Update: Previous Editions:
August 22, 2008
Abstract: Deforestation accounts for nearly 20% of anthropogenic greenhouse gas
emissions in the world. Deforestation results in carbon emissions when trees and
underlying vegetation are burning or decomposing. Deforested areas that are later
cultivated also release carbon to the atmosphere when soil carbon is oxidized.
Further, deforested areas converted to other land uses (e.g., pastures) might sequester
less carbon than forests, enabling greater levels of CO2 in the atmosphere. Providing
incentives to prevent deforestation in foreign countries has been proposed in climate
change legislation. An objective of this legislation is to provide funding from carbon
markets to assist foreign countries in reducing deforestation and increasing forest
restoration and afforestation. Challenges to this approach include implementing
deforestation reduction activities in developing countries that may lack the capacity
to monitor and enforce measures, avoiding harm to indigenous communities who rely
on forest resources, and matching policies with the various drivers of deforestation
in different regions around the world. Legislative policies on deforestation and
climate change are analyzed in this report, and challenges for restoring forests in the
tropics are discussed.
[read report]
Topics: Forests, Legislative, International