Or at least that's the advice of the jungle- hardened rangers who
patrol just one corner of this 1.9 million – acre (7,700 sq km)
wilderness. They are trained by the London-based conservation group
Fauna and Flora International (FFI) to protect Ulu Masen from illegal
loggers and poachers, who greedily eye its valuable hardwoods and
teeming wildlife: elephants, gibbons, tigers, leopards, bears, pythons
and scaly anteaters. The rangers' work might seem remote from the
modern world, but it has implications far beyond Ulu Masen's frontiers
— from Africa and the Amazon, which along with Indonesia are home to
what's left of our rain forests, to the meeting rooms of Copenhagen,
where thousands of delegates will arrive for next month's historic
climate-change conference.
Green plants use light to transform carbon dioxide, absorbed from the
atmosphere, and water into organic compounds, with oxygen as a
by-product. The process is called photosynthesis, and it enables
forests like Ulu Masen to play a critical role in regulating our
climate. Forests store an estimated 300 billion tons of carbon, or the
equivalent of 40 times the world's total annual greenhouse-gas
emissions — emissions that cause global warming. Destroy the trees and
you release that carbon into the atmosphere, putting the great
challenge of our age — averting catastrophic climate change — beyond
reach. Forest destruction accounts for 15% of global emissions by human
activity, far outranking the total from vehicles and aircraft combined.
Forests are disappearing so fast in Indonesia that, incredibly, this
developing country ranks third in emissions behind industrial giants
China and the U.S. Since 1950, estimates Greenpeace, more than 182
million acres (740,000 sq km) of Indonesian forests, the equivalent of
more than 95 Ulu Masens, have been destroyed or degraded.
The good news is that protecting forests "is one of the easiest and
cheapest ways to take a big bite out of the apple when it comes to
emissions," says Greenpeace spokesman Daniel Kessler. Ulu Masen will be
one of the first forests to be protected under a pioneering U.N.
program called REDD — Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest
Degradation in Developing Countries — that offers a powerful financial
incentive to keep forests intact. Here's how it works. Preserve Ulu
Masen, and over the next 30 years an estimated 100 million tons of
carbon are prevented from entering the earth's atmosphere — the
equivalent of 50 million flights from London to Sydney. Those savings
can be converted into millions of carbon-offset credits, which are sold
to rich countries and companies trying to meet their U.N.
emissions-reduction targets. The revenue produced by the sale of
credits is then ploughed back into protecting the forest and improving
life in communities living along its edge, thereby giving people a
reason to leave the trees standing. In other words, forests are better
REDD than dead.
With schemes now proliferating across Indonesia and the globe, the U.N.
estimates that REDD revenues could pump up to $30 billion a year into
the developing world, promising much-needed revenue at a time when rich
nations still haggle over how much money to give poorer countries to
help them adapt to climate change. REDD will likely be part of any
global climate pact negotiated in Copenhagen. "Everyone has got a lot
of hope in REDD," says Joe Heffernan, an expert in environmental
markets at FFI. "It's a big one."
The Money Tree
Ulu Masen received a boost last year when U.S. bank Merrill Lynch
pledged to invest $9 million over four years. "That gave the project a
lot more certainty," says Dorjee Sun, chairman of Sydney-based firm
Carbon Conservation, which is helping Aceh's provincial government
devise the scheme. "It showed there was appetite from investment banks
to buy these credits." Merrill Lynch calls Ulu Masen "the world's first
commercially financed avoided deforestation project." Money has been
followed by political muscle: a year later, Arnold Schwarzenegger of
California, along with the governors of Wisconsin and Illinois, signed
a deal committing the state to finding ways to incorporate forest
credits within U.S. carbon-trading systems. Ulu Masen is expected to
generate $26 million in carbon credits in its first five years.
Humans won't be the only animals to benefit. Clearing land for palm-oil
plantations is Indonesia's leading cause of deforestation, says a 2007
U.N. report, with Sumatra, Kalimantan and Papua the three
worst-affected provinces. Thanks largely to the global appetite for
palm oil, which is found in everything from chocolate bars to biofuels,
the natural habitat of endangered animals such as the orangutan and
Borneo rhino shrinks further each year. REDD could save them, said a
recent study of Kalimantan by researchers from the University of
Queensland in Australia. They believe that the revenues generated by
preserving a forest could not only compete with the profits of cutting
it down for palm oil but also fund biodiversity projects to put the
brakes on species extinction. REDD could "fundamentally change
conservation [in tropical countries] and provide benefits for mammals
at a scale we've never seen before," writes its lead author Oscar
Venter. If REDD's champions seem almost religious in their support, it
is partly because the scheme appears to contain so many holy grails.
Done right, its advocates say, REDD will alleviate poverty, preserve
rain forests, protect endangered species and do more to avert
catastrophic climate change than grounding jets and banning coal. It
also offers a rare partnership between two disparate and often
conflicting worlds: capitalism and conservation. With REDD, you can
save the planet and make money.
Read more: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1940544,00.html?iid=digg_share#ixzz0XwCEIXHnBy Andrew Marshall / Ulu Masen Monday, Nov. 30, 2009
By Andrew Marshall / Ulu Masen Monday, Nov. 30, 2009