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LULUCF – Post 2012 Bryan Smith Manager, Forest Policy Co-ordination Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry.

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Presentation on theme: "LULUCF – Post 2012 Bryan Smith Manager, Forest Policy Co-ordination Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry."— Presentation transcript:

1 LULUCF – Post 2012 Bryan Smith Manager, Forest Policy Co-ordination Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry

2 LULUCF and the Kyoto Protocol Forestry part of land use, land use change and forestry (LULUCF) Removals from LULUCF used to meet obligations. Emissions (deforestation) must also be accounted for by Annex 1 Parties New Zealand has high proportion of removals from forests – 25% of 1990 level emissions LULUCF activities dealt with differently from activity to activity and from other sectors under the Protocol. Rules reflect: –negotiated consensus nature of the agreements –limited information –LULUCF agreed after the Protocol targets were set –Credits (and emissions) while other sectors only create emissions –suspicion that sinks were ‘an easy way out’ –The biological nature of the sectors – with far greater complexity and uncertainties than most other sectors.

3 Will forestry be included under a post 2012 Climate Change Regime? Almost certainly Global political environment has changed Sense that everything must be done Avoided deforestation will be major driver Trend is toward more complete accounting Sinks being incorporated into domestic policies Negotiators conscious of need for certainty

4 Negotiating the Post 2012 Framework Avoided deforestation – huge expectations. Also has implications for developed countries AWG aims to set targets for post-2012. But rules for LULUCF are critical. Not yet fully recognised Much history and complexity with LULUCF - e.g. Brazil has blocked formal negotiations Informal process established Next informal meeting early next year – NZ will need some firm positions NZ seen as having a very favourable deal

5 What might a future LULUCF regime look like? Probably three scenarios for LULUCF: 1 - removal of LULUCF from future agreements – which seems unlikely; 2 - LULUCF remains in but there are major changes to the basis of the rules. 3 - LULUCF remains in, but with relatively ‘minor’ changes and ‘fixes’ to the existing rules. Most likely is probably somewhere between 2 & 3

6 Proposals for future changes might include Compulsory accounting for forest management of pre-1990 forests More ability/clarity about selecting certain Forest Management activities Removal of the volumetric restrictions on Forest Management – but with corresponding adjustments to Parties’ targets Establishing a 1990 baseline for Forest Management and/or Deforestation (making these net-net activities) Recognition of HWPs and/or harvesting Changing the base years for certain LULUCF activities Making other LULUCF activities compulsory A greatly liberalised CDM mechanism for LULUCF Mechanism for Avoided Deforestation [and Degradation] REDD Sectoral inclusion of LULUCF for developing countries.

7 NZ negotiating for post 2012 Rules for LULUCF post 2012 are likely to affect previous investment decisions – e.g. PFSI forests Negotiators are conscious of the need for certainty Will need a collaborative approach – existing investors, exporters Will need further analysis done – e.g. pre 1990 forests Expertise on hand – scientific, policy and industry Requires a major commitment of resources – not a part time job We won’t get everything we want – tradeoffs will have to be made Need to maintain flexibility Prospect of creating momentum around some profound changes to global wood supply


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