While many environmentalists were disappointed after the Copenhagen Accord , one positive development was a renewed focus on forestry. Over the past several months there has been a growing commitment from countries including the United States, Norway, Britain, and Japan, to make significant financial contributions to forests, carbon offsets, and climate change.
Eighty percent of people polled held positive opinions about forestry offset projects, up from 58 percent in 2009, according to the second Forest Carbon Offsetting Report. It focuses on corporations’ attitudes regarding forest offsets from forestry projects.
EcoSecurities, Conservation International, the Climate, Community & Biodiversity Alliance, the Norton Rose Group and ClimateBiz produced the report, which gathered in-depth responses from more than 200 organizations around the world.
Among the report’s findings:
- Participants indicated the most important factor when purchasing forest carbon offsets are carbon standards, followed by project locations, community, and biodiversity benefits.
- The two most popular carbon standards are the Voluntary Carbon Standard (VCS) Climate, Community & Biodiversity Standards (CCB ). and
- In Europe, 84 percent of participants say they have a positive attitude compared to only 36 percent in 2009.
Those most interested in forestry projects are voluntary offset buyers. Reforestation with native species and avoidance of deforestation were the most popular project type. Buyers of carbon forest carbon credits were the most concerned about a recognized standard, and the majority favored payment upon delivery of carbon offsets.
Michael Jenkins, president and CEO of Forest Trends –a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit–said in a May interview with Rhett A. Butler of Mongabay.com , that donors such as Norway, Britain, Germany, the U.S. have pledged close to $4 billion since Copenhagen. Jenkins believes that there will be “significant new finance for forest and broader land-use activity like sustainable agriculture that reduce carbon emissions.” Jenkins also said he feels the biggest obstacle to forests and other ecosystems is a lack of specific policies and regulations to drive the carbon market so that buyers of carbon offsets get what they pay for, and the payment goes to the proper producer of that service.
The United Nations Collaborative Programme on Reducing emission from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD) will continue to play a pivotal role in the development of new international carbon policy.
Article by Julie Mitchell appearing courtesy Celsias.
photo: Chris *V*
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Northern Farmers Cooperative Initiatives Ltd is based in Northern Uganda. The founders are Diaspora who returned from UK to help with resettlement efforts of the communities after the notorious LRA war of Joseph Kony which took over two decades.
With funding from the British Government, the company has now embarked on an ambitious plan of planting over 100,000 acres of tropical hard and soft wood. It has formed many strategic partnerships. We are now seeking partners/investors in this project.
Kindly help us look for interested investors/partnerships or funders for this project.
Yours
Kenneth Onekalit
CEO
Northern Farmers Cooperative Initiatives Ltd
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