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Preface | p. ix |
Background papers | p. xi |
Acknowledgements | p. xiii |
Executive summary | p. xv |
Introduction | p. 1 |
The impacts of climate change | p. 2 |
Climate change mitigation | p. 5 |
Forests and climate change | p. 6 |
Forest communities and ecosystem services | p. 8 |
The scope of this Review | p. 10 |
The challenge of deforestation | |
Forests, climate change and the global economy | p. 15 |
Forests and the carbon cycle | p. 16 |
Impacts of human activities on the forest carbon cycle | p. 18 |
Impacts of forests on climate change | p. 23 |
Modelling future impacts | p. 26 |
Conclusion | p. 33 |
The drivers of deforestation | p. 35 |
Why are trees being cut down? | p. 36 |
Population growth and wealth creation | p. 37 |
Growing demand for agricultural products and timber | p. 39 |
Current economic incentives for landowners to deforest | p. 41 |
Policy incentives | p. 42 |
Land tenure | p. 44 |
Capacity | p. 45 |
Forest transitions over time | p. 47 |
Conclusion | p. 48 |
Sustainable production and poverty reduction | p. 49 |
Introduction | p. 50 |
Land availability | p. 50 |
A vision of sustainable production | p. 52 |
Sustainable production and conservation | p. 53 |
Infrastructure and alternative employment | p. 58 |
Forest conservation | p. 60 |
Key levers for shifting to more sustainable production | p. 62 |
Conclusion | p. 68 |
The costs of mitigation | p. 69 |
Introduction | p. 70 |
Up-front and ongoing mitigation costs | p. 70 |
Ongoing forest emissions reduction costs | p. 71 |
Estimating the opportunity costs of avoided deforestation | p. 72 |
Estimating the costs of purchasing forest emissions abatement | p. 75 |
The benefits of taking action to reduce forest emissions | p. 77 |
Conclusion | p. 80 |
Forests and the international climate change framework: the long-term goal | |
A long-term framework for tackling climate change | p. 83 |
Overall framework for tackling climate change | p. 84 |
Criteria for a successful climate change framework | p. 85 |
Comparison of options for achieving global climate stabilisation | p. 90 |
Rationale for including forests within a global cap and trade system | p. 95 |
Four key elements of a long-term framework | p. 98 |
Conclusion | p. 99 |
The current international climate change framework | p. 101 |
Current international action | p. 102 |
The United Nations Rio Conventions | p. 102 |
The importance of the Kyoto Protocol | p. 107 |
Limitations of the first Kyoto commitment period | p. 111 |
Bali Action Plan | p. 117 |
Conclusion | p. 117 |
The building blocks of forest financing: the medium-term approach | |
Transition to a long-term framework | p. 121 |
Introduction | p. 122 |
Types of transition path | p. 123 |
A three-stage transition process: short, medium and long term | p. 125 |
Conclusion | p. 127 |
Effective targets for reducing forest emissions | p. 129 |
Introduction | p. 130 |
Baseline level | p. 130 |
Determining the baseline | p. 133 |
Baseline trajectories | p. 141 |
Conclusion | p. 143 |
Measuring and monitoring emissions from forests | p. 145 |
The importance of robust measuring and monitoring | p. 146 |
Measuring carbon stocks in forests | p. 147 |
Monitoring and verifying emissions and sequestration | p. 155 |
International and national approaches to measuring and monitoring | p. 159 |
Capacity building: expertise and costs | p. 162 |
Conclusion | p. 164 |
Linking to carbon markets | p. 165 |
Introduction | p. 167 |
Carbon markets: supply and demand | p. 168 |
Price impacts of linking forest credits to emissions trading schemes | p. 174 |
Scale of carbon market finance for forest abatement | p. 182 |
Linking mechanism | p. 184 |
Conclusion | p. 189 |
Governance and distribution of finance | p. 191 |
Introduction | p. 192 |
National-level governance | p. 192 |
Distribution of finance | p. 196 |
International governance | p. 205 |
Conclusion | p. 210 |
International action, capacity building and short-term funding | |
The funding gap and capacity building | p. 213 |
Introduction | p. 214 |
Research, analysis and knowledge sharing | p. 214 |
Policy and institutional reform | p. 216 |
Demonstration activities | p. 219 |
Meeting the funding gap | p. 222 |
Coordination and governance of public funding | p. 229 |
Conclusion | p. 232 |
Conclusions | p. 233 |
Introduction | p. 234 |
The forest sector in a global climate change deal | p. 234 |
International cooperation to support capacity building | p. 236 |
Coordinated international action to deliver finance effectively | p. 237 |
Conclusion | p. 238 |
Bibliography | p. 241 |
Index | p. 251 |
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