Tuesday, September 18, 2007

I'll give you $40 to not cut down that tree...



Do you have a forest?



Do you need some extra cash?



If so then the United Nations might be the place for you. As part of the brand new Kyoto Climate Change Treaty rainforest countries that avoid deforestation will receive payments from the developed world.


Already the developed nations can buy carbon credits from their less industrialized neighbors that allow them to continue to pollute. And now, they can pay developing countries not to pollute, so we can continue to drive our SUVs while drinking that banana smoothie and wearing our Chanel sunglasses.


It is true that 20% of the world’s carbon emissions come from the burning and logging of the rainforest, and reducing this carbon will be a huge step in the war on climate change. Deforestation emits more carbon than the whole of the global transport sector, and that reduction in the emissions caused by deforestation is an ideal way to make an impact on climate today.


The bottom like is that the proposal, worked up by Costa Rica and Papua New Guinea and backed by the World Bank, will potentially offer tropical rainforest countries billions in funding. Alongside reducing carbon emissions, some of the world’s most exploited countries will be able to begin their climb up the economic ladder. The fear is that this scheme will once again let the biggest polluting countries continue in their destructive patterns.


In the words of a climate change expert: ‘It is not a perfect solution, but the only one on the table at present.’


I’d like to see more solutions on that table, and then again I’d like to see the table – I wonder if it was made from Brazilian wood?

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