Children living in areas of Africa with heavy tree cover tend
to have more nutritious diets. Boosting production of such energy-rich crops as
rice, maize and wheat is often seen as essential to achieving global food
security, but if this comes at the expense of forests, this might actually
undermine nutritional security.
“Our research shows that children in Africa living in communities
surrounded by forest cover have higher dietary diversity and more fruit and
vegetable consumption,” said Amy Ickowitz, an economist with the Center for
International Forestry Research (CIFOR). “In these areas, dietary diversity
increases with tree cover, suggesting that in heavily treed areas, children
have healthier diets.”
Dercy Teles de Carvalho Cunha is a rubber-tapper and president
of the Rural Workers Union of Xapuri from the state of Acre in the heart of the
Brazilian Amazon, with a lifelong love of the forest from which she earns her
livelihood – and she is deeply confounded by what her government and
policymakers around the world call “the green economy.”
“The primary impact of green economy projects is the loss of
all rights that people have as citizens,” says Teles de Carvalho Cunha in a
report released last week by a group of Brazilian NGOs. “They lose all control
of their lands, they can no longer practice traditional agriculture, and they
can no longer engage in their everyday activities.” Referring to a state-run
programme called the “Bolsa Verde” that pays forest dwellers a small monthly
stipend in exchange for a commitment not to damage the forest through
subsistence activities, Teles de Carvalho Cunha says, “Now people just receive
small grants to watch the forest, unable to do anything. This essentially
strips their lives of meaning.” The Rural Workers Union of Xapuri is the union
made famous in Brazil when its founder, Chico Mendes, was murdered in 1988 for
defending the forest against loggers and ranchers.
Brazil has become a leader in fighting deforestation through
a mix of public and private sector
actions, Acre has become known for market-based climate policies such as
Payment for Environmental Services (PES) and Reducing Emissions from
Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) schemes, that seek to harmonise
economic development and environmental preservation. Acre has put into place
policies favouring sustainable rural production and taxes and credits to
support rural livelihoods. In 2010, the state began implementing a system of
forest conservation incentives that proponents say have “begun to pay off
abundantly”.
In 2010, California – the world’s eighth largest economy –
signed an agreement with Acre, and Chiapas, whereby REDD and PES projects in
the two tropical forest provinces would supply carbon offset credits to
California to help the state’s polluters meet emission reduction targets.
California policymakers have been meeting with officials
from Acre, and from Chiapas, for several years, with hopes of making a
partnership work, but the agreement has yet to attain the status of law. Attempts
by the government of Chiapas to implement a version of REDD in 2011, shortly
after the agreement with California was signed, met strong resistance in that
famously rebellious Mexican state, leading organisations there to send a series
of letters to CARB and California Governor Jerry Brown asking them to cease and
desist. Groups in Acre, too, sent an open letter to California officials in
2013, denouncing the effort as “neocolonial,”:
“Once again,” the letter read, “the former colonial powers are seeking
to invest in an activity that represents the ‘theft’ of yet another ‘raw
material’ from the territories of the peoples of the South: the ‘carbon
reserves’ in their forests.” This view appears to be backed up now by a new report on the Green Economy from the Brazilian Platform for Human,
Economic, Social, Cultural and Environmental Rights. The 26-page summary of a
much larger set of findings to be published in 2015 describes Acre as a state
suffering extreme inequality, deepened by a lack of information about green
economy projects, which results in communities being coerced to accept
“top-down” proposals as substitutes for a lack of public policies to address
basic needs.
Numerous testimonies taken in indigenous, peasant farmer and
rubber-tapper communities show how private REDD projects and public PES
projects have deepened territorial conflicts, affected communities’ ability to
sustain their livelihoods, and violated international human rights conventions.
Testimonies from Acre raise concerns that such economic incentives can deepen
existing inequalities. The Bolsa Verde programme is a case in point: according
to Teles de Carvalho Cunha, the payments are paltry, the enforcement
criminalises already-impoverished peasants, and the whole concept fails to appreciate
that it is industrial polluters in rich countries, not peasant farmers in poor
countries, who most need to reduce their climate impacts.
A related impact of purely economic incentives is to
undermine traditional approaches to forest management and to alienate
forest-dwellers from their traditional activities. “We don’t see land as
income,” one anonymous indigenous informant to the Acre report said. “Our bond
with the land is sacred because it is where we come from and where we will
return.” Another indigenous leader from Acre, Ninawa Huni Kui of the Huni Kui
Federation, appeared at the United Nations climate summit in Lima, Peru this
month to explain his people’s opposition to REDD for having divided and
co-opted indigenous leaders; preventing communities from practicing traditional
livelihood activities; and violating the Huni Kui’s right to Free, Prior and
Informed Consents as guaranteed by Convention 169 of the International Labor
Organization.
One of the REDD projects is the Purus Project, the first
private environmental services incentive project registered with Acre’s
Institute on Climate Change (Instituto de Mudanças Climáticas, IMC), in June
2012. The project, designed to conserve 35,000 hectares of forest, is jointly
run by the U.S.-based Carbonfund.org Foundation and a Brazilian company called
Carbon Securities. The project is certified by the two leading REDD certifiers,
the Verified Carbon Standard (VCS) and the Climate, Community, Biodiversity
Standard (CCBS). But despite meeting apparently high standards for social and
environmental credibility, field research detected “the community’s lack of
understanding of the project, as well as divisions in the community and an
escalation of conflicts.” One rubber tapper who makes his living within the
project area told researchers, “I want someone to explain to me what carbon is,
because all I know is that this carbon isn’t any good to us. It’s no use to us.
They’re removing it from here to take it to the U.S… They will sell it there
and walk all over us. And us? What are we going to do? They’re going to make
money, but we won’t?”
A second project called the Russas/Valparaiso project, seems
to suffer similar discrepancies between what proponents describe and what local
communities experience, characterised by researchers as “fears regarding land
use, uncertainty about the future, suspicion about land ownership issues, and
threats of expulsion.”
Concerns like criminalising subsistence livelihoods and
asserting private control over community forest resources, whether these
resources be timber or CO2, is more than a misstep of a poorly implemented
policy – it violates human rights conventions that Brazil has ratified, as well
as national policies such as Brazil’s National Policy for the Sustainable
Development of Traditional Peoples and Communities.
The report’s conclusion sums up its findings: “In the
territories they have historically occupied, forest peoples are excluded from
decisions about their own future or—of even greater concern – they are
considered obstacles to development and progress. As such, green economy
policies can also be described as a way of integrating them into the dominant
system of production and consumption. Yet, perhaps what is needed is the exact
opposite – sociocultural diversity and guaranteeing the rights of the peoples
are, by far, the best and most sustainable way of slowing down and confronting
not only climate change, but also the entire crisis of civilization that is
threatening the human life on the planet.”
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