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Nurturing forests, peatlands will attack global warming: UNEP
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  • PARIS, June 5 (AFP) Jun 05, 2009
    Fixing deforestation, preserving peatlands and ending reckless agricultural methods could be a major weapon in tackling climate change, the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) said on Friday.

    Biological systems, if responsibly managed, can absorb billions of tonnes of the dangerous carbon gases that fuel the greenhouse effect, the agency said in a report coinciding with World Environment Day.

    Trees and plants suck in carbon dioxide (CO2), the principal greenhouse gas, through photosynthesis.

    But this natural "sponge" is being damaged by deforestation and agricultural use, which releases the stored carbon to the air.

    Around 20 percent of annual greenhouse-gas emissions are imputable to logging, farming and burning of peatlands, according to scientists.

    UNEP Executive Director Achim Steiner said major countries had earmarked tens of billions of dollars in investments in carbon capture and storage technology, by which CO2 is siphoned off at power stations and then pumped underground or under the sea.

    "But perhaps the international community is overlooking a tried-and-tested method that has been working for millennia -- the biosphere," he said.

    "By some estimates, the Earth's living systems might be capable of sequestering more than 50 gigatonnes [50 billion tonnes] of carbon over the coming decades with the right market signals."

    The report touched on areas that are up for debate in talks to craft a new global pact on climate change. The accord, scheduled to be sealed in Copenhagen in December, will be take effect from the end of 2012.

    Separately, a study published in a science journal said the future pact, by incorporating an innovative mechanism, could deal a blow to tropical deforestation while also preserve precious biodiversity.

    The paper looked at the scenarios by which this proposed mechanism, called Reduce Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD), could work.

    Under REDD, countries that conserve their tropical forests and tackle deforestation would earn credits for reduced emissions. These credits would be sold on an international carbon market, or compensated through an international fund.

    But REDD is making slow progress in the UN talks, amid worries about its cost and how it would work in practice.

    The paper, published in the journal Conservation Letters, looked at how REDD could apply in the case of 3.3 million hectares (8.25 million acres) of forest in Indonesia's Borneo that is threatened by planned palmoil plantations.

    If CO2 credits could be sold for 10-33 US dollars per tonne, it would be profitable to keep the forest rather than clear it for oil palm, according to the study, lead-authored by Oscar Venter, a biologist at the University of Queensland in Australia.

    Conserving the forest at the same time would prevent 2.1 billion tonnes of carbon from entering the atmosphere and also preserve the habitat of orangutans, pygmy elephants and other threatened species.

    "Payments made to reduce carbon emissions from forests could also be an efficient and effective way to protect biodiversity," said Venter.




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