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Tree plantations and climate change: Avoiding responsibility in Ecuador

Patricia Granda, from Acción Ecológica Ecuador, discusses tree planting clean development mechanism projects in Ecuador.

Over 345 million hectares of land globally could be forested or re-forested to help combat global warming. The Kyoto Protocol, which sets targets for industrialised countries to reduce greenhouse gases (GHG) emissions, has established the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) to support such initiatives. But do these programmes tackle the real causes of climate change, asks Patricia Granda?

The CDM allows industrialised countries and organisations to fund projects in developing countries aiming to contribute to reducing GHG emissions. These projects are attractive to developing country governments because they offer foreign income, and to industrialised organisations for their low land and labour costs. Companies or governments with high emission levels can fund CDM projects that either increase carbon sinks (such as tree plantations) or expand existing carbon reservoirs (such as forest conservation). The idea is that by maintaining reservoirs or increasing sinks, a company is compensating for its own carbon emissions; however, this relationship has not been fully demonstrated. There are other problems with tree plantation projects. Research by Acción Ecológica, Ecuador and the World Rainforest Movement examines the social and environmental impacts of CDM tree plantation projects in the Ecuadorian Sierra, such as the FACE-PROFAFOR.

Problems with tree planting CDM projects include:

The CDM is a false solution to climate change and there are fundamental problems with the scheme. The idea does not attack the problem of excessive consumption of fossil fuels: industrialised countries use the CDM to avoid reducing their own GHG emissions. It is also impossible to accurately determine the exact quantities of atmospheric carbon sequestered through afforestation projects. Furthermore, the targets set for emissions reduction are inadequate. The 1990 emissions levels, which are used as a baseline against which to measure progress, are arbitrary. The CDM sets a target of a 5.2 percent reduction of emissions. However, many studies maintain that for this reduction to have a real impact on the climate problem, the figure should be set at no less than 70 percent of the levels released 15 years ago. The CDM framework enables industrialised countries to implement projects in developing countries and avoid reducing GHGs at the source.

As an alternative, the research suggests:

Contributor(s): Patricia Granda Source(s):
‘Carbon Sink Plantations in the Ecuadorian Andes', Acción Ecológica, translated into English by the World Rainforest Movement, by Patricia Granda, May 2005 More information.

Funded by: World Rainforest Movement; Entre Pueblos; the Municipality of Alicante; Novib; SSNC (Swedish Society for Nature Conservation) 29 March 2006

Further Information
Patricia Granda
Acción Ecológica
Alejandro de Valdez
No. 2433 y la Gasca
Casilla 17 15 246C
Quito
Ecuador
Tel+593 22 527 583
Fax+593 22 547 516
Email patagranda@hotmail.com
Acción Ecológica, Ecuador

Other related links:
Are carbon sinks really good for rural people?

Meeting energy needs through the Kyoto Protocol

Adapting to climate change: developing countries and the global response

Can the south afford to go green?

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