Brazil’s Emerging Sectoral Framework for Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation and the Potential to Deliver Greenhouse Gas Emissions Reductions from Avoided Deforestation in the Amazon’s Xingu River Basin

20 de outubro de 2010

out 20, 2010

Daniel Nepstad, Claudia M. Stickler, Andrea Cattaneo, Tracy Johns, John O. Niles, Ane Alencar, Osvaldo Stella, André Nahur, David Tepper

This technical update highlights the results of research conducted by Woods Hole Research Center (WHRC) for the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) in 2009 and 2010 to support research on the development of a potential GHG emissions reduction project to reduce deforestation in the Xingu River basin in Brazil’s Amazon region.

The report summarizes research and analysis conducted on the emerging market for GHG emissions offsets derived from activities to reduce deforestation and forest degradation. It presents analysis of the potential for large-scale emissions reductions in the Xingu River basin of the eastern Amazon region.

The report provides insights on the issues of property rights to carbon offsets, calculation of emission baselines for potential future REDD-based projects, carbon offset program registration, the development of a new sectoral “nesting” architecture through which pilot forest carbon projects could link to state- and national-level REDD programs, and the financial architecture that could link REDD-based projects to emerging cap-and-trade policies.

Relatório em inglês para o Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI).

IPAM, Woods Hole Research Center, Forest Trends e Tropical Forest Group. A Nova Estrutura Setorial Brasileira para Redução de Emissões por Desmatamento e Degradação (REDD) e a Potencial Redução de Emissões por Desmatamento Evitado na Região do Xingu. Outubro, 2010.

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Veja também

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Reducing emissions from deforestation in developing countries

Reducing emissions from deforestation in developing countries

WHRC and IPAM are convinced that there is now a consensus in the international community that to avoid “dangerous interference” in the global climate system (the primary objective of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, UNFCCC, Article 2), tropical deforestation should be greatly reduced, as also recommended by two important reports prepared since Workshop I: the Stern Review4 and the Fourth Assessment of the IPCC5.