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| Voluntary alternatives |
Given the effort and expense of registering a forest-based project (registering a REDD project can cost up to US$50,000), it is understandable that most Latin American project developers have concentrated on easier, higher carbon revenue CDM projects, such as landfill, biomass and hydropower.
Project developers, forest conservation groups and high-risk investors, meanwhile, have begun to bet on a voluntary system developing outside the formal structures of the carbon market.
“There’s a limit for forest projects under the CDM scheme. We need to work with private company partners to develop the voluntary market,” argues Alexandre Curvelo de Almeida Prado, manager of conservation economics at the environment group, Conservation International (CI).
In keeping with the strategy, CI recently advised international hotel chain Marriott on an innovative “forest fund” to protect 589,000 hectares of endangered forest in the Amazonas state of Brazil. The $2 million investment, announced in April, will fund monitoring deforestation in the Juma Sustainable Development reserve, as well as providing employment and healthcare for the area's 500 or so residents.
In Mexico, meanwhile, CI is working with coffee giant Starbucks on a five-year programme to protect standing forests. The initiative, which includes a $7.5 million investment over the first three years, will include training for coffee farmers to conserve the forests and other biodiversity around their land.
CI hopes that both projects will “ultimately” generate additional revenue through access to the CDM or emerging international carbon markets under REDD. The activities will be certified as ‘multiple benefit’ under the Climate, Community and Biodiversity Alliance (CCB) standards, one of the emerging voluntary schemes for evaluating land-based carbon mitigation projects.
The region also boasts a variety of innovative solutions to the absence of a standardised, fungible currency for voluntary forest initiatives.
Plan Vivo, for example, a UK-based carbon dealer, has developed a carbon financing mechanism for a pilot agroforestry project involving around 300 small-coffee farmers in Mexico.
Under criteria developed by Plan Vivo and assessed by environmental verifier Rainforest Alliance, the farmers agree a reforestation management plan for their plots. The proven, aggregated carbon reductions generated through the scheme are then sold to buyers with offset targets and the income returned to the farmers through individual trust accounts.
“There’s a recognition that carbon in some of these projects is a surrogate for a number of other benefits that are coming by conserving forests as part of a carbon forestry project,” says Jeffrey Hayward, senior services manager at the Rainforest Alliance. |
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