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An unprecedented deal announced March 28, 2008 opens the way for financial markets to price the ‘utility value’ of living rainforests, creating a positive incentive to conserve the world’s natural resources. For the first time investors will put a market value on the ecosystem services provided by a rainforest, including rainfall generation, climate regulation, biodiversity maintenance and water storage, thus rewarding developing countries that manage their forests in sustainable ways. The deal was announced at the world's first 'Biodiversity and Ecosystem Finance Conference'.
The Guiana Shield, one of only four intact rainforests left on earth, generates rainfall that supports agricultural production throughout northern Latin America and the southern Caribbean. Its heart is the million-acre Iwokrama reserve - “place of refuge” in the local Makushi language - which was gifted to the Commonwealth by Guyana in 1989 as a showcase for how tropical forests could be managed to provide ecological and economic benefits.
“This initiative fits perfectly with Iwokrama's original mandate to demonstrate that conservation, environmental balance and sustainable economic activity can be mutually reinforcing”, said Iwokrama's Chairman Edward Glover. Under the deal, Canopy Capital buys a licence to market Iwokrama’s Ecosystem Services for five years, through a guaranteed yearly payment to Iwokrama. The funds will be used to continue managing the Iwokrama forest sustainably while providing livelihoods for the 7,000 people living in the forest and the surrounding area. Expressing community sentiments, Iwokrama Head Ranger Ron Allicock said “I love this place. This is my home. I want it to be around for my children, my children's children, for ever.”
Speaking for Canopy Capital, Director Hylton Philipson describes the deal as “creating wealth that is worth having. Putting a price on such key ecosystem services such as rainfall generation, moderation of extreme weather, carbon storage and biodiversity maintenance is like taking out an insurance policy to maintain our life support system and has the potential to generate billions of dollars for forest-owning nations, says Canopy Capital, which is funded 20% by the Global Canopy Programme, a UK charitable alliance of 29 scientific institutions in 19 countries dedicated to preserving tropical forests, and 80% by a dozen international investors.
The deal, drawn up by London-based international law firm Stephenson Harwood, defines 'ecosystem services' as the proven ability of rainforests to generate rainfall, cool the atmosphere, store carbon, moderate weather conditions and sustain biodiversity. The investment template created by the deal could help make it more valuable for developing nations to keep their forests standing than to cut them down. Forests such as Iwokrama act as pumps, drawing water from the Atlantic Ocean inland to the Amazon and Guiana Shield where they help to seed clouds and deliver moisture over vast distances. The Amazon generates the rain that helps
"Rewarding people for good management is intrinsically more palatable than REDD [Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation] which rewards people for addressing a situation out of control," says Duncan MacQueen, a forestry expert at the Institute for Environment and Development in London, referring to a UN programme that was launched at the climate change summit in Bali, Indonesia, last December. REDD aims to pay countries to reduce deforestation. While a final agreement is not expected until 2009, it looks unlikely that REDD will reward countries, like Guyana, that have a long standing record for conserving their forests.
Last December, Merrill Lynch invested $9M in rainforest conservation in
While most investors are currently eyeing forests solely for their carbon value, Philipson believes they are overlooking more important services — especially rainfall generation. "If I were a farmer in Brazil's Mato Grosso or the mayor in Atlanta I would be very concerned about deforestation in the Amazon," he told mongabay.com, referring to studies by Duke University's Roni Avissar that have linked forest clearing in the Amazon to rainfall in North and South America. "The market is looking at carbon but what I believe will be far bigger will be the maintenance of rainfall."
This story was compiled from a variety of sources, including Iwokrama's news release; information on the Canopy Capital website; a March 27, 2008 mongabay story entitled Private equity firm buys rights to ecosystem services of Guyana rainforest; a March 27, 2008 NewScientist story entitled Investor puts his money into the rainforest by Catherine Brahic; a March 27, 2008 story by Daniel Howden in the Independent newspaper entitled Millions of acres of Guyanese rainforest to be saved in groundbreaking deal; a March 27, 2008 Bloomberg story by Jim Efstathiou Jr. entitled Rainforest saviors are investors betting jungle value; an article in the Telegraph by Global Canopy Program director Andrew Mitchell entitled Putting a value on rainforests; and a November 24, 2007 Independent article by Mr. Howden entitled Take over our rainforest - Guyana's extraordinary offer to Britain to save one of the world's most important carbon sinks.
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