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Christoph Thies, Greenpeace campaigner , explained the essence of the plan of Forest For Climate. Greenpeace launched its Forests for Climate initiative, the pioneering solution to reduce deforestation, tackle climate change, preserve global biodiversity and protect the livelihoods of millions of forest people.
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Taking the first step to match donor
countries to real projects in developing forested countries, Greenpeace invited
embassies of key donor countries, donor agencies, government officials and
governors of several Indonesian provinces, to talk about the FFC initiative and
to support a moratorium on any new forest conversion in Indonesia prior to any
carbon money flowing. The well-attended launch took place at Tanjung Priok,
Jakarta's port area, at an event jointly hosted by Rachmat Witoelar, The State
Minister of Environment of the Republic of Indonesia.
Indonesia's rampant deforestation and fast rising greenhouse gas emissions
have been driven by the lure of short term profit. Greenpeace's Forests for
Climate mechanism is the solution as it places a value on keeping the
forests alive
Minister of
Environment Republic of Indonesia,
Mr. Rachmat Witoelar said "Indonesia's Government and society have a responsibility to protect its
tropical forests, for the sake of the environment, the country's development
and to prevent the worsening impacts of climate change. It is time for
Indonesia to gain the right to funding from industrialized countries to protect
one of the world's lungs."
Under the FFC mechanism, industrialized countries that committed to reduce
their emissions would fund protection of the world's last remaining tropical
forests. Developing countries with tropical forests, like Indonesia, which
chose to participate and who committed to protect their forests, would have the
opportunity to receive funding for capacity-building efforts and for national
level reductions in deforestation emissions. FFC prevents deforestation from
shifting from one country to the next and is the only mechanism that involves
local and indigenous forest peoples' representatives to ensure their rights and
livelihoods are respected.
Greenpeace is pushing for the FFC mechanism to become part of the second phase
of the Kyoto (post-2012) agreement on climate change. If countries commit to
FFC, funding from industrialized countries for the protection of
tropical forests could become available as soon as 2009.
Indonesia's remaining forests must be protected to combat climate change, stop
biodiversity loss and protect the livelihoods of forest-dependent peoples.
First, we need an immediate moratorium on deforestation, followed by
international funding through the United Nations to protect forests for their
carbon value.
The Esperanza, will leave Jakarta on Saturday 1st November, en-route to Riau.
Greenpeace embarked on the Indonesian leg of its "Forests for
Climate" ship tour in Jayapura on 6 October, to shine the spotlight on the
rampant destruction of the Paradise Forests - the last remaining ancient
forests of Southeast Asia.