Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Trip Report: Democratic Republic of the Congo

Tuesday, May 15th, 2012

ClearSky Climate Solution’s CEO, Keegan Eisenstadt, recently returned from a trip to the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) vis a vis Kenya.  ClearSky is conducting REDD pre-feasability and REDD-readiness work for Pact’s REDD+ Signature Initiative.  We hope you enjoy these photos from his trip!

Trip Report: Argentina

Thursday, March 15th, 2012

It is surreal for me to now be sitting in Miami International airport awaiting my flight to the Salta Province of Argentina.  Quite a few years of diligence, patience, and taking chances have led me to this day, where I’m about to commence a 9-month Fulbright-Hays research grant to work on forest conservation in northwestern Argentina’s deforestation frontier.  Almost 2 years ago, I was working in this region to carry out my master’s research studying wildlife conservation and landscape connectivity.  But I never foresaw that I would receive funding to return and continue to pursue conservation work there again!  Indeed, this is a unique opportunity for me to follow through on my objective to support on-the-ground conservation in a region of the world that desperately needs this support.

Development pressure in the forested northwest of Argentina, primarily for soybean cultivation and cattle grazing, is on the rise.  Meanwhile, planning efforts to promote more sustainable land use practices appear stagnated by conflicting government policies and the apparent inability of local government to control illegal land clearing.  My colleagues, Argentine conservationists who deal with the challenge of balancing development and conservation demands, are working feverishly to stall a troubling development trajectory, as they witness new and large land clearings appearing in the aerial imagery they review each year.  There simply aren’t enough people on the ground with experience, time, and materials to keep pace with the agricultural industry’s expanding infrastructure and development plans.

My work is intended to complement the existing efforts of conservation scientists I have partnered with from the non-profit, Fundación CEBio (Foundation for the Study and Conservation of Biodiversity).  They have been working in a landscape linkage that connects the subtropical Yungas and Chaco forests, conducting research, and promoting education in local communities, in support of sustainable development and forest conservation.  My particular focus in this upcoming grant work will be engaging private landowners of large-scale cultivation operations in conservation action.  I believe there has been very little engagement that has occurred to date with this robust and powerful landholding group.  The land rights of all, even those who do not hold formal title, is important in my work.  However, to move beyond traditional governmental (top-down) approaches, we will need the support of large producers at the table to make rubber hit the road.

After having the privilege of working for ClearSky Climate Solutions for the past 8 months on REDD project development, I believe I see a viable pathway that may offer financial incentives appropriate for this case in Argentina.  Forest-based carbon offsets produced within the voluntary carbon credit market may provide sufficient financing to secure voluntary land conservation agreements in strategic locations within the forested corridor that links the Yungas and Chaco forests.  I seek to interconnect protected parks and reserves with private lands in this zone.  The bulk of my work to come will be observing the needs, ideas, and preferences of large landholding producers of this region, and commence socialization of forest conservation pathways (whether it be REDD and/or some other conservation tools).  It is my hope that in this process I will identify critical leverage points that may bring conservation and development into a better state of balance than it is today.  Let’s hope.

For now, I’m elated to return to a beautiful and fantastic country known for its vast open spaces and incredible landscapes, diverse array of flora and fauna, to-die-for beef, savory empanadas, fine wines, and great people.

And so it begins…

Lorie Baker

Saying goodbye to Lorie Baker!

Thursday, March 1st, 2012

Lorie is leaving ClearSky in March to start her Fulbright Scholarship in Northern Argentina.
She’s researching the potential to use provincial land use planning to highlight biodiversity corridors and then coordinate carbon forestry activities to enhance regional biodiversity and conservation. There may be a role for REDD in Lorie’s work and we hope to follow her progress with both interest and pride.

Lorie's last day......

Despedida Loca!!

Trip Report: Durban didn’t kill Kyoto, but we may experience a climate mitigation coma for a while.

Thursday, February 16th, 2012

Is there time for such delay?

  • For better, developed and developing nations will take part in the post-2020 treaty.
  • For worse, Kyoto will be extended, but its true future won’t be determined for a while (a new treaty is scheduled to be developed in 2015 with an implementation date of 2020).
  • For better, the U.S. says it’s committed to a post-2020 treaty.
  • For worse, time will tell to see what ‘commitment’ means to post-2020 political leadership.
  • For better, voluntary REDD projects continue to spark international interest and investment. Market actors are continuing to improve procedures to ensure environmental and social safeguards are in place to protect the livelihoods of affected communities located in areas of conservation action.
  • For worse, the carbon market has seen little positive impact from the Durban meetings.

COP 17 Durban: Key outcomes for REDD+ and ClearSky Climate Solutions

Thursday, February 16th, 2012

ClearSky Climate Solutions, CEO, Keegan Eisenstadt was on the ground in Durban for the UNFCCC 17th Conference of the Parties. He was present for what was an incredibly busy couple of weeks. Participating in a schedule filled with formal negotiations, technical side events, meetings with government actors, NGOs and civil society organizations from around the world. Keegan had numerous educational discussions with other participants and left with many ideas of how ClearSky can more thoroughly participate in the climate change sector.

While the formal outcomes of the meeting are something of a mixed bag, the result was not as bad as projected in the run up to the COP17. EU leadership, and a determination by all the major Parties to build upon the successes of Cancun, led to a result that may act as the foundation for future progress on mitigation and adaptation. The 194 countries in the convention agreed to be legally bound, in an agreement to be signed no later than 2015, to cut their emissions of seven greenhouse gases starting no later than 2020. This outcome is very important, as it has removed the fault line separating the developing/developed countries that has hampered years of talks by bringing countries such as China and India under a mandatory reductions framework. This has effectively removed the key barrier that has kept the US from the negotiating table, and its importance cannot be underestimated. ‘The Durban Platform’ is an important step on the way, but not a destination. Its importance is in the clear signal it sends that regulatory clarity on future carbon markets are expected by the end of 2015.

Implications for Forests and REDD+
Two sets of negotiations were held in Durban with regard to REDD+: (1) a technical discussion, (under the auspices of the Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice, SBSTA), which focused on safeguards and reference levels and (2) a broader discussion regarding the overall architecture of the agreement (Ad Hoc Working Group for Long-term Cooperative Action, LCA ¶63-73), which revolved around the private sector and market mechanisms, and whether these would have a role to play in financing REDD+. Key advancements were made in both areas that were stronger than most observers expected, and which served to reinforce the community-oriented approach at ClearSky.

The key element of the REDD+ decision in Durban was on sources and delivery of finance. The Durban Platform is the first time that 194 countries have agreed, despite ideological differences, to include explicit mention of market-based approaches to funding REDD+. The decision confirms that private sector has a role to play, and considers that market-based approaches can be developed, subject to maintaining environmental integrity, to deliver performance-based funding to REDD+ activities. The decision encourages financing from private sector actors to overcome a large funding gap in public resources to achieve the required reductions in deforestation. Importantly, the positive signal that markets can play a driving role in REDD+, opens further opportunity for work on REDD+ projects like the work it is currently developing in the tropics.

A second, important REDD+ discussion in Durban looked at the issue of incorporating effective social, environmental and governance safeguards for local communities and biodiversity. Significant progress was made on defining the criteria, monitoring systems and types of information that must be conveyed in reports on safeguard implementation and delivery for projects in all countries. Discussions focused on the frequency of safeguard monitoring/reporting and the types of information that needed to be monitored. The monitoring and reporting of safeguards is vitally important to ClearSky, because it allows us to see if national level REDD+ programs are being implemented with the Free Prior Informed Consent of indigenous peoples and local communities, and ensure that their rights are being respected. There had been strong push back against reporting of safeguards from some forest countries on sovereignty grounds – but the agreement to include a robust safeguards decision won the day.

The consistent message from donor countries, NGOs and the private sector is that only through the rigorous application and accurate reporting on safeguards can stakeholders ensure that positive and equitable REDD+ outcomes are achieved. Durban produced a strong and detailed framework to deliver this. Some observers, including Pact, lamented the fact that the explicit guidelines on the content of safeguard monitoring were not decided upon, and were left to be defined at a later time.

The final main negotiating point regarding REDD+ at Durban related to reference levels for forest carbon. It was agreed that the formation of applicable reference levels can be stepwise and iterative, and the decision acknowledges that subnational forest reference emission levels and/or forest reference levels may be used as an interim measure on the way to a national accounting framework, ensuring the viability of the ‘nested approach’ – which potentially incorporates previous ‘project based’ actions.

Considering the persistent global economic situation, Durban was a much better outcome than most observers expected. It was a surprising ‘shot in the arm’ for carbon markets as a tool, and sets the stage for aggregating all the emissions from 194 countries into the UNFCCC process over the next 8 years. REDD+, as in the past 3 years, was a big winner. This time, however, the Parties were able to rise above previously entrenched positions to set the stage for the creation of innovative and transformative financing solutions that make forests worth more standing than cut. The extensive discussions on safeguards were a vindication of the role of communities, forest dependent and indigenous peoples in ensuring the sustainability of a future REDD+ mechanisms – whether it is project-based, sub-national or national……it is the people living in the woods who will determine their future.

The end of the road, or a bump in the road?

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

Last week, US Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) decided not to pursue federal climate change legislation, and I’ve been stewing quite a bit.  (FULL DISCLOSURE: I believe climate change presents a serious problem for the US and the rest of the world, and that the solutions to this problem will yield more benefits than penalties.)   The inability to produce a piece of legislation in the Senate is frustrating on several levels, and this failure has been dissected elsewhere.  The endless spin, fear-mongering, and other shameless behavior is a problem for Democrats and Republicans alike, and the world will suffer for this stagnation.

Silver lining

Is there a silver lining to our cloudy future for climate legislation?

Calling it quits isn’t really an option if you believe climate change is a real threat, so let’s remember a few things that are going right.  It’s going to take a lot of hard work and citizen action to keep this issue on Congress’ radar, and these thoughts might help you keep your chin up as you move forward:

  1. “It’s not like these problems appeared all of a sudden.”  Our CEO at ClearSky made this comment to me the other day, while talking about the struggles with a community forestry project in Cambodia.  It’s a great point, and it’s applicable to this issue as well.  Politicians have been bickering since the days of the Whig party.  This doesn’t absolve Congress or reinforce the status quo – but remember that we’ve made a lot of progress over the past few years, albeit too slowly, and this momentum can continue to build.
  2. The EPA is moving quickly on climate change regulation, and Obama has pledged to protect their authority.  EPA regulation will be more direct than federal legislation, and without the giveaways to corporate interests.  The pressure on Congress to act will grow as regulation takes shape, and this might finally be the cattle prod that forces them to act seriously.  
  3. Your Senators are coming home in a few days.  The August recess will be here soon, so go tell them you want some real action!

Calculate Your Carbon Footprint

Monday, May 17th, 2010

With this simple tool, you can estimate your personal or household greenhouse gas emissions for an entire year. Also, you can test how slight lifestyle changes could affect your climate footprint. We use established protocols and estimates from trusted data sources to calculate greenhouse gas emissions. All calculations are presented in metric tons of CO2 equivalent/year or tons CO2e/year.

Calculate Your Carbon Footprint