Curbing
deforestation by half key to global warming fight: research
AFP
WASHINGTON
Petroleumworld.com
05 11 07
Tropical developing nations can help drastically
cut greenhouse gas emissions blamed for global warming by reducing the rate of
deforestation by half, climate researchers said Thursday.
Reducing tropical deforestation by 50 percent over the next century would help
prevent 500 billion tonnes of carbon from going into the atmosphere every year,
the researchers said in a policy article published in the journal Science Express.
Such a reduction in emissions would account for 12 percent of the total reductions
targeted by the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the
researchers said.
At its current rate, tropical deforestation releases annually 1.5 billion tonnes
of carbon into the atmosphere that would otherwise be absorbed by trees, making
it a major contributor to global climate change, they said.
The policy article was aimed to give scientific and technological backing to
a two-year initiative launched by the United Nations Framework Convention on
Climate Change, after a group of developing nations asked for a strategy to make
forest preservation politically and economically attractive.
The researchers said the Reducing Emissions from Deforestation (RED) initiative
faces political challenges as many developing countries consider their tropical
forests as a key economic resource.
But low-cost measures could be taken to convince developing nations to reduce
deforestation, including, for example, by helping them evaluate the use of forests
to focus clearing only in areas with high agricultural value, they said.
"It will require political will and sound economic strategy to make the
RED initiative work," said Christopher Field, director of the Global Ecology
Department at the Carnegie Institution of Washington, a private, non-profit scientific
research organization.
"But the initiative provides a big reduction in emissions at low cost," he
said in a statement.
AFP 10 2214 GMT 05 07
Copyright© 2007
AFP. All
Rights Reserved.
Send
this story to a friend
Your
feedback is important to us!
We invite all our readers to share with us
their views and comments about this article.
Write
to editor@petroleumworld.com
Any
question or suggestions, please write to:
editor@petroleumworld.com
Best
Viewed with IE
5.01+
Windows
NT 4.0, '95, '98 and ME +/ 800x600 pixels
|