9/12/2005
Climate Change Conference Urges Strategies To Curb Massive Deforestation
With 2 billion tonnes of carbon entering the atmosphere each year
due to forest loss, accounting for 25 per cent of all man-made
emissions of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2), the United
Nations climate change conference in Montreal this week heard urgent
pleas for financial incentives and other strategies to curb deforestation.
“
There are a number of strategies that countries can use to accurately
monitor reductions in deforestation and increases in carbon storage,
especially in tropical countries where forests do the most to remove
carbon dioxide from the atmosphere,” said Dieter Schoene,
of the Forestry Department of the UN Food and Agricultural Agency
(FAO).
This type of reporting would be key to any scheme to create strategies
to retain forest carbon storage in developing countries. FAO
offered to provide such data and technical advice to countries
attending
the conference.
According to a recent report by the agency, the world’s forests
store 283 gigatonnes of carbon in their biomass alone, while the
total carbon stored in forest biomass, deadwood, litter and soil
together is roughly 50 per cent more than the amount found in the
atmosphere – adding up to 1 trillion tons.
The report shows that destruction of forests adds almost 2 billion
tonnes of carbon to the atmosphere each year.
“
Preventing this stored carbon from escaping is important for maintaining
the global carbon balance and vital to conserving the environment,” according
to Mr. Schoene.
Yesterday at the conference, Klaus Topfer, head of the UN Environmental
Programme (UNEP) marked Arctic Day, saying it was one of the regions
that were showing obvious effects of climate change.
“
If anyone has any doubt that climate change is underway they need
only listen to the many small voices from this region – the
early warning system of the globe,” he said.
The 11-day UN Climate Change Convention (UNFCCC) is seeking to
draw up an action plan for the period after 2012, when the Kyoto
protocol on reducing greenhouse gases expires.