate funding for forest conservation must protect against deforestation as well as all other ecological diminishment of large, contiguous and relatively intact forest expanses. Ancient forests can simply not be acceptably industrially managed while still holding all their carbon.

g.b.


RELAYED TEXT STARTS HERE:

Title: Brazil Proposes Fund to Protect Amazon
Source: Copyright 2006, Reuters
Date: November 7, 2006
Byline: Andrea Welsh

Brazil, home to the world's largest rainforest, will ask rich nations to back a plan to help it slow deforestation at global climate talks this week, a senior environmental official said.

The plan marks a first step toward including deforestation in global climate agreements to cut emissions of carbon, a heat- trapping gas released by burning fossil fuels and trees that is partly to blame for rising world temperatures.

Officials from dozens of nations were to meet in Kenya starting Monday for the 12th round of UN global climate talks since 1992. The goal is to start crafting an extension to the Kyoto Protocol, a 1999 treaty that set mandatory targets for most rich nations to reduce carbon emissions.

The Brazilian secretary of forests and biodiversity, Joao Paulo Capobianco, said Brazil will present a plan for rich nations to put money into a fund that developing countries can tap after they prove they have slowed initial deforestation rates.

"A country will only have the right to claim resources after the environmental benefit is delivered," he said in an interview.

Critics have said Brazil just wants to get paid for protecting the Amazon, the world's largest rainforest and home to maybe a quarter of all species on earth.

Slowing deforestation was a cheap and fast way to lower global carbon emissions, nearly a fifth of which come from clearing land and burning trees, Capobianco said.

"When deforestation comes up, people in America, England, France, Italy, they take to the streets and protest because Brazil is cutting down the rainforest," Capobianco said. "The question isn't why would they invest money in this. The question is why wouldn't they?"

Under the Kyoto Protocol, Brazil cannot get credit for slowing deforestation although it burns relatively little oil and gas. A third of its carbon emissions come from felling trees in the Amazon.

In 2005, enough trees were cut down to cover all of Israel or Wales. To date, about a fifth of Brazil's Amazon has been cleared -- an area twice the size of Germany -- mostly to produce lumber, graze cattle or plant crops like rice and soy.

Capobianco said Brazil reduced land-clearing by a third last year and could do better if given credit for the carbon emissions avoided. More money would go to invest in new economic models for the rainforest, which makes poor farm land because of its sandy soil and frequent floods, he said.

"People don't cut down the Amazon because they're angry at trees," he said. "It's actually expensive and quite difficult. People do it because it's how they guarantee their economic survival."

Capobianco also said poor nations would gain by lowering carbon emissions more cheaply than they otherwise could.

Brazil's plan will need support from other developing nations, which were excused from Kyoto's mandatory carbon cuts so they could focus on economic growth and urgent problems like poverty and disease.

The United States, which is responsible for more than a third of the world's carbon emissions, backed out of the treaty saying it unfairly exempted countries like China and India from mandatory cuts.

Donnerstag, 19. Oktober 2006

Bundestag entschied gegen Urwaldschutzgesetz

Naturschutz: Bundestag entschied gegen Urwaldschutzgesetz (19.10.06)

Der Bundestag lehnte heute mehrheitlich ein Gesetz zur Rettung der letzten Urwälder der Erde ab. Der Gesetzesantrag sah vor, den Besitz und den Handel von Holzprodukten aus Urwaldzerstörung, die nach Deutschland importiert werden, zu verbieten und zu kontrollieren. Greenpeace hatte Anfang 2004 mit einem ersten Entwurf zu einem Urwaldschutzgesetz die parlamentarische Diskussion ins Rollen gebracht. Die Schwarz-Rot Koalition habe laut Greenpeace bis heute nichts im Rahmen der 2007 bevorstehenden deutschen EU-Präsidentschaft unternommen, um in Europa ein Importverbot von Urwaldholz durchzusetzen.

Die ganze Nachricht im Internet:
http://www.ngo-online.de/ganze_nachricht.php?Nr=14569

Montag, 16. Oktober 2006

Forest Activists Call for an End to Deforestation & a Ban on GE Trees

Posted 10/14/06

http://www.globaljusticeecology.org/index.php?name=news&I... press photos available on request +1.802.578.6980

http://www.organicconsumers.org/2006/article_3137.cfm

For: IMMEDIATE RELEASE
contact: kim_lobaria(at)yahoo.com

Charleston, South Carolina (US)--This morning, the Charleston front of the South to South solidarity campaign went to the Double Tree Hotel to continue this weeks protest around the International Union of Forest Research Organizations (IUFRO). They used guerrilla theater to call for a halt of deforestation and expose the social impacts in Chile, Brazil and the US South caused by timber plantations. The campaign also demands a global ban on the new threat of genetically engineered (GE) trees.

"Short term profits at the expense of future generations of all species is not acceptable" declared Mother Earth, to the crowd of scientists and corporate executives. People dressed as a GE tree, an ArborGen CEO, and forest critters, showed the dangers of GE trees, while a hazmat team secured the contaminated area.

The industry conference was organized by the International Union of Forest Research Organizations and co-sponsored by Summerville, SC-based ArborGen. ArborGen leads the world in research into genetically engineered trees and the IUFRO will be organizing another similar conference next week in Chile.

ArborGen works in both in the US South and in Brazil. Massive tree plantations in Chile and Brazil have forced both the Mapuche of Chile and the Guarani and Tupinikum of Brazil off of their land. Plantations decimate huge areas of forest, cause sickness in nearby villages and increase global warming. Using genetically engineered trees will only worsen these impacts.

"We are in an ecological crises now! Climate change is here and deforestation is a massive contributor to this rolling catastrophe," said Jean Wald. "It's too late to tinker with bogus solutions. Plantation forestry is a serious problem and GE trees will make it that much worse. Add the social consequences of plantations and there is no more justification for them."

Info transferred via:
STOP Genetically Engineered Trees Campaign
http://www.stopgetrees.org
info@stopgetrees.org

A project of Global Justice Ecology Project
P.O. Box
412 Hinesburg, VT
05461 U.S.
+1.802.482.2689 ph/fax
info@globaljusticeecology.org
http://www.globaljusticeecology.org


Informant: binstock

Take action now and help save Europe's oldest lowland forest

http://assets.panda.org/custom/newsletter/passport/2006/passport_161006.html

Montag, 9. Oktober 2006

Regenwald: Kritik an britischem Palmöl-Kraftwerk von RWE

09.10.06

Die Umweltorganisation Rettet den Regenwald (RdR) hat Pläne von RWE npower scharf kritisiert, ein Kraftwerk im britischen Kent künftig mit Palmöl zu betreiben. Dadurch werde die Klimakatastrophe forciert, so Verbandsvorsitzende Reinhard Behrend. "Solche Projekte steigern die Nachfrage nach Palmöl. Als Folge werden in Südostasien weitere Regenwälder zerstört, um Platz für neue Plantagen zu schaffen." Palmöl werde vor allem im Tieflandregenwald von Indonesien und Malaysia angebaut. Die dortigen Torfwälder seien gigantische Kohlendioxid-Speicher. Regelmäßig würden riesige Waldflächen abgefackelt, um Platz für neue Palmöl-Plantagen zu schaffen. Durch die Waldbrände allein in Indonesien würden in manchen Jahren mehr als eine Milliarde Tonnen Kohlendioxid frei gesetzt, etwa 15 Prozent der weltweit von Menschen verursachten Emissionen mit Kohlendioxid.

Die ganze Nachricht im Internet:
http://www.ngo-online.de/ganze_nachricht.php?Nr=14490

Southeast Asia's Burning Rainforests and Peatland Threaten World's Climate

PLEASE FORWARD WIDELY!

ACTION ALERT

By Climate Ark & Rainforest Portal, Projects of Ecological Internet, Inc.

http://www.rainforestportal.org/ and http://www.climateark.org/

October 8, 2006

TAKE ACTION

Let Kyoto Protocol Delegates Know You Demand Immediate Action to Stop Rainforest Fires and Peatland Agricultural Conversion http://www.climateark.org/alerts/send.asp?id=indonesia_peatland

On November 6th governments from all over the world will be meeting in Nairobi for the year's most important United Nations climate change talks. To date international policy discussions have largely ignored the destruction and burning of Southeast Asia’s rainforest peatlands. These wet, swampy rainforests are drained to be cleared for agricultural plantations, and as they dry their peat filled soils are highly susceptible to long burning, carbon and methane rich fires. Peatland fires have for years been one of the largest sources of greenhouse gas emissions - accounting for the equivalent of some 15% of all global CO2 emissions from fossil fuels. Hundreds of peat and forest fires are once again burning across Borneo, Sumatra and Java. Unless the international community acts quickly, Southeast Asia’s emissions of carbon and methane from burning peatlands alone may lead to dangerous climate change including massive sea level rises and mass extinctions. Expansion of oil palm plantations, illegal logging and timber plantations have been identified as the main drivers of the destruction.

Take action!
http://www.climateark.org/alerts/send.asp?id=indonesia_peatland

Samstag, 30. September 2006

No More Ancient Forest Logging, Anywhere, Anytime

http://www.rainforestportal.org/issues/2006/09/no_more_ancient_forest_logging.asp

http://www.rainforestportal.org/issues/2006/09/no_more_ancient_forest_logging.asp#comments


Informant: Richard Harvey

Freitag, 29. September 2006

Forests Worth Far More Alive Than Dead

http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0928-03.htm

Initiative gegen den Verkauf des gesamten Landeswaldes in Schleswig-Holstein

http://www.buergerwelle.de/pdf/volksini_waldverkauf_liste.pdf

Unterschriftenliste "Initiative gegen den Waldverkauf". Die Landesregierung in Schleswig-Holstein will den gesamten Landeswald in Schleswig - Holstein verkaufen, z. T. an Shell. Anbei eine Unterschriftenliste. Bitte Unterschriften sammeln und an die angegebene Adresse schicken. Viele Grüße!"

Arfst

Donnerstag, 28. September 2006

What’s it take to save the forest?

What’s it take to save the forest?
http://www.omeganews.bravehost.com/what_it_take_to_save_the_forest.htm



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