MRV in REDD+: Deforestation and forest degradation drivers

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MRV in REDD+: Deforestation and Forest Degradation Drivers Louis Verchot, Noriko Hosonuma, Veronique De Sy, Martin Herold, Ruth De Fries, Maria Brockhaus, Arild Angelsen, Erika Romijn

description

This presentation was given by CIFOR scientist Louis Verchot on 28 November 2012 at a joint CIFOR and GOFC-GOLD (Global Observation of Forest Cover and Land Dynamics) UNFCCC COP18 side-event in Doha, Qatar.

Transcript of MRV in REDD+: Deforestation and forest degradation drivers

Page 1: MRV in REDD+: Deforestation and forest degradation drivers

MRV in REDD+: Deforestation and Forest Degradation Drivers

Louis Verchot, Noriko Hosonuma, Veronique De Sy, Martin Herold, Ruth De Fries, Maria Brockhaus, Arild Angelsen, Erika Romijn

Page 2: MRV in REDD+: Deforestation and forest degradation drivers

Importance of monitoring drivers

• Essential for REDD+ strategy and policy design

• Link to policy and implementation of REDD+ and broader development objectives

• Prioritize engagement with non-forest sectors

–> Requires resources and efforts additional to estimation and reporting of GHG emissions

–> Countries should integrate and combine capacity development efforts for monitoring drivers with on-going national forest monitoring for REDD+

Page 3: MRV in REDD+: Deforestation and forest degradation drivers

Definitions

• Proximate/direct causes: human activities or immediate actions that directly impact forest cover and loss of carbon

Deforestation: commercial agriculture, subsistence agriculture, mining, infrastructure and urban expansion

Forest degradation: logging, fires, livestock grazing in forest, fuelwood collection and charcoal production

• Underlying/indirect causes: complex interactions of fundamental social, economic, political, cultural and technological processes that are often distant from their area of impact

Page 4: MRV in REDD+: Deforestation and forest degradation drivers

An assessment of deforestation and forest degradation drivers

• Country REDD+ readiness activities – first inventory of what countries identify as relevant and important drivers

• Methods: R-PIN, R-PP, a study on proximate drivers of deforestation of 25 tropical countries (Mathews et al., 2010), CIFOR country profiles and the UNFCCC national communications

• Nominal, ordinal or ratio-scale data for 46 non-Annex I countries (78% of total forest area in 2010)

• Countries have limited on the drivers at the national level and are only just beginning efforts

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THINKING beyond the canopy

Changes of Deforestation Drivers: Important for assessing historical deforestation

Using national data from 46 countries: REDD-related data and

publications

Time

Phase1 Pre

Transition

Phase4 Post

Transition

Phase2 Early

Transition

Phase3 Late

Transition

Fo

rest

Co

ver

(%)

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Classification of countries by forest transition phases

Pre Early Late Post

Forest transition phases

Distribution of 99 countries: Pre: 9, early: 48, late: 33, post: 10

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Validation of the forest transition model

Page 8: MRV in REDD+: Deforestation and forest degradation drivers

THINKING beyond the canopy

Deforestation/degradation drivers for each continent

-39%

-35%

-13%

-11%

-2%

-57%

-36%

-2% -4% -1%

-41%

-37%

-7%

-10%

-7%

26%

62%

4% 8%

70%

9%

17%

4%

67%

20%

6% 7%

Forest degradation driver Deforestation driver

AMERICA AFRICA ASIA

Deforestation

Degradation

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THINKING beyond the canopy

Changes of Deforestation Drivers

Agriculture (commercial) is 45%, agriculture (local/subsistence) 38%, mining 7%,

infrastructure 8%, urban expansion 3% and only agriculture make up 83% of total

Ratio of mining is decreasing and urban expansion is relatively increasing over time

Deforested-area ratio of deforestation drivers

Deforested area

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

pre early late post

Urban expansion

Infrastructure

Mining

Agriculture(local-slash & burn)Agriculture(commercial)

km2

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

pre early late post

Distribution of 46 countries - Pre: 7, early: 23, late: 12, post: 4

(subsistence)

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Indirect or underlying drivers

• Economic growth

– Based on export of primary commodities

• Population growth / Urban growth

• Demand for timber and agricultural products

• Countries (31 national REDD+ R-PPs):

– Weak forest sector governance and institutions, conflicting policies beyond forest sector and illegal activity (93%)

– Population growth (51%)

– Poverty and insecure tenure (both 48%)

Future

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Forest carbon stock impact of different activities

Time

Car

bo

n s

tock

Pri

mar

y fo

rest

Deforestation

Agroforestry

Further disturbances: Prevented regrowth Fire/storm/pests

Human induced disturbance causing loss of forest: fire, clearing, selective extraction, …

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Agriculture is the main deforestation driver (~ 80 %)

Major degradation drivers for LAC and Asia is logging (~70%)

Fuel-wood/charcoal are the main degradation drivers for Africa

Impact for monitoring: each deforestation/degradation process requires specific monitoring

Countries have limited data on drivers at the national level

Drivers of the “+” the carbon sinks are largely unknown

Conclusions from this study

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