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GlobalWarmingisReal contributor Anders Hellum-Alexander wraps-up the climate and environmental news headlines for the past week:

  • Canada’s CBC news covers the melting of the arctic ice cap. Some scientists originally thought that the melting of the ice cap would create vast areas of water that would absorb CO2, slowing atmospheric global warming. Now, some scientists think that the new open water will only absorb CO2 in surface level water. This would be good for the ocean as it will acidify less, but bad for the atmosphere as it will heat more. The solution? Stop emitting so much CO2.

Continue Reading Weekly Environmental News Wrap: July 20-27: Oceans and Arctic Ice Melt, Deforestation, Obama’s Environmental Record, and more…

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The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service agreed yesterday to review the status of the Whitebark Pine for possible inclusion on the endangered species list.

Whitebark Pine is found in the mountains of the Pacific Coast, from Washington State south to central California  and in the Rocky Mountains from Idaho to Nevada. As we wrote in a previous post on the Whitebark Pine, the trees are under increased attacked by mountain pine beetles now often able to survive the slowly declining chill of winter and migrate to higher elevations due to warming temperatures (read our previous post for more on ecosystem shift and species migration). The trees have no natural defense against the beetle, depending instead on elevation and frigid winter temperature to protect it from the growing onslaught. The Whitebarks are also suffering from blister rust, an invasive fungus that has been weakening white pine species for the past century.

Continue Reading U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Considers Whitebark Pine for Inclusion on Endangered Species List

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What’s Up With the Rainforest is a weekly series from James Boyce and the Rainforest Alliance –

We can’t allow the constant reminders of the damage we have done to our planet overshadow the fact that we still have the chance to prevent the past from repeating itself. With advancements in science and technology developing at an exponentially increasing speed, it should be obvious that we hold the knowledge and the tools needed to achieve a solution to our environmental crisis. So this week we, along with our partner Rainforest Alliance, don’t want to just focus on the forces threatening the rainforests and ecosystems. We also want to reveal the ways people have come together, using weapons of courage, education and technology, to fight for a better tomorrow.

Continue Reading What’s Up With the Rainforest: United States has higher percentage of forest loss than Brazil

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Sigourney Weaver, James Cameron, and Joel David Moore of Avatar fame were in Brasilia on April 12, 2010 to add their voices to the strong movement in Brazil to stop Belo Monte Dam.With the 40th anniversary of Earth Day upon us, a renewed sense of activism and attention is cast around the present state of our natural environment. What started as a local grassroots effort to increase environmental awareness and provoke action from our political leaders has not only led to significant policy changes, but has also developed into an international celebration of our planet. As we remember what this day first meant, it is important we not only look back on our past with a critical eye, but also look at our world with the hope that is needed to make the future better than today. We, along with our partner Rainforest Alliance, are calling on you to take the action needed to help make that dream a reality. Because as the recent events involving the rainforest show us, we hold the power for both tremendous improvement and colossal destruction.

Continue Reading What’s Up With the Rainforest for Earth Day: Brazil suspends Amazon dam project targeted by Avatar director

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It is no secret the impact humans have had on earth. With the world population nearing 7 billion, can we even come close to realizing the magnitude to which our impact extends? Part of the problem in understanding this is due to the fact that our influence is complicated; our actions are not only formidable, but can yield unforeseeable results. And even though we have come to realize the severity of our actions and the actions of previous generations on our planet, the solutions to these errors are not as clear. The fact that our impact on the planet is multi-faceted is brought to light by the recent news and events facing the rainforest; exposing the ways in which our previous actions have had both unexpected and severe consequences, the efforts being made today to ensure our impact leads to a better tomorrow, and the decisions underway that are about to affect this precious land.

Continue Reading What’s Up With the Rainforest: Rate of Forest Loss Has Decreased, But We’re Not Out of the Woods Yet

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The first decade of the 21st century has seen a decrease in global deforestation, bringing with it a reduction in forest carbon emissions. According to the Global Forest Resources Assessment 2010 report from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), for the first time on record a declining rate of deforestation, combined with the planting of new forests and natural regeneration, has reversed a trend and slowed the rate of global forest cover loss.

Continue Reading Forest Carbon Emissions Decline With Reduced Deforestation

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Research published last week in the journal Nature estimates the “velocity of climate change,” a measurement of how quickly rising temperatures force ecosystems to migrate in order to survive – and the likelihood that some species within an ecosystem will face extinction.

Continue Reading Ecosystem Shift Accelerating From Changing Climate New Research Says

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Elizabeth Baker 12/15/09 649 words
Wangari Maathai’s REDD Belt Movement
Wangari Maathai, the first environmentalist to win a Nobel Peace Prize, will be honored at Tuesday’s COP15 opening ceremony as a Messenger of Peace with special focus on the environment and climate change, raising the stakes for Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation in developing Countries (REDD) within the climate change agreement by putting a human face on the efforts to fund carbon trapping forestry programs in developing countries. Talks have stalled over developed countries’ reluctance to commit to a financial package for developing countries and the lack of a commitment to sufficient CO2 reduction targets.
According to the UN, “Ms. Maathai has emerged as a symbol of unity among several climate change campaigns, including Tck Tck Tck Copenhagen, Hopenhagen, and Seal the Deal.”  Through the work of the Green Belt Movement, which she founded in 1977, she is responsible for planting over 40 million trees across Africa.  Her forest advocacy extends beyond her native Kenya with her service as the Goodwill ambassador for the Congo Forest, the second largest tropical rainforest in the world.
Professor, as she is known by Green Belt Movement colleagues, has high hopes for the outcome of COP15.  She called the 110 heads of state from around the world “serious leaders.”  She said, “They know all the science. I am quite sure that they are not coming here for a dance.”  On Saturday, Ms. Maathai remarked, “If we are lucky, REDD+.  Even better, REDD++.”
Speaking on two panels at the COP15 parallel event Forest Day 3, held on Sunday at the Copenhagen Radisson Falconer Hotel, Professor Maathai expressed strong support for REDD+.  It includes conservation, sustainable forest management, and stock enhancement—defining aspects of the Green Belt Movement’s work—and was the most popular position at the close of Forest Day 3, according to the side event’s 1600 registered participants.  Among those speaking were UNFCCC Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer; Denmark’s Minister for the Environment; Rajendra Pachauri, Chairman of the IPCC; Gro Harlem Bruntland, United Nations Special Envoy on Climate Change, and Nobel Prize winner Elinor Ostrom.  The timing of Forest Day 3 allowed for many delegates and Ministers of the Environment from various countries to attend, despite its location outside the Bella Center where the formal negotiations are taking place.
Forests are known to be carbon sinks that release large volumes of carbon into the atmosphere when burned or degraded, with 17% of worldwide greenhouse gas emissions arising from such activity.  In addition to removing carbon from the air and reducing global warming, healthy forests provide ecosystem services such as water purification, predictable rainfall, prevention of soil erosion, biodiversity, firewood, food, and income.  Arguing for the inclusion of wording to support indigenous peoples’ rights and a definition of forests that would exclude monoculture plantations, she asked, “What are you going to hunt and gather in a forest of eucalyptus?”
Ms. Maathai believes REDD efforts can be funded, verified, monitored and enforced based on 40 years of community-based forestry and cooperation with international partners. Ms. Maathai attributes the Green Belt Movement’s success in poverty eradication, job creation, and aforestation to paying women growers a small amount for only the trees that survive. A grassroots example, she believes the success of the Green Belt Movement shows the potential for investment-worthy projects across forested regions of the developing world.
Flanked by the African Development Bank and Congo Basin Forest Fund co-chair Paul Martin, Ms Maathai said Monday, “Money is not the problem.”  Throughout the week, she has described the problem as one of world leaders not listening.  “If they don’t listen, they don’t listen at their own peril.” The Congo Basin Forest Fund was set up in 2008 by the UK and Norway to protect the world’s second largest tropical rain forest.
‘The trees cannot speak.” Ms. Maathai said over the weekend.  “The frogs cannot speak.  The lions cannot speak. We must speak for them.”
Elizabeth Baker is vice president of the Resource Renewal Institute in California and a Green Belt Movement delegate to COP15

By Elizabeth Baker

Continue Reading Wangari Maathai’s REDD Belt Movement

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The World Comes Together in Copenhagen There was an extensive debate in the lead-in to the Kyoto Protocol (and after) about whether incentives for reducing deforestation would be recognized as a part of the agreement.  For a number of reasons countries didn’t agree to include deforestation incentives, but did agree to allow increased forest cover to count.  Unfortunately a lot of the world’s forests were lost in the meantime.
But things changed…

Continue Reading COP15 Primer (part 4): Stemming Global Deforestation Emissions

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The US Forest Service reshapes management plans to cope with climate changeA new direction for the US Forest Service

In a memo (pdf) sent on November 20, US Forest Service Chief Tom Tidwell told his regional offices and station directors that “responding to the challenges of climate change in providing water and water-related ecosystem services is one of the most urgent tasks facing us as an agency. History will judge us by how well we respond to these challenges.” Referring to how the challenge will alter future forestry management, Tidwell said that  ”Climate change is dramatically reshaping how we will deliver on our mission of sustaining the health, diversity, and productivity of the Nation’s forests and grasslands for present and future generations.”

Continue Reading The Changing Role of US Forest Management in Response to Climate Change