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A note by the Editor of ForestIndustries.EU:
We wrote this article more than two years ago. Many significant events happened since then and a huge amount of new knowledge has been collected by the global community:
Once more we are told how deforestation of our rain forests can be stopped, "the standing tree has to be worth more than the felled tree" - and since agriculture is accepted as the main cause of the tropical rain forest destruction, thus the "opportunity costs" have to be covered by REDD+ [17]. Is to say, the returns on the cash gifts of the REDD+ process must be higher than the profits that can be obtained from an agricultural reuse of a cleared rain forest area. However, even this is not so simple because the profits from the use of this area for an industrial beef production are much higher than the profits which a small farmer can obtained from the same area when he runs agriculture for a living for himself and his family.
But back to the original topic: Conservation can be the sole savior in the REDD process as so many international conservation organization want to make us believe (CI and UNEP in the output of the ITTO Tropcial Forest Update 20 / 1 - Oct 2010 [18]):
"In general, policy makers and forest managers can help redd Ensure implementation contributes to biodiversity conservation in a variety of ways. These include (but are not limited to) spatially targeting redd to forests of greatest biodiversity value, Prioritizing the reduction of deforestation and forest conservation over the reduction of forest degradation and forest carbon stock enhancement (as the former will have greater immediate conservation benefits), Establishing new protected areas where appropriate, replacing conventional logging with reduced-impact logging or forest conservation, environmental and social impact assessments Requiring (EAIA 's) for redd programs and / or Establishing environmental safeguards."
Is there no place for People in conservation?
This passage is interesting because conservation is presented as a top priority without losing a single word about the people who are living in, by and with such forests. No word about the fact that forests in the tropics ensure the livelihood of 60 million and provide for a further 900 million people a significant part of their livelihood.
But long, there is resistance suggests this one-sided nature viewing. Not for nothing REDD+ was called into life, where the PLUS represents not just conservation, but also sustainable forest management and carbon enrichment (which is equivalent to planting).
As in many instances impressively documented, carbon sink projects in the tropics have caused an exodus of local communities and indigenous peoples because of them being seized on rigid nature protection agreements.
On behalf of many of these projects two of them should be mentioned here:
The fate of the indigenous people of North America or Australia in mind
What happened in these cases is just like a common thread, just like something what recurring happened to indigenous people in our history. The role model is always the same: firstly indigenous people have been robbed of their land, centuries later states have started welfare projects in the form of government subsidies as a form of a compensation scheme.
These governmental money gifts have taken the identity of these people, they destroyed their livelihood, they robbed all tasks and challenges, and they have driven them into dependency on alcohol and state funding. The Indians of the North American continent, the Eskimos of Greenland and the Aborigines of Australia can sing a song like this. For them it was the natural resources or the country itself, for which they had to leave, today and tomorrow it could be carbon sinks and biodiversity of the rainforests for which indigenous peoples again made to paupers.
The carbon pools in the rainforests are to be monitored
Since we explored that deforestation of our rainforests provide a significant contribution to global greenhouse gas balance of earth, fire is on top. At least since the climate conference in Bali a lot of people is thinking on how to get rid of this problem. A program with the somewhat unwieldy name of REDD+ (reducing emissions from deforestation and degradation ") was established. And of course all these people think of what should be the content of this program. Conservation, sustainable forest management and planting trees are the main supporting parts of the program. The core idea of REDD+ is that money paid by developed countries should be transferred to tropical forest countries helping them to reduce the deforestation rate. The changes in carbon pools of these forests should be the indicators for the amount of money to flow.
KISS - Keep It Simple, Stupid
The massive use of the conservation maces in the REDD+ process could cause the same effects as the displacement of Native Americans or Australians that took place centuries ago |
It is interesting that in most articles written on this subject, conservation of forests is seen as the one and only solution for REDD+. Probably in the belief the best way to protect ecosystems is to keep out mankind. Sounds plausible at first sight, but ignores the fact that many people are already living in and from these forests (~60 million indigenous people). According to the logic of the so often called conservation idea in REDD+, evacuation of these forests is the logical consequence. And actually thoughts have been given on how people can be “softly” affected to migrate from their forests. The idea behind it: the money paid by developed countries to rainforest nations for reducing deforestation (REDD+ money) will not flow to the governments, but should hit directly to the affected population.
This money will serve as a compensation for the enforcement of an absolute conservation act by protecting the biological diversity of these forests as well. Of course, this money will be used for social programs also. Sounds familiar to you? You just created associations with "reserves" in your mind? And you see indigenous people who have been separated from their true roots and now eke out their miserable existence in state-funded accommodation? You are not alone with these pictures ...
Sustainable forest management along the lines of Central Europe could be key
As mentioned above, conservation is just a part of REDD+, sustainable forest management and tree planting (carbon enrichment) also form part of the PLUS of REDD.
However, the majority of experts involved in the REDD+ process is mainly stressing conservation. Why is this? One reason could be that there is only of few of them having a concrete idea on sustainable forest management. In addition, many conservation organizations serve the stereotype of sustainable forest management as a license to logging, and thus serves as a ruthless exploitation of nature. Of course there is a repeated reference to sustainable forest management in the literature on REDD. But if one begins to read this literature more closely, we notice that very often the imagination of the author has finally exhausted only in conservation.
Be it the GEF [23], UN-REDD [24] or other international programs in the REDD area they often reduce sustainable forest management to conservation.
It just might be sustainable forest management which offers the capacity to defuse the tension between REDD+ and the people issue because the Central European system of sustainable forest management is a holistic and integral one. The multifunctionality of the forests has top priority, human beings, conservation and utilization are on equal footing. The mutual recognition of all these forests issues results in taking compromises into account without harming each other.
Now what can sustainable forest management deliver for REDD+?
First of all sustainable forest management would all people who live in and from their forests, offer the opportunity to continue to live with their forests.
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A picture is worth a thousands words: As proud as these forest owners are on their forests, |
Come to us and convice yourself
The Sustainable Forest Management System of Austria could save those people who are directly affected by climate change processes such as REDD+, the fate of life in "reserves". And it also offers these people a smooth transition into a new era and the most extensive painless entry into a global world. It would leave them their dignity and they could continue to be proud making their living by their own hands work with their forests.
If you do not believe that sustainable forest management can manage all this then they come to us to Austria. We can show you our long been practiced and lived system of sustainable forest management
Not for nothing reserve rhymes with conserve...
Editor's note: Some days ago (14th of December 2011) Joachim Bilé, current chairman of ITTO’s governing Council came up with an interesting statement: " He noted that many people think the conservation of tropical forests and the development of the tropical timber trade are mutually exclusive. “On the contrary, the one is essential for the other,” he said. “Without conservation there can be no long-term trade. Without trade, the forests will be cleared for agriculture because, one way or another, the people living in tropical countries will continue to demand economic development. ITTO’s role has been, and will continue to be, to help governments, companies and communities to improve the management of their forests and the marketing of their products.” Read further here... [25]
More like this... |
Editors Note, the 2nd:
Conservation refugees [34] are people, mostly indigenous people, who are displaced from their traditional homelands to create conservation areas including national parks and biodiversity reserves.
Since the "discovery [35]" of the Yosemite National Park [36] on March 21, 1851, as many as 20 million people have been turned into Conservation refugees.
Conservation Refugees - Expelled from Paradise, an award-winning documentary by Marketfilm and Friends of People Close to Nature [37], introduces us to some of these refugees and the struggles they now face as displaced peoples.
You can watch the film online at http://vimeo.com/12273503 [38]
Synopsis
It is no secret that millions of native people around the world have been forced off their homelands to make way for oil, mines, timber, and agriculture. But few people realize that the same thing has happened for a cause which is considered by many as much nobler: land and wildlife conservation.
Indigenous peoples evicted from their ancestral homelands, for conservation initiatives, have never been counted; they are not even officially recognised as refugees. The number of people displaced from their traditional homelands is estimated to be close to 20 million. These expelled native peoples have been living sustainable for generations on what can only be reasonably regarded as their ancestral land.
Editors note the 3rd:
Some further readings:
(by Fairfax Digital network navigation Donnybrook - Bridgetown Mail) [54]
THE forestry debate is currently verging on the ridiculous.
One side claims forest preservation will attract carbon credits by locking up carbon in the forest, while the other refutes this and claims logging helps to lock up carbon through promoting new growing forests.
Both arguments appear to hinge on the dollar value of forests and ignore the wider complexity of the issue - such as the fact there is much more at stake than carbon pollution and a few dollars.
The two basic facts are that we need to preserve forests for the sake of the air we breathe and we need to maintain forestry industries for the sake of a significant proportion of livelihoods and to provide us with certain needs.
Wrangling endlessly over the question of to log or not to log and becoming entangled in specious arguments about carbon credits and profits, is inevitably going to get both sides of the debate nowhere.
A pro-active approach would be much more useful.
There must be alternative sources of raw materials for at least some current forest products, just waiting to be discovered and developed to make some part of our currently insanely consumerist lifestyles at least a little more sustainable, preserve some trees and keep people in their jobs.
There's always a solution, but it's never found by arguing.
(Forest Trends, October, 2012. Michael Richards. 5 pages) [55]
What Do We Understand about the Social Impacts of REDD+ Frequently mentioned social or equity concerns in the REDD+ literature, many of them depending on the strategies that countries or projects adopt to implement REDD+, include:
Please click here [56]to download.
Large-scale land acquisitions are increasing in pace and scale, in particular across parts of Africa, Asia and Latin America. Weak governance and poor land use planning mean that commercial ‘land grabs’ often damage biodiversity as well as dispossessing people from customary rights and livelihoods. Land can also be ‘grabbed’ for ‘green’ purposes, triggering conflicts that undermine potential
synergies. Expanded state protected areas, land for carbon offset markets and REDD, and for private conservation projects all potentially conflict with community rights. Such conflict is counterproductive because secure customary and communal land tenure helps enable sustainable natural resource management by local communities. This briefing presents the experience of
international development, wildlife and human rights practitioners, shared at a symposium on land grabbing and conservation in March 2013.
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Links
[1] https://forestindustries.eu/de/content/redd-naturschutz-ist-nicht-der-weisheit-letzter-schluss
[2] https://forestindustries.eu/busting-forest-myths-people-part-solution
[3] https://forestindustries.eu/redd-conservation-not-deal-all
[4] https://forestindustries.eu/european-union-eu-isnt-able-or-willing-get-idea-forests-issues
[5] http://www.taylorandfrancis.com/books/details/9781849713948/
[6] http://blog.cifor.org/10667/are-conservation-projects-succeeding-in-the-lower-mekong-basin/#.UGhDKFFZzp1
[7] https://forestindustries.eu/are-conservation-projects-succeeding-lower-mekong-basin
[8] http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/09/120925091608.htm?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed:+sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment+%28ScienceDaily:+Top+News+--+Top+Environment%29
[9] http://www.decc.gov.uk/assets/decc/11/tackling-climate-change/international-climate-change/6316-drivers-deforestation-report.pdf
[10] https://forestindustries.eu/sites/default/files/userfiles/1file/6316-drivers-deforestation-report.pdf
[11] https://forestindustries.eu/stepping-out-redd-shadow-%E2%80%93-forests-and-adaptation
[12] http://www.cifor.org/online-library/polex-cifors-blog-for-and-by-forest-policy-experts/english/detail/article/1222/globalisation-logging-concessions-conservation-organisations-and-local-people.html
[13] https://forestindustries.eu/globalisation-logging-concessions-conservation-organisations-and-local-people
[14] https://forestindustries.eu/climate-finance-makes-sense-farmers
[15] https://forestindustries.eu/mitigation-without-adaptation-can-leave-communities-vulnerable-%E2%80%94-study
[16] http://www.forestindustries.eu/content/communities-need-more-money-stop-clearing-their-forests-new-research-shows
[17] https://forestindustries.eu/redd
[18] https://forestindustries.eu/itto-publishes-article-greening-redd
[19] https://forestindustries.eu/conservation-projects-displace-locals
[20] https://forestindustries.eu/carbon-trading-scheme-pushing-people-their-land
[21] https://forestindustries.eu/carbon-offsets-and-human-rights-do-they-fit-one-another
[22] https://forestindustries.eu/bushman-children-arrested-under-renewed-government-repression
[23] http://www.thegef.org/gef/sites/thegef.org/files/publication/REDD-english.pdf
[24] https://forestindustries.eu/june-2010-wood-still-no-option-un-redd
[25] https://forestindustries.eu/new-accord-tropical-forests-enters-force
[26] https://forestindustries.eu/sustainable-forest-management-and-good-governance-%25E2%2580%2593-crucial-key-factors-redd
[27] https://forestindustries.eu/sustainable-forest-management-tropics-%E2%80%93-panacea-folly
[28] https://forestindustries.eu/sustainable-forest-management
[29] https://forestindustries.eu/sustainable-forest-management-sfm
[30] https://forestindustries.eu/historical-background
[31] https://forestindustries.eu/ceasing-forest-conversion-harms-poor
[32] https://forestindustries.eu/primer-redd-and-indigenous-peoples
[33] https://forestindustries.eu/free-prior-and-informed-consent-redd-isilda-nhantumbo
[34] http://intercontinentalcry.org/conservation-refugees-expelled-from-paradise/
[35] http://www.pbs.org/nationalparks/history/ep1/
[36] http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2009/05/03/no_natives_allowed/
[37] http://www.fpcn-global.org/
[38] http://vimeo.com/12273503
[39] https://forestindustries.eu/redd-right-route-conservation-organisations
[40] https://forestindustries.eu/protected-areas-are-more-effective-reducing-deforestation-when-they-allow-sustainable-forest
[41] http://blog.cifor.org/5457/redd-needs-to-invest-in-alternative-livelihoods-before-making-carbon-payments/
[42] http://pubs.iied.org/17114IIED.html?s=IIEDBRIEF&b=d
[43] http://mondediplo.com/2012/01/09mexico
[44] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mark-tercek/forest-preservation_b_1216156.html
[45] http://climateandcapitalism.com/?p=6406
[46] http://blog.cifor.org/7110/forest-communities-make-a-list-of-dos-and-donts-for-forest-conservation-schemes/
[47] http://blog.cifor.org/7302/push-for-forest-conservation-destroying-pakistani-yak-herding-practices/
[48] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/will-turner/biodiversity-conservation_b_1277337.html
[49] http://motherjones.com/environment/2009/11/conservation-indigenous-peoples-enemy-no-1
[50] http://news.mongabay.com/2012/0628-logging-concessions-sumatra-redd.html
[51] https://forestindustries.eu/return-fortress-conservation-redd-and-green-land-grab-peruvian-amazon
[52] https://forestindustries.eu/trucks-arrive-evict-botswana-bushmen-despite-government-denials
[53] http://www.donnybrookmail.com.au/news/opinion/editorial/general/proactive-approach-needed-for-forestry-debate/2627011.aspx
[54] http://www.donnybrookmail.com.au/
[55] http://www.forest-trends.org/publication_details.php?publicationID=3232
[56] https://forestindustries.eu/sites/default/files/userfiles/1file/doc_3232.pdf
[57] http://pubs.iied.org/17166IIED.html
[58] http://pubs.iied.org/search.php?c=natres/water/land
[59] http://pubs.iied.org/search.php?c=biocon
[60] http://pubs.iied.org/search.php?s=IIEDBRIEF
[61] http://pubs.iied.org/search.php?a=Tom%20Blomley
[62] http://pubs.iied.org/search.php?a=Dilys%20Roe
[63] http://pubs.iied.org/search.php?a=Fred%20Nelson
[64] http://pubs.iied.org/search.php?a=Fiona%20Flintan
[65] https://forestindustries.eu/sites/default/files/userfiles/1file/17166IIED.pdf
[66] https://forestindustries.eu/category/topicsthemen/forestry
[67] https://forestindustries.eu/category/forests-w%C3%A4lder/deforestation
[68] https://forestindustries.eu/category/forests-w%C3%A4lder/redd
[69] https://forestindustries.eu/category/forests-w%C3%A4lder/abholzung