Global groups call to end deforestation, conserve the world's forests
Countdown for Survival: Global groups make an urgent call to end deforestation
and conserve the world's forests during UN Climate Talks
Bonn, Germany - A coalition of youth, environmental groups, NGOs, Indigenous
Peoples organizations and women's groups delivered a plea to negotiators asking
them to ensure a strong climate deal and warning them that they will put our
survival at risk if they do not act immediately to halt deforestation and the
industrial logging of the world's primary forests (forest
degradation). [Signatories and statement below in NOTE 1]
"Survival is not negotiable. The climate deal signed in Copenhagen needs to
ensure the survival of all countries and people. The immediate protection of
the world's forests is no longer just an option, it is essential to ensure a
safe climate for us and our kids," stated youth spokesperson Gemma Tillack.
The coalitions' plea asks delegates to ensure that any climate deal:
--Immediately ends deforestation, industrial scale logging in primary
forests and the conversion of forests to monoculture tree crops, plantations;
--Protects the world's biodiverse forests including primary forests in
developed countries (e.g. Australia, Canada and Russia) and tropical forests in
developing countries;
--Respects the rights of women, Indigenous peoples and local communities and
allow them to lead healthy and sustainable lives whilst stopping deforestation
and industrial logging of primary forests in their country; and
--Does not allow developed countries to use forest protection and the avoiding
deforestation and industrial scale logging of primary forests in other
countries as an offset mechanism for their own emissions.
"The forest is our life, without the forests we would not exist. Avoiding
deforestation and stopping industrial logging will allow Indigenous peoples to
live and will secure our future," said Adolphine Muley, of the Union pour
l'Emancipation de la Femme Autochtone in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
"We need to ensure that climate change mitigation plans do not drive the
establishment of monoculture tree plantations. The rapid ongoing direct and
indirect replacement of forests by plantations is a significant cause of social
and environmental harm and contributes significantly to climate change," said
Diego Cardona from Friends of the Earth -Colombia and the Global Forest
Coalition.
"The definition of forests in the climate change negotiations includes
monoculture tree plantations thus allowing their promotion disguised as forests
in market-based mechanisms that could be used in REDD. All countries need to
accept and adopt a forest definition in the climate deal that clearly
distinguishes forests from monoculture tree plantations," said Raquel Nunez
from the World Rainforest Movement.
"A commitment to protect biodiversity and halt deforestation in primary forests
would send a positive signal to the global community that we are on the right
path towards avoiding a climate disaster," said Joao Talocchi from Greenpeace
Brazil.
"Developed countries like Australia, Canada and Russia need to stop undermining
the climate negotiations. They should stop industrial logging and woodchipping
of their biodiverse forests, permanently protect their own carbon reservoirs
and start accounting for their emissions from forestry activities. Only then
can they ask developing countries to protect their forests," said Claire Spoors
from Global Witness.
Ms. Tillack concluded saying, "We need to act now to secure a safe climate and
peak our emissions by 2015. Every day of delay results in the release of huge
amounts of dangerous carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. We can not wait to
take these first steps to ensuring our survival."
Contact:
Gemma Tillack: The Wilderness Society and youth caucus +61 427 057 643
Claire Spoors: Global Witness +49 1763 546 3586
Joao Talocchi: Greenpeace Brazil +55 11 8351 0169
NOTE:
[1] The coalition of youth, environmental groups, NGOs, Indigenous peoples'
Organizations, women's groups who have signed this survival plea include:
International Youth caucus in Bonn
Ecosystems Climate Alliance
Global Forest Coalition
The Wilderness Society
World Rainforest Movement
Global Witness
Greenpeace
Rainforest Action Network
Wetlands International
Rainforest Foundation Norway
Rainforest Foundation UK
FERN
Friends of the Earth
Sobrevivencia/FoE-Paraguay
Indigenous Environmental Network
Global Justice Ecology Project
CORE India
Life gender, Environment and Diversity Germany
Sustainable Population Australia
Tanzania Forest Conservation Group
the Tanzania Community Forest Conservation Network MJUMITA
Stop GE Tree Campaign
RAVA Institute Indonesia
SWBC Nepal
Timberwatch Coalition South Africa
Pacific Indigenous Peoples Environment Coalition
Friends of the Siberian Forests Russia
Focus on the Global South
Women´s Environment Network Australia
Biofuelwatch
Women Environmental Programme Nigeria
Just Environment
COECO-CEIBA-Friends of the Earth Costa Rica
WALHI-Friends of the Earth-Indonesia
Down to Earth
Carbon Trade Watch
Women's Environment and Development Organization
Watch Indonesia
Asociacion ANDES Peru
Ecologistas en Accion Spain
Sustainable Energy and Economy Network
North East Peoples Alliance on Trade, Finance and Development India
WISE Inc. Philippines
GenderCC
FASE Solidarity and Education Brazil
Global Exchange
Kingdom Narintarakul Thai Working group for Climate Justice
Union pour l'Emancipation de la Femme Autochtone
Plea:
Halt Climate Change ---- Halt Forest destruction ---- Halt Plantations
The undersigned broad coalition of NGOs, Indigenous Peoples' Organizations and
women's groups call upon the Parties to the FCCC to take into account the
critical role of forest conservation in climate change mitigation. The
protection of forest biodiversity is vital for life on earth. Native forest
ecosystems provide us with clean air, clean water, a safe climate, food,
fodder and shelter and they are an important part of our global and cultural
identity. Forests provide aesthetic and intrinsic values. Indigenous Peoples
and traditional local communities of the forests are the guardians and original
conservationists of the forest. They maintain a food sustenance and
socio-cultural relationship to the forests based on their cosmovision.
For that reason, we call upon Parties to:
- Immediately put in place rights-based and equitable policies and institutions
to halt deforestation and forest degradation and the destruction of other
natural ecosystems like peatlands and grasslands in all continents
- Identify and address the direct and underlying causes of deforestation and
forest degradation;
- Ensure that these policies and measures uphold international human rights and
environmental standards and are fully consistent with the UN Declaration on
the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. This includes the effective adoption and
implementation by all Parties and all UN agencies and multilateral banks of the
Right to Free Prior and Informed Consent of Indigenous Peoples and local forest
dependent communities;
- Ensure that these policies take into account the specific role, rights and
interests of women and are fully consistent with Convention on the Elimination
of all forms of Discrimination Against Women;
- Ensure that these policies are fully consistent with the Convention on
Biodiversity and its Expanded Program of Work on Forest Biodiversity and
contribute meaningfully to conserving and enhancing biodiversity and related
cultural diversity, traditional knowledge and spirituality;
- Explicitly exclude the establishment and management of monoculture tree
plantations, including genetically modified tree plantations, and the practice
of industrial logging from these policies. This also implies adopting a forest
definition that clearly distinguishes forests from monoculture tree
plantations;
- Ensure any policies intended to reduce deforestation and forest degradation
include measures to reduce consumption of forest products, especially in the
Industrialized North;
- Ensure these policies secure the fair and equitable sharing of the benefits
of forests and other ecosystems, both between countries and within countries,
taking into account the critical role of Indigenous Peoples, local communities
and women in conserving and restoring forests and other ecosystems. This also
implies recognizing the customary and collective land tenure and forest rights
of Indigenous Peoples and ensuring the full and effective participation of
Indigenous Peoples, local communities and women in all decision-making
processes related to forests;
We call upon developed countries to recognize the historical debt to developing
countries caused by their excessive greenhouse gas emissions. This implies
immediate and drastic cuts in their domestic greenhouse gas emissions (45% by
2020/ 95% by 2050 as an absolute minimum) AS WELL AS providing sufficient
financial and technological support to enable developing countries to halt the
destruction of forests and other ecosystems. It is too late for either/or
policies. Any form of carbon offsetting, including CDM
afforestation/reforestation and REDD offset projects will only increase the
ecological footprint and carbon debt of developed countries and must thus be
avoided. (Due to a broad range of ethical, social and methodological risks,
forest-based carbon offsets will undermine an effective, equitable and socially
just climate regime.) Climate change mitigation and sustainable forest
management must be based on different mindsets with full respect for Nature,
and not on carbon offset mechanisms. Public funding mechanisms that ensure
environmental integrity and equitable distribution of funds must be made
established.

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