ABSTRACT

An area of forest the size of England is cut down in the tropics each year. Forestry is responsible for a fifth of global carbon emissions - more than the entire world transport sector. Urgent action to tackle the loss of global forests needs to be a central part of any new international agreement on climate change. Climate Change: Financing Global Forests is an independent report commissioned by the UK Prime Minister to address this vitally important issue. It assesses the impact of global forest loss on climate change and explores the future role of forests in the international climate change framework, with particular emphasis on the role of international finance. It also looks at the economic and policy drivers of deforestation and describes the incentives required to ensure more sustainable production of agriculture and timber in order to meet global demand while reducing carbon emissions. The report draws on a wide range of international expertise and will have significant national, EU and international interest and influence. It includes new modelling and analysis of the global economic impact of continued deforestation and provides a comprehensive assessment of the opportunity and capacity-building costs of addressing the problem. It shows that the benefits of halving deforestation could amount to $3.7 trillion over the long term. However, if the international community does not act, the global economic cost of climate change caused by deforestation could amount to $12 trillion. In this comprehensive and detailed report, Johan Eliasch makes a clear and forceful case for forests to be included in international carbon trading mechanisms. He calls for the international community to support forest nations to halve deforestation by 2020 and to make the global forest sector carbon neutral by 2030.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

part |68 pages

Part I

chapter 3|14 pages

The Drivers of Deforestation

chapter 5|12 pages

The Costs of Mitigation

part |38 pages

Part II: Forests and the International Climate Change Framework: The Long-term Goal

part |92 pages

Part III: The Building Blocks of Forest Financing: The Medium-term Approach

chapter 8|7 pages

Transition to a Long- term Framework

chapter 11|26 pages

Linking to Carbon Markets

chapter 12|20 pages

Governance and Distribution of Finance

part |29 pages

Part IV: International Action, Capacity Building and Short-term Funding

chapter 13|20 pages

The Funding Gap and Capacity Building

chapter 14|7 pages

Conclusions