Capturing Carbon and Conserving Biodiversity: The Market ApproachIan Swingland Routledge, 2013 M06 17 - 368 pages For decades conservation has been based on the donor-driven principle. It hasn't worked. For centuries, environmental pollution or degradation has been addressed by the same attitude: the 'Polluter Pays' principle. That hasn't worked either. The cycle has to stop. But while everyone talks about using a market-driven approach, few know how to do it. Faced with the situation on the ground what do you do? What is happening? How can you engage a system so that it is self-sustaining and the people self-motivated? This study explores how the growing market in carbon can help to conserve carbon-based life forms. It discusses how reducing global warming and saving biodiversity can both be achieved with the right market conditions. The contributors include conservation biologists, ecologists, biologists, economists, lawyers, community and tribal specialists, financial specialists, market makers, environment specialists, climatologists, resource managers, atmospheric scientists, project developers and corporate fund managers. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 95
Page vii
... Climate Change 1 Forests, carbon and global climate 15 Yadvinder Malhi, Patrick Meir and Sandra Brown 2 Changes in the use and management of forests for abating carbon emissions: issues and challenges under the Kyoto Protocol 42 Sandra ...
... Climate Change 1 Forests, carbon and global climate 15 Yadvinder Malhi, Patrick Meir and Sandra Brown 2 Changes in the use and management of forests for abating carbon emissions: issues and challenges under the Kyoto Protocol 42 Sandra ...
Page viii
The Market Approach Ian Swingland. Part 2 Environmental Services 9 The influence of land-use change and landscape dynamics on the climate system: relevance to climate-change policy beyond the radiative effect of greenhouse gases 157 ...
The Market Approach Ian Swingland. Part 2 Environmental Services 9 The influence of land-use change and landscape dynamics on the climate system: relevance to climate-change policy beyond the radiative effect of greenhouse gases 157 ...
Page xiv
... Climate Change Policy Specialist at Environmental Defense, 1875 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Washington, DC, USA mcarey@environmentaldefense.org Gonzalo Castro is Team Leader for Biodiversity at the Global Environment Facility, The World ...
... Climate Change Policy Specialist at Environmental Defense, 1875 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Washington, DC, USA mcarey@environmentaldefense.org Gonzalo Castro is Team Leader for Biodiversity at the Global Environment Facility, The World ...
Page xviii
... climate change. This policy threatened to continue the damage to the world's most important habitats. They ignored the wider and negative repercussions on the environment as a whole of their monomania on the issue of fossil fuels. As ...
... climate change. This policy threatened to continue the damage to the world's most important habitats. They ignored the wider and negative repercussions on the environment as a whole of their monomania on the issue of fossil fuels. As ...
Page xxii
... Climate Change International Year of Ecotourism joule kilowatt kiloyear (1000 years) International Institute for Environment and Development National Institute for Space Research (Brazil) World Conservation Union Joint Implementation ...
... Climate Change International Year of Ecotourism joule kilowatt kiloyear (1000 years) International Institute for Environment and Development National Institute for Space Research (Brazil) World Conservation Union Joint Implementation ...
Other editions - View all
Capturing Carbon and Conserving Biodiversity: The Market Approach Ian Swingland Limited preview - 2013 |
Capturing Carbon and Conserving Biodiversity: The Market Approach Ian R. Swingland Limited preview - 2013 |
Common terms and phrases
afforestation annual Article 3.4 assessment atmospheric CO2 avoided deforestation baseline biodiversity biomass carbon credits carbon cycle carbon emissions carbon market carbon offsets carbon sequestration carbon sinks carbon stocks change and forestry Clean Development Mechanism climate change commitment period communities conservation Convention cost crops deforestation developing countries economic ecosystems ecotourism effects emissions reductions emissions trading emissions-trading energy Environment environmental services estimates example forest management forestry projects fossil-fuel GHG emissions global greenhouse gas harvesting hectares impacts implementation improved incentives increase industrialized IPCC Kyoto Protocol land land-use activities land-use change leakage LULUCF measures mitigation monitoring natural forests options organic Parties PgC yr−1 plant plantations potential practices production programme protected areas rates Ravindranath reduce regions result sector sequester carbon soil carbon sources species sustainable agriculture sustainable development tC ha−1 timber tion tonne of carbon tourism trees tropical forests UNFCCC watershed World Bank