PART II / CHAPTER 4 BIO-CULTURAL COMMUNITY PROTOCOLS AND REDD These so-called “carbon cowboys” have been linked to “carbon deforestation and forest degradation. As observed by Cotula fraud” or situations of “conflict carbon” in which carbon credits and Mayers (2009), much has yet to be determined regarding are generated by projects that are objected to by the how REDD benefits will be allocated from the national to local 15 local communities. level, but it is clear that resource tenure is critical to REDD’s 17 ability to benefit ILCs. Many forest-dependent communities are faced with the same double-edged sword as ILCs with commercially-lucrative TK 3.3 Disembodiment of Carbon in the ABS framework. A community’s participation in a REDD project may deliver much-needed income and development Another underlying issue with REDD is that it encourages opportunities, but it may also result in their exclusion from a carbon-centric view of forests, which concerns ILCs that the forest and the severance of linkages instrumental to depend on forests for their livelihoods and have long played the maintenance of both the forest and the community’s a role in their conservation. There is a risk that by viewing bio-cultural ways of life. forest carbon as a tradable commodity, REDD could disembody it from ILCs’ bio-spiritual values and bio-cultural There are still major decisions to be made regarding the ways of life that have actively maintained the forests. financing of REDD, including whether it will be financed by As with ILCs that have developed TK over many generations, market-linked revenues such as the selling of carbon offset communities that have succeeded in maintaining forest credits, by a fund based on contributions from developed cover have been able to do so not because of their countries or by some combination of the two. The integrity proprietary rights, but because they maintain a way of life of both systems is in question. Similar to the challenges of that is integrally linked to that of the forest. Thus, because the using TK within the ABS framework, there are serious well-being of the forests (and the carbon stored within) concerns about allowing the market to decide how forest is contingent on the well-being of forest peoples, REDD carbon will be valued and how ILCs’ interests and rights will must enable those ILCs to continue to live according to their then be protected. As for a fund-based mechanism, it is bio-cultural values. unclear if and how REDD funds received by states will be distributed to forest-dependent communities that could 4. The Potential Role BCPs in REDD 16 benefit most. The potential pitfalls highlighted above illustrate the dangers 3.2 Governance and Land Tenure that a regime intending to save forests may pose to ILCs. The large amount of available funds will inevitably serve as Many of the countries that suffer from the highest rates an incentive to establish REDD projects, which may lead to of deforestation and forest degradation are also those with the further marginalization of ILCs by other stakeholders the poorest governance and highest levels of corruption. trying to minimize threats to the agreements being entered There are concerns that this will pose a major barrier to REDD into. Like the future IRABS, REDD requires careful local funds reaching the communities that need it the most, calibration to ensure that it achieves both environmental allowing for further entrenchment of the political and social and social justice. The development of bio-cultural protocols elites that have benefited the most from deforestation to date. by forest-dependent ILCs is one way in which communities may be able to respond to and ensure the local integrity Forest communities often lack formal rights and title to their of REDD. This section explores the ways in which the traditional territories and the forests that they depend on. development of a REDD community protocol could assist This has led to concerns that they could be effectively ILCs to prepare for REDD deals and to assert their rights to excluded from the forests that are earmarked for reducing continue their ways of life. 1 5 . Mongabay.com. 2008. Conflict in PNG between government and landowners over REDD carbon trading. November 17, 2008. Available at: http://news.mongabay.com/2008/1117-png.html 16. At the time of writing, the most current version of the negotiating text was FCCC/AWGLCA/2009/INF.2. UNFCCC 2009. Ad hoc Working Group on Long-term Cooperative Action Under the Convention: Annex III C: Enhanced action on mitigation. Available at: http://unfccc.int/resource/docs/2009/awglca7/eng/inf02.pdf Accessed 27 September 2009. 17. Cotula, L. and Mayers, J. 2009. Tenure in REDD – Start-point or afterthought? Natural Resource Issues No. 15. International Institute for Environment and Development. London, UK. 47

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