http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/29/opinion/29fri2.html?hpw=&pagewanted=print

 
 


May 29, 2009
Editorial
Forests and the Planet 
A major shortcoming of the 1997 Kyoto Protocol on climate change was its 
failure to address the huge amounts of greenhouse gas emissions caused by the 
destruction of the world's rain forests. A proposal that rich nations be 
allowed to offset some of their emissions by paying poorer counties to leave 
their rain forests intact was shot down after European environmental groups 
objected. They argued that it would allow rich countries to buy their way out 
of their own obligations. The planet has been paying for that colossal blunder 
ever since. 

Deforestation accounts for one-fifth of the world's greenhouse gases - about 
the same as China's emissions, more than the emissions generated by all of the 
world's cars and trucks. And the world is doing far too little to stop it. An 
estimated 30 million acres of rain forest disappear every year, destroying 
biodiversity and pouring billions of tons of carbon dioxide into the 
atmosphere. 

The global warming bill now working its way through the House seeks to change 
this destructive dynamic in two ways. It sets up a carbon trading system that 
is expected to raise upward of $60 billion annually through the sale of 
pollution allowances. Five percent of that would be set aside to help prevent 
deforestation, either through a special international fund or as bilateral 
grants to poor countries. 

In addition, the bill would allow for the kinds of offsets proposed and 
rejected in Kyoto, Japan. For example, a power company having trouble meeting 
its emissions limits could satisfy some of its obligations by paying to reduce 
deforestation elsewhere in the world. 

The economics make sense. It is a relatively inexpensive way for industrialized 
nations to get credit for reducing global emissions while they make the 
necessary investments to control their own pollution. And it is a good deal for 
poor countries. The World Bank estimates that an acre of rain forest converted 
to crops is worth $100 to $250. It's worth far more under a system that puts a 
value on carbon. An average acre stores about 200 tons of carbon; assuming a 
low price of $10 a ton, that acre is suddenly worth $2,000. 

A big effort will still be required to resist the loggers, miners, ranchers and 
politicians who have had their way with the rain forests for years. And any 
plan must include safeguards and inspection mechanisms to ensure that the 
allowances and offsets are being used properly.

But with the rain forests shrinking and the planet warming up, it's crucial to 
get the right incentives in place - first as part of broad climate change 
legislation in the United States, then as part of a new global treaty that the 
world's nations hope to negotiate in the fall. 

Related
Times Topics: Greenhouse Gas Emissions | Forests and Forestry

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