Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation: Global Land-Use Implications

Recent climate talks in Bali have made progress toward action on deforestation and forest degradation in developing countries, within the anticipated post-Kyoto emissions reduction agreements. As a result of such action, many forests will be better protected, but some land-use change will be disp...

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Additional Info

Field Value
Source https://resources.unep-wcmc.org/products/WCMC_RT217
Author UNEP-WCMC
Maintainer UNEP-WCMC
Last Updated March 9, 2023, 14:17 (UTC)
Created March 9, 2023, 12:16 (UTC)
GUID unep-wcmc-rsrc-report-wcmc_rt217
Issued 2023-03-09T01:01:02.178Z
Language en
Modified 2023-03-09T01:01:02.178Z
Publisher email info@unep-wcmc.org
Publisher name UNEP-WCMC
Theme Report
avg_rating 1
citation Miles, L. and Kapos, V. (2008). Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions From Deforestation And Forest Degradation: Global Land-Use Implications. Science 320 (5882): 1454-1455. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1155358
data_type webpage
date_published 2008-06-12
icon_url https://resources.unep-wcmc.org/assets/icons/document-placeholder-e938f98deb4879afb3aeb922f66a9def5d814e683ac7f4f20614478110eae22f.svg
license copyright
num_views 0
short_description Research is needed into selection of priority areas for reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD) to deliver multiple benefits, on-the-ground methods to best ensure these benefits, and minimization of displaced land-use change into non-target countries and ecosystems, including through revised conservation investments.