The Japan Times - Market-based schemes not reducing deforestation, poverty: report

EUR -
AED 4.244184
AFN 75.701053
ALL 96.004548
AMD 435.662485
ANG 2.068737
AOA 1059.745391
ARS 1599.839369
AUD 1.66711
AWG 2.080487
AZN 1.963523
BAM 1.958937
BBD 2.322439
BDT 141.48654
BGN 1.975389
BHD 0.436671
BIF 3432.32619
BMD 1.155665
BND 1.485146
BOB 7.967758
BRL 5.962651
BSD 1.153056
BTN 107.406974
BWP 15.819398
BYN 3.41673
BYR 22651.041523
BZD 2.319033
CAD 1.608594
CDF 2663.808972
CHF 0.921372
CLF 0.026923
CLP 1063.06202
CNY 7.95404
CNH 7.94513
COP 4239.466007
CRC 536.552132
CUC 1.155665
CUP 30.625133
CVE 110.943633
CZK 24.507676
DJF 205.385202
DKK 7.472184
DOP 70.322521
DZD 153.874241
EGP 62.780943
ERN 17.334981
ETB 180.053617
FJD 2.604644
FKP 0.875035
GBP 0.872013
GEL 3.102964
GGP 0.875035
GHS 12.71811
GIP 0.875035
GMD 85.519202
GNF 10146.742248
GTQ 8.821124
GYD 241.336414
HKD 9.056996
HNL 30.630248
HRK 7.534827
HTG 151.33773
HUF 382.085931
IDR 19677.514491
ILS 3.623416
IMP 0.875035
INR 107.448453
IQD 1510.618714
IRR 1524524.882544
ISK 144.400294
JEP 0.875035
JMD 181.790285
JOD 0.81937
JPY 184.211901
KES 150.004585
KGS 101.063444
KHR 4611.263581
KMF 493.469647
KPW 1040.098575
KRW 1735.601482
KWD 0.357494
KYD 0.960939
KZT 546.404872
LAK 25390.422624
LBP 103434.408555
LKR 363.808805
LRD 211.588784
LSL 19.594397
LTL 3.41238
LVL 0.69905
LYD 7.37387
MAD 10.833246
MDL 20.289012
MGA 4820.676873
MKD 61.772659
MMK 2426.629502
MNT 4128.316192
MOP 9.309005
MRU 45.807353
MUR 54.258177
MVR 17.866819
MWK 1999.383996
MXN 20.544206
MYR 4.65444
MZN 73.905057
NAD 19.593973
NGN 1593.50064
NIO 42.427014
NOK 11.243342
NPR 171.848924
NZD 2.019075
OMR 0.444681
PAB 1.153046
PEN 3.989287
PGK 4.9879
PHP 69.442199
PKR 321.737139
PLN 4.269091
PYG 7459.00747
QAR 4.204332
RON 5.095788
RSD 117.668222
RUB 92.545729
RWF 1684.081881
SAR 4.339061
SBD 9.290131
SCR 16.682104
SDG 694.555216
SEK 10.875944
SGD 1.483441
SHP 0.867048
SLE 28.486971
SLL 24233.737777
SOS 658.952225
SRD 43.165281
STD 23919.940166
STN 24.538866
SVC 10.089154
SYP 127.775558
SZL 19.586445
THB 37.509481
TJS 11.052196
TMT 4.056385
TND 3.399343
TOP 2.782564
TRY 51.53158
TTD 7.822627
TWD 36.901544
TZS 3004.730031
UAH 50.500421
UGX 4325.92642
USD 1.155665
UYU 46.694765
UZS 14009.431082
VES 547.081016
VND 30435.603549
VUV 137.877287
WST 3.196892
XAF 657.00327
XAG 0.015757
XAU 0.000246
XCD 3.123244
XCG 2.078127
XDR 0.817633
XOF 657.014659
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.799172
ZAR 19.443584
ZMK 10402.372876
ZMW 22.282871
ZWL 372.123782
  • CMSD

    0.1100

    22.26

    +0.49%

  • BCC

    -1.8800

    73.2

    -2.57%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • GSK

    0.7000

    56.69

    +1.23%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.04

    +0.23%

  • BTI

    0.3900

    58.28

    +0.67%

  • AZN

    2.7600

    203.49

    +1.36%

  • JRI

    0.0900

    12.61

    +0.71%

  • RIO

    -0.3600

    94.45

    -0.38%

  • BCE

    -0.9300

    24.45

    -3.8%

  • NGG

    1.1500

    87.99

    +1.31%

  • RYCEF

    0.9000

    15.99

    +5.63%

  • RELX

    0.3600

    33.59

    +1.07%

  • VOD

    0.0800

    15.21

    +0.53%

  • BP

    0.9500

    47.12

    +2.02%

Market-based schemes not reducing deforestation, poverty: report
Market-based schemes not reducing deforestation, poverty: report / Photo: Ludovic MARIN - AFP

Market-based schemes not reducing deforestation, poverty: report

Market-based approaches to forest conservation like carbon offsets and deforestation-free certification schemes have largely failed to protect trees or alleviate poverty, according to a major scientific review published on Monday.

Text size:

The global study -- the most comprehensive of its kind to date -- found that trade and finance-driven initiatives had made "limited" progress halting deforestation and in some cases worsened economic inequality.

Drawn from years of academic and field work, the report compiled by the International Union of Forest Research Organizations (IUFRO), a group of 15,000 scientists in 120 countries, will be presented at a high-level UN forum starting Monday.

Its authors urged a "radical rethink" of increasingly popular market-based approaches often promoted as effective at saving forests, curbing global warming and raising living standards in developing nations.

"The evidence does not support the claim of win-wins or triple wins for environment, economy and people often made for market mechanisms as a policy response to environmental problems," said contributing author Maria Brockhaus from the University of Helsinki.

"Rather our cases show that poverty and forest loss both are persistent across different regions of the world... where market mechanisms have been the main policy option for decades," she told AFP by email.

- No accountability -

Since the last IUFRO assessment in 2010, the report noted a rise in complex and overlapping market-based schemes "with financial actors and shareholders more often interested in short-term profits than long-term just and sustainable forest governance".

Its lead author, Constance McDermott from the University of Oxford, said this may not be true of all individual projects "but overall... it's hard to say they've been a rousing success".

The report said a $120 million project in the Democratic Republic of Congo had "reinforced entrenched interests" by restricting local people from forests without addressing logging by powerful extractive businesses.

In Malaysia, indigenous groups promised better livelihoods from a foreign-backed plantation venture on their customary land received no benefit, the report said.

"As both cases show, 'wins' are often gained elsewhere, while the burdens of forest loss, enclosures and forestland conversion are carried locally," said Brockhaus.

In Ghana, deforestation rates had risen despite a slew of sustainable cocoa standards, corporate pledges, and carbon offset projects, while farmers were earning less today than decades ago, said McDermott.

Meanwhile green trade policies imposed by wealthy countries -- like the EU's ban on imports linked to deforestation -- might look good from Brussels but did not consider the knock-on effects, she added.

"There's no accountability. If this doesn't work -- or farmers are pushed off their farm as a result -- it's not going to hurt the person eating chocolate in the UK or Germany," she said.

- 'Radical rethink' -

Despite recent turmoil, carbon markets are projected to grow into a multi-billion-dollar industry as corporations increasingly turn to credits to meet their net-zero climate targets.

Credits are purchased from projects, often in developing nations, that reduce or avoid the release of planet-heating emissions, such as protecting CO2-absorbing rainforests or peat swamps.

Kenya's President William Ruto has called Africa's carbon sinks an "unparalleled economic goldmine" that could generate billions of dollars every year.

But there are growing concerns about how much of that revenue poor communities might expect to see, with unscrupulous actors accused of exploitation.

Brockhaus said market-based approaches may be appealing to policymakers but would not be a solution without also addressing the broader economic and governance challenges around forest management.

"We advocate for a radical rethink," she said.

K.Nakajima--JT