Asia Must Reverse Massive Deforestation Trend : UN
INDIA: March 28, 2008
NEW DELHI - Parts of Asia are losing more than 28,000 square kilometres
(10,800 square miles) of forest every year, a trend that must to be reversed
immediately to fight climate change, a United Nations report said on
Thursday.
Deforestation accounts for about 20 percent of global greenhouse gases --
trees soak up carbon dioxide when they grow and release it when they rot or
are burnt.
A UN climate conference in Bali last year agreed to launch pilot projects to
grant poor countries credits for slowing deforestation under a new long-term
climate pact beyond 2012. With 28,000 sq km of forests disappearing every
year, South and Southeast Asia nations were among the most vulnerable to
climate change, the report from the UN's Economic and Social Commission for
Asia and the Pacific said.
"If these trends continue, land-use emissions are likely to increase until
2050; much damage will already have been done by the time they start to
recede," it said. "Reversing deforestation is thus critical."
Experts say reversing the trend would also help reduce the impact of soil
erosion and drought, protect against floods and increase bio-diversity, and
thus food security.
The report said governments in Asia and the Pacific were likely to face
"eco-refugees" from their own countries and elsewhere in the region, seeking
shelter from short term and long term environmental catastrophes.
"These refugees are likely to head to cities and towns, so government needs
to plan for this influx both in the short term and long term." it said. "A
regional food bank is one measure that countries can adopt for mutual
assistance."
The report said it was unfair to expect developing countries to sacrifice
growth to cut emissions, but it was also imperative to include them in all
mitigating efforts.
"The solution is invest in carbon-reducing technologies," it said.
But the cost of returning greenhouse gas emissions to present levels by 2030
would be about $200 billion annually, the U.N says, through measures such as
investing in energy efficiency and low-carbon renewable energy.
The report suggested top polluters such as China and India could held other
developing countries in their region develop more practical and affordable
green technologies.
"The countries of the region, whatever measure they undertake, need to
develop policies that reduce greenhouse gas emissions," it said.
(Editing by Alex Richardson)
Story by Krittivas Mukherjee
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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