REDD+ Reducción de las emisiones derivadas de la deforestación y la degradación de los bosques

Noticias

The UN-REDD Programme is celebrating 10 years of successfully working with 64 countries to achieve climate and forest goals. The Programme will continue to play a key role at the global level to strengthen countries capacity to better protect, manage and monitor their forests, to advance forest-related investments in partner countries and to support strategies and market access for deforestation-free agriculture commodities as a measure to halt deforestation and ultimately deliver emission reductions. The 10-year anniversary represents a positive momentum to not only evaluate the Programme’s past successes but to plan future work. To do so, the UN-REDD Programme Executive Board...
The Ministry of Tourism and Environment of the Republic of the Congo (MTE) and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) have launched a technical assistance project to strengthen the country’s readiness efforts towards the Green Climate Fund (GCF). Hosted in Brazzaville, the launching event gathered more than forty participants representing various ministries, civil society, technical and financial partners, indigenous peoples and the private sector. The meeting presented an outline of the technical assistance project and enabled discussions on the various activities and feasibility studies that will be launched. In his opening speech, Mr Roch Mpassi Moumpassi, the...
Fulfilling global environmental commitments and goals requires accurate information due to the number of challenges that countries face. A clear understanding of these challenges facilitates the creation and implementation of accurate strategies, involving all stakeholders, and enables the monitoring and implementation of policies and measures to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions and promote countries’ sustainable development goals. National Communications and more recently Biennial Update Reports (BUR) are the instruments through which countries are reporting their National Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Inventories to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). Since 2014, 44 developing countries have submitted their first BUR to the UNFCCC,...
Reliable forest monitoring systems are key to realizing the climate change mitigation potential of tropical forests. In fact, the 1997 Kyoto Protocol was not able to provide meaningful incentives for avoiding deforestation in tropical developing countries partly because of concerns that those countries could not monitor emission reductions accurately. The debate continued until 2007, when the UNFCCC Conference of the Parties (COP) decided to include reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation as a key element of the Bali Roadmap, laying the foundation for REDD+. Making REDD+ a reality has required an investment in a ‘readiness’ phase for tropical developing...
Recognising the significance of tropical forests and the importance of their protection, Papua New Guinea was one of the first countries to take the global lead in seeking to combat climate change by proposing measures to reduce emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD+). REDD+ was first discussed in 2005 by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) at its 11th session of the Conference of the Parties to the Convention (COP) at the request of Costa Rica and Papua New Guinea. On behalf of the Coalition for Rainforest Nations, the two countries submitted the document titled "Reducing...