Réduction des émissions provenant du déboisement et de la dégradation des forêts REDD+

Nouvelles

La degradación forestal genera grandes emisiones de carbono (34% de las emisiones del sector forestal, FAO 2020). Prevenir la degradación forestal reduce las emisiones al tiempo que salvaguarda la salud del ecosistema forestal y maximiza la productividad forestal para los medios de vida de las comunidades y la economía en general. Por lo tanto, estimar las emisiones y remociones de carbono derivadas de la degradación forestal es un requisito para participar en nuevas oportunidades de financiamiento climático. El Programa ONU-REDD, con el apoyo técnico de la Organización de las Naciones Unidas para la Alimentación y la Agricultura (FAO) y el programa...
The UN-REDD Programme – FAO Halting Deforestation, Degradation, and Emissions Team invites proposals for the provision of a study on “Analytical framework on Policy Coherence to halt deforestation: Aligning public expenditure and cross-sectoral strategies to meet climate change commitments in the AFOLU Sector.”  FAO, through joint efforts of the UN-REDD Programme, and the FAO Agrifood Economics and Policy Division’s Monitoring and Analyzing Food and Agricultural Policies team, are developing an analytical framework of public expenditures analysis on forest conservation, restoration, and sustainable use, encompassing budgets allocated to forestry, agriculture, and other land use sectors.    The forthcoming study will extend the scope...
As countries increasingly qualify for payments under the REDD+ process and schemes in return for reducing their emissions from deforestation and forest degradation, a new report from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and UN-REDD highlights the need for legal clarity on who owns emission reductions and who is entitled to benefit from those payments.    The publication, entitled Comparative study of carbon rights in the context of jurisdictional REDD+: Case studies from Africa, Asia and the Pacific and Latin America and the Caribbean explains that since the Warsaw framework for REDD+ was established in 2013, verified emission reductions derived from forests have effectively become...
In a recent study published in the International Forestry Review, researchers from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and the Forest Research Institute in Myanmar have revealed insights into the carbon density of the country's mangrove forests. The article, titled "Mangrove Biomass and Carbon Estimates for REDD+ from National Forest Inventory in Two Regions of Myanmar," confirms the assumption that mangroves are much more efficient and effective in carbon storage than most other forest types.  Myanmar boasts the second-largest area of mangrove forests in Southeast Asia. Despite this, the region has experienced high deforestation rates and forest...
Experts from Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Honduras, Mexico, and Peru met in the   Amazon city of Florencia (Colombia) Forest degradation generates large carbon emissions (34% of forest sector emissions, FAO 2020). Preventing forest degradation reduces emissions while safeguarding forest ecosystem health and maximizes forest productivity to community livelihoods and the broader economy. Estimating carbon emissions and removals from forest degradation is thus a requirement to participate in new climate finance opportunities.  UN-REDD Programme with the technical support from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization  (FAO) and the SilvaCarbon program - Latin America and the Caribbean region,  brought together 23...