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Think Progress

October 6, 2009

by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Brad Johnson, and Zaid Jilani

ENVIRONMENT

Saving The Forests

"With one acre of tropical forest disappearing every second and the rate and severity of global climate change accelerating," the bipartisan Commission on Climate and Tropical Forests declared, "there is the serious need for the U.S. to take a leading role in finding effective solutions." According to the World Resources Institute, the razing of forests from Indonesia to Brazil is responsible for the release of five billion tons of carbon dioxide a year -- 12 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions -- more than all the cars and trucks in the world. Deforestation is much more than a global warming threat -- although "tropical forests cover only about 7 percent of the Earth's dry land, they probably harbor about half of all species on Earth" and "at least 1,400 distinct indigenous and traditional peoples." A large amount of deforestation comes from slash-and-burn clearing for subsistence agriculture, but large-scale commercial activities such as industrial cattle ranching and palm tree bio-fuels plantations now also play a significant role. Our world's forests are trapped in a vicious cycle -- global warming fuels forest fires, insect outbreaks, and droughts -- which increases the carbon pollution behind global warming. As these forests act as watersheds for millions of people, their loss can lead to devastating water wars. With only 10 more days of official negotiation left before international climate talks at Copenhagen begin in December, the race is on to save the world's forests and preserve the planet's health. "We have to value forests when they are alive and standing," Papua New Guinea's climate negotiator Kevin Conrad said last month. "Presently, we only value them when they're dead."

INTERNATIONAL ACTION: Including deforestation, "Indonesia could be considered the world's third-largest emitter of greenhouse gases." To date, "Brazil has lost over 220,000 square miles of its Amazonian forest -- an area the size of France." However, deforestation in Brazil is slowing. On Monday, "four of the biggest companies involved in Brazilian cattle farming" signed a formal moratorium "to stop the purchase of cattle from newly deforested areas of the Amazon." Other global efforts are also having an impact. After a three-year Greenpeace investigation, international companies including Adidas, Nike, and Timberland "threatened to cancel contracts unless their beef and leather products were guaranteed free from raw materials linked to Amazon destruction." Wangari Maathai, the Nobel-winning founder of the Green Belt Movement, is working to plant 10 billion trees in the developing world to reforest ravaged lands. The international effort to comprehensively fund forest protection as part of new climate treaty -- about $10 to $20 billion a year will cut deforestation by half -- is known as reducing emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD). This investment to cut deforestation, as long as it is properly implemented, is one of the least-expensive routes to cutting global warming pollution, even ignoring the $4.5 trillion to $5 trillion in benefits of saving the world's tropical forests. However, according to the UN REDD program, "[i]f humankind instead continues to deforest at the same pace, the last of the planet’s forests will be chopped down by 2100." Last week, "three U.S. governors and eight regional leaders from Brazil and Indonesia" called on "the presidents of their nations to write generous forestry provisions into an international climate change pact in Copenhagen in December."

COMPLEX CHALLENGES: Saving the world's tropical forests is a profound challenge. "Where countries are corrupt," the United Nations notes, "the potential for Redd corruption is dangerous." A framework controlled by corporations and international bodies raises great concerns from representatives for indigenous people, who worry that "States and Carbon Traders will take more control over our forests." Scientists have found that "U.S. incentives for biofuel production are promoting deforestation in southeast Asia and the Amazon by driving up crop prices and displacing energy feedstock production," but Congress has voted to forbid land-use considerations in biofuel mandates. A $100 million scandal involving false carbon credits swept Papua New Guinea this summer. "Logging companies may turn into carbon companies," warns conservationist Rob Dodwell, who notes that only efforts that strengthen local communities rather than reward multinational corporations have any chance of being fair or trustworthy. An international framework to solve deforestation cannot ignore the "links between the exploitation of natural resources and the funding of conflict and corruption." In other words, storing carbon must not be the only reason to save the forests.

CONGRESSIONAL ACTION: "Deforestation is a critical national security challenge," Sen. Richard Lugar (R-IN) said in February, "because of its connections with threats from climate change and food security." Lugar hopes the United States will "exercise leadership in protecting forests and responding to the risks of climate change." The Waxman-Markey American Clean Energy and Security Act (ACES), passed by the house in June, "provides funding for tropical countries to prepare and implement plans to reduce deforestation, as well as for achieving these reduction goals." ACES establishes private and public financing from polluters to prevent deforestation, and would create an "International Climate Change Adaptation Program within the U.S. Agency for International Development to provide adaptation assistance to the most vulnerable developing countries." Last week, Sens. John Kerry (D-MA) and Barbara Boxer (D-CA) introduced the Senate version of ACES, the Clean Energy Jobs and American Power Act. The international forestry provisions in the bill "echo those originally included in the House bill," though it "would allow international offsets to account for a quarter of projects annually rather than the half called for in the House bill," thus making the private offsets program more reliable, and shifting more responsibility to public deforestation projects.

Tomorrow, the Commission on Climate and Tropical Forests, co-chaired by former senator Lincoln Chafee and Center for American Progress President and CEO John Podesta, will release its recommendations for domestic and international forest policy.

UNDER THE RADAR

RADICAL RIGHT -- OIL TYCOON AND AMERICANS FOR PROSPERITY PUSHING FOR TEA PARTIES TO PROTEST ESTATE TAX: The estate tax, a duty on the transfer of a deceased person's property and asset, is currently set to vanish in 2010 and come back in 2011 with a 55 percent rate on estates over $1 million -- a Bush-era gimmick designed to push Congress to eliminate the tax altogether rather than reinstating it after a tax-free year. Many in Congress are not falling for the gimmick and are working to make sure an estate tax stays in place in 2010. Now, libertarian oil-tycoon David Koch is enlisting the help of corporate front-group Americans for Prosperity (AFP) to slow down congressional action on taxes long enough for the estate tax to be eliminated. As the Washington Independent's David Weigel reported, Koch appeared at AFP's annual "Defending the American Dream" summit and urged its activists to campaign against an extension of the estate tax. "If we run out the clock," AFP Policy Director Phil Kerpen told attendees, "the estate tax is gone in 2010, and it would be tricky for Democrats to try and bring it back." Despite Koch's invocation that ending the estate tax would be part of a "mass movement...of hundreds of thousands of American citizens from all walks of life standing up and fighting for the economic freedoms that made our nation the most prosperous society in history," the fact is that 99.8 percent of estates owe no tax at all. Rather, the Koch-driven movement is, as the Wonk Room's Pat Garofalo writes, fighting for "needlessly giving millionaire families (like the Koch family) billions in tax breaks, despite the country's budget situation." 
 


THINK FAST

A new poll indicates 68 percent of Americans believe the U.S. will not win or lose the Afghanistan war, which will go on without resolution. Yesterday, White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said that leaving Afghanistan is "not something that has ever been entertained."

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told PBS' Charlie Rose yesterday that she believes it would be very difficult to get her fellow Democrats to support a surge in Afghanistan. "Their constituents don't like an escalated war in Afghanistan. They'd like to see a different approach," she told the TV host.

Politico reports that the Obama administration "misread the congressional mood" in wanting to close the Guantanamo Bay prison camp. "It was a widespread breakdown on the political, legislative, policy and planning fronts that contributed to what is shaping up as one of Obama's most high-profile setbacks."

"With unemployment expected to rise well into next year even as the economy slowly recovers, the Obama administration and Democratic leaders in Congress are discussing extending several safety net programs as well as proposing new tax incentives for businesses to renew hiring." Among the ideas up for consideration are the $8,000 tax credit for first-time homebuyers and extra unemployment assistance.

New rules announced Monday by the Federal Trade Commission will require bloggers to disclose payments they received in return for product reviews. "The post of a blogger who receives cash or in-kind payment to review a product is considered an endorsement," said the agency. "Thus, bloggers who make an endorsement must disclose the material connections they share with the seller of the product or service."

President Obama will speak at the annual dinner of a leading LGBT advocacy group, the Human Rights Campaign, on Saturday. Obama's appearance will come "a day before thousands of people are expected to march on Washington in a demonstration calling for greater legal protections for gays, lesbians and transgendered Americans."

Hospitals and health insurance companies "are pushing back against changes to the latest Senate health-care bill that ease the penalties for Americans who don't carry health insurance." The changes would affect two million fewer people which hospitals say leave too few people covered under the bill and "could undermine a cost-cutting pledge by the industry."

The Obama administration is expected today "to unveil an outline of sweeping changes for the nation's immigration-detention system, saying it will decide whom to lock up and for how long based on the danger and flight risk posed by detainees." The administration plans to revise Bush-era detention standards "and will turn to the private sector for ideas, asking for proposals to construct two model facilities." 

Kenneth Feinberg, the Treasury Department's special master on compensation, "is planning to clamp down on compensation at firms receiving large sums of government aid by cutting annual cash salaries for many of the top employees." "Instead of awarding large cash salaries," he "is planning to shift a chunk of an employee's annual salary into stock that cannot be accessed for several years."

And finally: Levi Johnston, the ex-boyfriend of Bristol Palin, is now starring in an ad for Wonderful pistachios. "In the spot, he is shown sporting a T-shirt emblazoned with a map of his home state, escorted by a bodyguard and dealing with paparazzi -- one of whom inquires, 'How's the baby?' As Johnston cracks open a nut, a voiceover intones, 'Now Levi Johnston does it with protection.'"
 



BLOG WATCH

Retired Gen. John Abizaid talks U.S. foreign policy.

Conservatives think the Bible has become too liberal and have decided to "correct" it.

Apple leaves the Chamber of Commerce over its denial of climate change.

Is Conservatism really dead as an intellectual movement?

UK supermarket pulls all Fox News ads after customer complaints about Glenn Beck.

There is growing consensus on containing Iran.

A German magazine is giving reality a go.

Mike Huckabee sends Fox viewers to his PAC website "under [the] guise of signing a petition."
 

DAILY GRILL

"I would suggest that a real cross-section of doctors would not be applauding [the public option]."
-- Rep. Tom Price (R-GA), 10/05/09

VERSUS

"Most doctors -- 63 percent -- say they favor giving patients a choice that would include both public and private insurance."
-- NPR, 9/14/09

 


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