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Forests under threat from climate change

Forests under threat from climate change

Forests are extremely vulnerable to climate change that is set to bring more wildfires and floods and quick action is needed to aid millions of poor people who depend on forests, a study said on Thursday. The report, by the Jakarta-based Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), urged delegates at a U.N. climate meeting in Poznan, Poland, from December 1-12 to work out new ways to safeguard forests in developing nations. It said climate change could have impacts ranging from a drying out of cloud forests in mountainous regions of Central America — making wildfires more frequent — to swamping mangroves in Asia as seas rise.

Similar article appeared in The Times of India


World’s forests may be devastated by climate change

World’s forests may be devastated by climate change

A group of forest scientists has warned that unless immediate action is taken, climate change could have a devastating effect on the world’s forests and the nearly 1 billion people who depend on them for their livelihoods. The researchers, from the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), called for the implementation of adaptation measures to reduce the vulnerability of forests and forestdependent communities that will experience an unprecedented combination of climate change associated disturbances like flooding, drought, wildfire, and other environmental challenges in the next 100 years. According to “Facing an Uncertain Future: How Forests and People can Adapt to Climate Change”, a new book by CIFOR, immediate measures must be taken now to adapt forests to climate change.

Similar article appeared in Hindustan Times, New Kerala, Times of India


Clima: sos foreste, a rischio 1 mld persone in 100 anni/ansa

Clima: sos foreste, a rischio 1 mld persone in 100 anni/ansa

Se non verra’ intrapresa nessuna azione immediata a tutela delle foreste, nel giro di un secolo i cambiamenti climatici potrebbero avere un effetto devastante per quasi un miliardo di persone sul Pianeta. Questo quanto prevede un recente rapporto del Centro internazionale di ricerca forestale (Cifor), dal titolo ”Affrontare un futuro incerto: come le foreste e le popolazioni possono adattarsi ai cambiamenti climatici” che verra’ presentato ufficialmente il prossimo 5 dicembre a Poznan, in occasione della Conferenza Onu sul clima, al via lunedi’ prossimo. Un vertice dove si gioca una partita importante in vista della definizione dell’accordo che prendera’ il posto del protocollo di Kyoto, nel 2012. Secondo Frances Seymour, direttore generale del Cifor, la questione foreste e’ stata fino ad oggi sottovalutata, sia nei contesti nazionali sia nei negoziati internazionali. ”La sfida dell’ adattamento – ha spiegato Seymour – e’ sempre stata considerata secondaria rispetto a quella della mitigazione (cioe’ del taglio delle emissioni), e invece le due sono indissolubilmente legate”.


Le changement climatique menace les forêts

Le changement climatique menace les forêts

Les forêts sont très sensibles au changement climatique et sont très menacées par ce phénomène qui pourrait conduire à leur assèchement, à leur destruction par le feu ou à leur pourrissement par l’inondation. Les forêts sont extrêmement sensibles au changement climatique qui devrait provoquer plus d’incendies et d’inondations, et il est urgent d’agir rapidement pour aider les millions de personnes pauvres qui dépendent des forêts, d’après les résultats d’une étude publiée jeudi. L’étude, publiée par le Centre pour la Recherche Forestière Internationale (CIFOR) a recommandé aux délégués qui participeront à la conférence climatique des Nations Unies à Poznan en Pologne, du 1er au 12 décembre, de chercher à élaborer de nouvelles manières de protéger les forêts dans les nations en développement.

Similar article appeared in Yahoo ! News France


Suomalaistutkija varoittaa: “Pienikin ilmastonmuutos uhkaa metsiä” (Finno scientist warn: Even a small climate change threatens the forests)

Suomalaistutkija varoittaa: “Pienikin ilmastonmuutos uhkaa metsiä” (Finno scientist warn: Even a small climate change threatens the forests)

Tutkimuksen on tehnyt Jakartassa sijaitseva Kansainvälinen metsäntutkimuskeskus (CIFOR), ja se julkistetaan YK:n ilmastomuutoskokouksessa Poznanissa, Puolassa joulukuun alussa. Suomalainen CIFORin metsäekologi ja akatemiatutkija Markku Kanninen, raportin toinen kirjoittaja, sanoi uutistoimisto Reuterille, että monissa metsissä pienilläkin ilmastonmuutoksilla saattaa olla tuhoisia vaikutuksia.


Insurers uneasy about underwriting trees for carbon credit

Insurers uneasy about underwriting trees for carbon credit

Forest owners want full access to credits. But insurers suggest half should be retained in buffer funds in case forests vanish in a few decades. If a forest disappeared, credits in the funds would go to the insurers.”How much land managers will see of the price is what the excitement is about,” said Frances Seymour, the head of the Centre for International Forestry Research in Indonesia. Placing a value on forests could give developing nations in Africa, Latin America and Asia a big incentive to do more to slow rising greenhouse gas emissions. But the economic slowdown may make rich nations reluctant to take part.


Forests Are Vulnerable to Climate Change Effects

Forests Are Vulnerable to Climate Change Effects

A new report released by Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), a Jakarta-based initiative, urges the leaders of the world to act swiftly for the prevention of global warming, so as to save the world’s forests from threats posed by climate change. The study is addressed to the delegates of the 190 nations meeting in Poznan, Poland, December 1 to 12.


Climate change puts forests and people at risk, adaptation needed to avert crisis

Climate change puts forests and people at risk, adaptation needed to avert crisis

Unless immediate action is taken, climate change could have a devastating effect on the world’s forests and the nearly 1 billion people who depend on them for their livelihoods, warned a leading group of forest scientists in a report to be released next week.

The researchers from the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) called for the implementation of adaptation measures to reduce the vulnerability of forests and forestdependent communities that will experience an unprecedented combination of climate change-associated disturbances like flooding, drought, wildfire, and other environmental challenges in the next 100 years.



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