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Reuters
Monday 01 October 2007
Jakarta
- Cutting emissions from deforestation will be key to curbing climate
change and should be agreed upon in December's climate talks in Bali, a
leading Indonesian forestry researcher said on Monday.
The conference on the resort island is expected to initiate talks on clinching a new deal by 2009 to fight global warming.
Under
the Kyoto Protocol, developed nations can pay poor countries to cut
emissions from activities such as the manufacture of refrigerants and
fertilizers as well as capturing greenhouse gases from farm waste and
rubbish dumps.
But
greenhouse gas emissions from deforestation, nearly 20 percent of the
world's total, are not yet eligible for trade because they were
excluded from the Kyoto Protocol's first round, which runs out in 2012.
"It's
huge because preserving and conserving the existing pool will then
become very attractive," said Daniel Murdiyarso, senior scientist at
the Centre for International Forestry Research (CIFOR).
"Whether
by means of a market mechanism or not, including deforestation in the
new deal is something Indonesia and every developing country should
push for."
Murdiyarso,
who is often consulted by the government on forestry and climate change
issues, said the next climate deal should increase emission cut targets
to halt rising temperatures.
"The
Kyoto Protocol only targets a 5 percent emission cut. To stabilize
levels the cut has to be much more than 5 percent," Murdiyarso said by
telephone from his office on the outskirts of Jakarta.
Participants
from 189 countries are expected to gather in Bali for December's
U.N.-led summit, which will hear a report on Reduced Emissions from
Deforestation to decide the fate of a new scheme to make emission cuts
from forest areas eligible for global carbon trading.
Murdiyarso
said Indonesia's vast peatlands, which are a huge store of carbon, will
play a key role in shaping post-Kyoto plans on reducing global warming.
With
annual carbon dioxide emissions of over 1,500 million tones, preserving
Indonesia's peatlands could bring in billions of dollars, Murdiyarso
said.
Experts
estimate Indonesia has 20 million hectares (50 million acres) of dense,
black tropical peat swamps, formed when trees, roots and leaves rot,
that are natural carbon stores.
However, when burnt or drained to plant crops such as palm oil, peat releases large amounts of carbon dioxide.
Indonesia
is home to 60 percent of the world's threatened tropical peatlands and
among the world's top three carbon emitters when peat emissions are
added in, said a report sponsored by the World Bank and Britain's
development arm.
"In
Germany, the cost of reducing 50 million tones is 10 billion euro,
that's 200 euro per ton. If we take the same number for peatlands, we
can expect some 900 billion euro," said Murdiyarso, also a peatlands
expert.
"I don't think anyone would buy it at such a high price, but it would still mean millions of dollars for Indonesia."
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