In a "historic" referendum, the Ecuadorian people vote to keep oil drilling out of the Yasuní National Park, a protected area of the Amazonian jungle where the Waorani indigenous people also live, along with one of the greatest holdings of biodiversity on Earth. GC also give an update on the involvement of the GPD program and touches on the importance of the incredible biodiversity within Yasuní National Park.
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The forests of the Danum-Maliau-Imbak ecosystem, Sabah, Malaysia.
Global Conservation’s Carbon for Forests is the first forest-based carbon offset program which directly funds the protection and restoration of tropical forests, using advanced satellite monitoring combined with ISO-standard monitoring and verification.
Our planet has lost over 40% of our tropical forests over the past twenty years - about 342 million hectares, which is equivalent to three times the size of the country of Colombia or six times the size of Kenya. Rainforests once covered 14% of the earth's land surface, but now they cover only 6%. Experts estimate that the last remaining rainforests could be consumed in less than 40 years.
Clear-cut deforestation in the Danum-Maliau-Imbak ecosystem of Malaysia.
How can carbon offsets help save the world’s forests? Carbon offset financing aims to reduce the global amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere by incentivizing projects that capture carbon from the air and store it. In our case, we are working with reforestation projects, because forests store enormous amounts of carbon and therefore release an enormous amount of carbon when they are burned or cut down. Protecting all existing forests would represent at least 30 percent of the action needed to keep global temperature rise at or below 2 degrees Celsius. Consequently, we use carbon offset financing to reward projects that promote good forest management. It works like this:
- An entity, like a corporation (e.g. an oil company), wants to “offset” their carbon emissions by funding projects that capture carbon. They may do this in an effort to reduce their environmental impact or improve corporate social responsibility.
- The corporation “buys” a given amount of carbon storage, equivalent to the amount they want to offset, from a program like Carbon for Forests.
- Carbon for Forests reinvests that money into conservation projects that are successfully capturing carbon. The amount of money each conservation project receives is based on how much carbon it is successfully capturing, indicating how successful its reforestation or forest protection programs are. This is called its “Carbon Offset Value”.
- This results in incentive-based financing for conservation projects while simultaneously combating global climate change.
Indonesia - Tropical forest loss over past 20 years due to palm oil plantations, illegal logging and land clearing. Courtesy Global Forest Watch.
Working with Nature Needs Half, Carbon for Forests is targeting UNESCO World Heritage Sites and national parks in developing countries with the highest rates of deforestation. By comparing national and regional deforestation rates with gains and losses of forest coverage achieved through protection and reforestation programs, Carbon for Forests is able to accurately estimate the Carbon Offset Value (and changes) of each 1-million-acre (405,000-hectare) forest block for monitoring and verification. There are over 100 UNESCO World Heritage Sites and national parks in high-deforestation countries that will be suitable for Carbon for Forests funding.
Carbon for Forests signs 20-year carbon offset contracts with Large Carbon Emitters (LCEs), such as oil companies. The financing from these contracts guarantees forest protection and reforestation goals in each national park. Annual payments are made in exchange for performance in park protection and reforestation. If there are unexpected gains or losses in forest coverage and carbon values, annual payments are adjusted accordingly.
Rangers, like these in the Mirador ecosystem, Guatemala, put their lives on the line each day to protect the world's last intact forests. Carbon offset financing can help ensure that they get the support they need.
The greatest challenge is accurately measuring the amount of carbon stored in an ecosystem in order to track a project’s performance and determine its Carbon Offset Value. To do this, Global Conservation is partnering with the Arizona State University Center for Global Discovery and Conservation Science (ASU GDCS) to use 3D laser (Lidar) and multi-spectral analysis for carbon value verification. Lidar provides detailed three-dimensional information of the forest canopy height and structure across large areas. However there is a cost-based limit to the scale of Lidar measurements. To overcome this, GDCS combines its Lidar measurements with satellite images to map forest carbon across millions of hectares. GDCS’s method allows us to monitor carbon in tropical forests at an unprecedented level of detail.
3D LiDAR map of a tropical forest. Courtesy ASU GDCS.
“Our [work] powerfully demonstrates a new capability to not only measure forest carbon stocks from space, but far more critically, to monitor changes in carbon emissions generated by a huge range of activities in forests,” said Greg Asner, director of ASU GDCS. “The days of mapping forests based simply on standing carbon stocks are behind us now. We are focused on carbon emissions, and that’s precisely what is needed to mitigate biodiversity loss and climate change.”
3D LiDAR map of a tropical forest. Courtesy ASU GDCS.
A critical baseline is calculated at the start of each Carbon Offset Contract, with quarterly assessments on progress. All reporting is available 24-7 through an online Carbon for Forests portal. Each year, a review of progress is sent to each investor showing in detail an inventory of all gains and losses in forest coverage and carbon offset values. Based on performance, annual payments are adjusted to reflect decreases/increases in the carbon offset value of the forest protection and reforestation efforts.
Protecting half a million hectares of tropical forest prevents almost 450 million tons of carbon dioxide from escaping into the atmosphere at a cost of only US$650-900,000 per year, or approximately $13-18 million over 20 years.
The forests of the Leuser Ecosystem, Indonesia, are being destroyed at breakneck speed. Burning to make way for agriculture, especially palm oil, is a major driver of this destruction. Carbon offset financing can help to protect these forests.
Carbon offset financing enables multi-year funding of Global Park Defense for on-the-ground protection of forests and wildlife habitats. Once funding is secured, Global Conservation and our partners support national park authorities to implement Global Park Defense using advanced protection systems, technology, communications and training to achieve “No Cut, No Kill” protection. Our primary goal is to eliminate illegal logging and land clearing, and to reforest destroyed or degraded areas to improve forest coverage and carbon values.
LiDAR measurements of forests are giving scientists a better understanding of how much carbon is absorbed and stored by forests. Courtesy ASU GDCS.
Why Carbon for Forests?
- Protects large intact forests and reforests damaged forests in and around national parks over 25 years. Carbon offsets include both avoided deforestation and reforestation.
- Directly funds park protection, monitoring and enforcement using Global Park Defense methodology.
- Reduces CO2 emissions from forest fires due to land clearing and illegal development.
- Offers a global portfolio of intact forests for carbon offsets to align with corporate social responsibility.
- Generates growth and employment through sustainable tourism to UNESCO world heritage and national parks, including new infrastructure, roads and community services.
- Develops human capital in developing countries for park and forest protection, sustainable tourism and resource management.
- ISO-standard verification and monitoring based on advanced satellite monitoring and science-based forest and carbon offset accounting.
- Insured for performance against catastrophic forest losses.
Case Study: Cardamom National Park- Saving Cambodia’s Last Intact Tropical Forest
In a country like Cambodia, which has faced 20-30% deforestation nationwide over the past 10 years, large-scale forest protection in national parks will be the most direct and effective way to protect the country’s 3.1 million hectares of critical forest ecosystems.
A threatened clouded leopard in Cardamom National Park, Cambodia.
Cambodia has one of the highest rates of deforestation in the world, third only to Nigeria and Vietnam, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). The Cambodian government has played a large role in shaping the use of the country's forests.
Deforestation has directly resulted from poorly managed commercial logging, wood collection for fuel, agricultural invasion, and infrastructure and urban development. Indirect pressures include rapid population growth, inequalities in land tenure, lack of agricultural technology, and limited employment opportunities.
The pristine forests and waterways of the Cardamom Mountains make it one of the world's most important biodiversity hotspots.
Cambodia's primary forest cover fell dramatically from over 70% in 1970 at the end of the Vietnam War to just 3.1% in 2007. Deforestation is proceeding at an alarming rate, with a total forest loss of nearly 75% since the end of the 1990s. In total, Cambodia lost 2.5 million hectares of forest between 1990 and 2005, 334,000 hectares of which was primary forest. As of 2007, less than 322,000 hectares of primary forest remain, with the result that the future sustainability of Cambodia's forest reserves is under severe threat.
Cardamom National Park was established in 2015 and is in dire need of international financial support in order to save one of Cambodia’s last intact tropical forest. Covering almost a million hectares, Cardamom National Park is protected by Wildlife Alliance in partnership with the Ministries of Environment and Forestry. With Carbon Offset Financing, there is a high potential for the entire Cardamom Mountains to be protected, securing clean water, ecosystem services, tourism revenues and better livelihoods for millions of Cambodians.
Cardamom National Park is Cambodia's last stronghold for Asian elephants.
Read the report describing how ASU GDCS uses LiDAR to monitor forest carbon here.
LiDAR Forest Carbon Monitoring in the News
Mongabay - Large branches fall from the western Amazon rainforest canopy at a surprising rate
Climate Central - New Amazon Carbon Maps May Help Limit Deforestation
Mongabay - World’s rainforests could be mapped in 3D at high resolution by 2020 for under $250M
Mongabay - Researchers produce the most accurate carbon map for an entire country
Nature News - Carnegie advances carbon mapping in Colombia
Mongabay - Breakthrough technology enables 3D mapping of rainforests, tree by tree
Mongabay - Laser-based forest mapping as accurate for carbon as on-the-ground plot sampling
Fast Company - How Lasers Can Help Save the World’s Forests
ScienceDaily - Carbon mapping breakthrough
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Global Conservation helps fund a major expansion of Calakmul that also now boasts the first Mexican tropical forest reserve, joint-operations rangers crack down on illegal activity that has crime syndicates scared to enter the area, GC supports the Protection of Jaguars Throughout the Heart of La Selva Maya, critical resources are provided for the Amigos de Calakmul Community REDD+ Program, and communities meet to strengthen and support for their lands.
read moreUPDATE: Global Conservation Secures $100,000 Grant from the Bonefish & Tarpon Trust for TASA and Supports Turneffe Atoll with another $300,000 a year for Protection and Enforcement through the deployment of Marine Monitors on the North and South ends of Turneffe Atoll to provide 24/7 monitoring for real-time response to potential illegal activities, both day and night.
read moreIn his Forbes Interview, Jeff Morgan talks about how the planet grapples with the consequences of illegal actions while creating an understanding about what positive actions need to happen in the future to save wildlands and the local communities attached to them, and how ecotourism can help fund National Parks and World Heritage Sites' protection.
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