Business Daily (Nairobi)
Godwin Kowero
10 July 2009
opinion
In the run-up to this year's global climate negotiations in Copenhagen, the international community is fiercely debating proposals for mitigating climate change, including strategies for Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD).
African forests - which cover 635 million hectares and account for 16 per cent of the world's forests - are attracting increasing attention.
Partly because of their potential as a sink for carbon dioxide, and unsustainable land use including agricultural expansion, commercial tree harvesting and urbanisation are driving high rates of deforestation and forest degradation on the continent, making it an obvious target for REDD strategies.
But unless African forestry perspectives are included in global climate change debates, REDD policies for the continent risk being inadequate or inappropriate. Making REDD work for Africa means recognising the complexity and diversity of African forests.
The way the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change currently defines forest limits the lands that would qualify for REDD in Africa. For example, most dry forests -- which constitute the bulk of African natural forests -- will be excluded.
It also means learning from the failings of current strategies -- in particular the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM).
The procedures, costs and capacity requirements for developing qualified CDM projects, in addition to political and tenurial uncertainties, and an unstable investment environment in some countries, all combine to seriously inhibit Africa's participation in this mechanism.
Compared to other regions of the world, there has been little interest in CDM in Africa.
For REDD, there is the additional challenge of how to monitor and measure the impact of actions -- in particular how to set baselines.
No managementMost natural forests in Africa are under no form of management or administration, which makes it difficult to determine how much carbon they hold.
A first requirement for REDD in Africa then will be putting forests under effective management and ensuring secure ownership of all forests. Accurate data on forest cover, deforestation, degradation, and biomass productivity are also urgently needed.
Perhaps most importantly, making REDD work for Africa means recognising the crucial role that forests and trees play in African socioeconomic development and addressing the underlying causes of deforestation and degradation.
Forests and trees support key sectors in African economies, including crop and livestock agriculture, energy, tourism and water.
Over 70 per cent of the continent's population depends on forest resources. Forests are crucial for maintaining environmental quality and providing global goods and services.
Climate change poses a significant threat to African forests and their role in society. Agricultural production and overall access to food across the continent may be severely compromised.
So, any strategy to address climate change in Africa must also enhance the livelihoods of forest-dependent populations. Still, there are interventions that could significantly reduce deforestation and degradation of African forests.
These include supporting intensification of crop and livestock agriculture around forest margins, improving domestic and industrial energy efficiency and conservation, promoting efficient and sustainable harvesting of forest and tree products, improving efficiency in wood processing, and diversifying livelihood options for the poor.
Raise awareness Supporting existing national forest programmes and projects and implementing relevant international agreements, such as the Convention on Biological Diversity, will also considerably help attain REDD objectives.
Also, the African forestry sector and national governments should help raise awareness on climate change.
Agricultural policies, for example, must fit in with overall environmental policy. And energy, urbanisation and housing policies must be harmonised with forest policy.
More research into how African forests might adapt to climate change is also needed -- Africa's knowledge base and its capacity for the forest sector to respond to climate change is weak.
African forests can help both mitigate climate change and adapt to its adverse effects. But doing so means involving the African forestry community and other key stakeholders in global climate negotiations.
Kowero is the executive secretary for the African Forest Forum in Nairobi, Kenya.
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