Search This Blog

Friday, 27 August 2010

Forests, Climate Change, and Communities: Making Progress up the Learning Curve


Sources: http://climate-l.org by the International Institute of Sustainable Development and http://www.cifor.cgiar.org/Headlines/urgent-action-needed-on-climate-forestry-research.htm
The Director General of the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), Frances Seymour delivered a keynote address titled "Forests, Climate Change, and Communities: Making Progress up the Learning Curve" during the  International Union of Forest Research Organizations (IUFRO) World Congress, which is being held in Seoul, Republic of Korea, from 23-28 August 2010.
Seymour began by providing an overview of research on forests and communities, with the aim of drawing lessons for the multiple challenges of integrating climate change into future research. She emphasised that Forestry scientists need to think big, act fast and communicate better if their work is to have an impact on global climate change negotiations and later warned against the "tyranny" of the case study, allowing scientists to build scientifically supported arguments to corroborate preexisting opinions and assertions. She then called for the inclusion of a political economy approach to account for the multiple, often competing, interests involved in forest policy-making.
Her speech then focused on  series of open questions regarding: whether reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation in developing countries (REDD) will shape or be shaped by the pre-existing political economies of forests; the significance of climate change’s political dominance for community forests; and which institutions are most supportive of community-level adaptation initiatives. . 
“In the new context of climate change, we need to understand the institutions and governance mechanisms needed to underpin solutions that yield effective, efficient, and equitable outcomes. How can REDD and adaptation schemes find the optimal position between centralized and decentralized approaches?  How do local property rights and other institutional variables influence their effectiveness? What are the actual impacts of forest adaptation and mitigation policies and projects on the rights and livelihoods of forest communities, and how can synergies be maximized and trade-offs reduced?”
Seymour noted that communication with the "climate world" is imperative, underlining that what may be conventional wisdom to foresters might be novel information to others. She then called for forest scientists to commit to "big science," as too much "small think" can impede evidence-based rural policy-making, and stressed that much is to be gained by investing in global comparative studies. The full report can be downloaded from: http://www.cifor.cgiar.org/publications/iufro/25TranscriptofFrancesSeymourSpeech.pdf

Wednesday, 25 August 2010

REDD Readiness Requires Radical Reform: Prospects for making the big changes needed to prepare for REDD-plus in Ghana

The Forests Dialogue (TFD) has recently released the summary report from a  dialogue on REDD-plus Readiness in Ghana. The report is titled “REDD Readiness Requires Radical Reform: Prospects for making the big changes needed to prepare for REDD-plus in Ghana.” You can download the report and related materials on http://environment.yale.edu/tfd/dialogue/forests-and-climate/second-redd-readiness-field-dialogue/.
'The REDD-plus field dialogue was held in Ghana’s Western Region and the dialogue process engaged nearly 50 leaders from a broad spectrum of Ghanaian government and civil society, as well as stakeholders from 13 countries. The Ghana dialogue's co-chairs - James Mayers, Stewart Maginnis and Emelia Arthur - also authored the report.
The report summarizes the outcomes of the Ghana dialogue including:
• the context and status of REDD-plus in Ghana;
• lessons applicable to Ghana from other international and local experiences;
• the challenges and ways forward for REDD-plus readiness in Ghana as identified via the dialogue.
The report concludes with a list of suggested key actions that different stakeholder groups need to consider for REDD-plus to work in Ghana. TFD is working with our local and international partners to ensure that the findings from this report are presented to key stakeholders in Ghana and that local stakeholders are collaborating to address the issues identified.
Through our REDD-plus Readiness Initiative, TFD seeks common ground among national and international stakeholders, to identify key challenges and foster a community of practice among stakeholders in several REDD countries. Ultimately our goal is to contribute to the on-going discussions over the global and national development and implementation of REDD-plus in an effort to “get REDD right”. In the last 10 months, we have convened dialogues in Brazil, Ghana, Guatemala and Ecuador. Similar reports from the TFD to the Ghana report will be forthcoming highlighting those countries soon. 

Can we achieve environmental sustainability by 2015?