REDD+ in the Post-Copenhagen World: Recommendations for Interim Public Finance

4 de agosto de 2010

ago 4, 2010

William Boyd, Brunello, T., Mariano Cenamo, Andrea Cattaneo, John Embiricos, Michael Jenkins, Tracy Johns, Paula Moreira, Paulo Moutinho, Daniel Nepstad, John-O Niles, Jacob Olander, Steve Schwartzman, Osvaldo Stella, David Tepper, Tsakonas, I.

REDD holds the potential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, improve the livelihoods of forest-dependent people, and conserve biodiversity. The interim public fundind announced during and since the COP15 could play a role in helping to realize this potential. The overall goal of this funding should be to support progress towards REDD+ national programs that are “efficient, effective, and equitable”.

Boyd, W.; Brunello, T.; Cenamo, M.; Cattaneo, A.; Embiricos, J.; Jenkins, M.; Johns, T.; Moreira, P.; Moutinho, P.; Nepstad, D.; Niles, J.; Olander, J.; Schwartzman, S.; Stella, O.; Tepper, D.; Tsakonas, I.REDD+ in the Post-Copenhagen World: Recommendations for Interim Public Finance. 2010

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Overview: Global fire regime conditions, threats, and opportunities for fire management in the tropics

Overview: Global fire regime conditions, threats, and opportunities for fire management in the tropics

The major sources of fire regime alteration worldwide include climate change, agriculture and ranching, deforestation, rural and urban development, energy production, fire exclusion and suppression, invasive species, plantations, and arson. Integrated fire management (IFM) is an approach that considers both damaging and beneficial fires within the context of the natural environments and socio-economic systems in which they occur. IFM takes into account fire ecology, socio-economic issues, and fire management technology to generate practical solutions to fire-related threats to biodiversity.