Skip Navigation

气候变化与能源: 缓解措施

新闻

  • 打印
  • 发表评论
  • | 共享

REDD alert for forest climate change policy

Helen Mendes

2010年6月7日 | EN | ES

Brazilian Amazon

The results come as a surprise — other studies show that fires go down as deforestation levels are reduced

Flickr/Andrea Vascellari

[CURITIBA, BRAZIL] Carbon dioxide emissions from an unexpected rise in the number of forest fires in the Brazilian Amazon may be cancelling out emission reductions from efforts to preserve rainforests.

Researchers analysed satellite data on deforestation and fires from the region between 1998 and 2007 and found that fires increased in 59 per cent of the areas where deforestation rates were reduced.

In a study published in Science last week (4 June), they warn that reducing emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD) — a climate change mitigation strategy that uses financial incentives to reduce carbon emissions from tropical deforestation and forest degradation — could fail unless people living off the forest adopt an organised fire policy.

"We were surprised to find this backward pattern," Luiz Aragão — a researcher at the UK-based University of Exeter, who co-authored the study — told SciDev.Net.

All other studies show that fires go down as deforestation levels are reduced, he said, but a combination of factors could have driven the increase. 

"Even though there is a decrease in deforestation rates, the total amount of deforested areas is always increasing, even if it's at a slower pace," said Aragão. "This generates more forest edges — the intersection between agriculture land and the forest — and increases fragmentation. Forest edges and fragments, and secondary forests, are all susceptible to fire."

Further, slashing and burning of secondary forests that grow in abandoned agricultural areas are not recorded by Brazil's National Institute for Space Research, which monitors only deforestation of primary forests.

There is a pressing need now for policymakers to consider the threat to forests posed by fire, said the researchers. "The success of reductions in carbon emissions by avoiding deforestation depends on harmonising REDD with policies to limit fire incidence not only in the Brazilian Amazon but also in other rainforest nations in South America, Africa and Asia," they state.

"We need to improve monitoring systems to quantify all the components — deforestation, degradation and carbon emission — from forest fires," said Aragão. But implementing monitoring systems will be difficult in many countries, which will have to invest further in training, he said.

"This study highlights the role of fire in REDD, an aspect of emissions reduction that has seen relatively little attention to date," Chris Justice, a geography professor at the University of Maryland, United States, told SciDev.Net.  

Paulo Moutinho, executive director of the Amazon Environmental Research Institute (IPAM) added: "There is no way to imagine any REDD related action without reducing carbon emission from forest degradation. And that includes avoiding fires, one of the most evident ways to degrade forests."

Link to full article in Science

参考文献

Science doi 10.1126 (2010)

添加你的评论

这是您的网络:张贴您的评论,和别人分享您关于我们的任何文章的观点。

您需要注册后发表评论或者给作者发送评论的邮件。请登陆或注册。 登陆 或者 注册.

所有的评论都要接受审核,我们保留对评中包括 不适当/不适合的语言进行编辑的权利。科学与发展网络享有网站发布所有内容的版权。请查看使用条款了解详情。

只要适当标明来源与作者就可以免费复制科学与发展网络所有内容。更多详情请参见 发表评论.

返回 新闻
到达顶部