First Name: | Jonah |
---|---|
Last Name: | Busch |
Email Address: | jbusch@cgdev.org |
Affiliation | Center for Global Development |
Subject | Eight Reasons for California to Lead on Climate and Tropical Forests |
Comment |
Eight Reasons for California to Lead on Climate and Tropical Forests Thank you for the opportunity to share views and express support for including sectoral offset credits for reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation under the California cap-and-trade program. When it comes to fighting climate change, California is already a world leader on pricing carbon, transitioning to renewable energy, and decarbonizing the world’s eighth largest economy. California now has yet another golden opportunity to lead on climate by helping to halt and reverse tropical deforestation. Here are eight reasons for California to accelerate inclusion of sectoral offset credits for tropical forests: 1. To fight climate change comprehensively. Climate change is bad enough for Californians facing drought and sea-level rise. It’s many times worse for people in poor countries who are more exposed and less able to adapt. Fighting climate change by regulating smokestacks and tailpipes is essential, but there’s no chance of avoiding dangerous climate change without also halting and reversing deforestation. Every year tropical deforestation produces more greenhouse gas emissions than the European Union. 2. To contain costs. Reducing tropical deforestation is a bargain. Relative to California, tropical forests offer 55 times as many emission reductions below twenty dollars per ton of carbon dioxide. By letting regulated companies purchase these low-cost emission reductions to meet a fraction of their climate obligations, California can meet its ambitious climate goals at a lower cost to companies and their customers. 3. To be the standard-setter for the world. What California decides will have an outsized importance for the world’s tropical forests that goes well beyond the emission reductions its companies might buy each year. California can write rules that set the precedent for other US states and even other developed countries on how to use tropical forest offsets in cap-and-trade programs in a way that guarantees environmental integrity and benefits indigenous peoples, the best guardians of tropical forests. Just as with clean air laws a generation ago, California once again has the chance to be the standard-setter for the world. 4. Because there are side benefits for sustainable development. Deforestation isn’t just bad for the climate, it’s bad for people living near and within the forests. Brazil’s deforestation has been blamed for its record-setting drought; Indonesia’s massive and deliberately-set forest and peat fires are choking Southeast Asia with a thick carcinogenic haze, causing a public health emergency. By financing forest protection in the tropics, California will be contributing to Global Sustainable Development Goals on poverty alleviation, food, water and sanitation, health, and energy. And since tropical forests are home to two-thirds of all plant and animal species that live on land, California will be helping to achieve international agreements on biodiversity too. 5. Because it’s a tested model. National performance payments for conserving forests have been tested using public funding, and they’re working. Brazil’s anti-deforestation policies reduced Amazon deforestation by 80% over the last decade—the single largest reduction in greenhouse gas emissions ever achieved by any county. In return Norway contributed one billion dollars into the Amazon Fund. 6. To support indigenous peoples. Evidence to date suggests that performance payments for conserving forests can benefit indigenous peoples. Brazil has increased indigenous territories to an area larger than Greenland. Guyana has accelerated titling of indigenous lands. And in Indonesia, a court decision recognized indigenous peoples’ claims to 40 million hectares of forest. 7. Because technical issues are surmountable. The Air Resources Board white paper lists a number of technical issues, such as monitoring, reference levels, and social safeguards. These issues are important but surmountable. Many good ideas for addressing these issues have been put forward in the last decade, including by the REDD Offsets Working Group, the Methodological Framework of the Forest Carbon Partnership Facility Carbon Fund, the Verified Carbon Standard Jurisdictional and Nested REDD+ Framework, and bilateral REDD+ agreements. A new working group report by the Center for Global Development recommends keeping rules simple and practical. 8. Because finance is the missing piece. Climate diplomats have finished negotiating global rules for paying for reductions in emissions in deforestation. These rules are expected to become part of an international climate agreement in Paris this December. More than 50 tropical countries are lining up to reduce deforestation, if funding for performance payments comes forward. California can jumpstart action in those countries by sending the signal that market finance is on the way. By including sectoral offsets for reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation in its cap-and-trade program, California will open up a new source of finance to help tropical countries conserve their forests, with many attendant benefits for climate and sustainable development. Yet again, California has a golden opportunity to lead. Jonah Busch, Ph.D. Center for Global Development 2055 L St, Fifth Floor Washington, DC 20009 References: “Eight Reasons for California to Lead on Climate and Tropical Forests.” Jonah Busch. Center for Global Development Blog. October 27th, 2015. http://www.cgdev.org/blog/eight-reasons-california-lead-climate-and-tropical-forests Further reading: “Look to the Forests: How Performance Payments Can Slow Climate Change.” Report of the Working Group on Scaling Up Performance-Based Transfers for Reduced Tropical Deforestation. Center for Global Development, Washington, DC. 74 pp. October 14th, 2015. http://www.cgdev.org/publication/ft/look-forests-how-performance-payments-can-slow-climate-change “Why Forests? Why Now? Paper Series.” Frances Seymour and Jonah Busch. Center for Global Development, Washington, DC. http://www.cgdev.org/page/wfwn-paper-series |
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Date and Time Comment Was Submitted: 2015-10-30 09:05:09 |
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