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AEDA Conservation Letters paper on Reducing Emmissions & saving biodiversity hits 65+ media outlets & radio


An AEDA paper published in Conservation Letters on Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD) and biodiversity conservation hits 65 media outlets and radio.  Lead by Oscar Venter, an AEDA PhD student (www.aeda.edu.au), researchers from around the world have determined that REDD could offset deforestation if used in cost-efficient areas, such a Kalimantan.

Oscar was interviewed by Phil Kafcaloudes and Adelaine Ng from the Breakfast Club on Radio Australia on 10 June 2009 - LISTEN HERE

Media outlets from all around the world have reported on this paper, including:

BBC;   Scientific American;   New York Times;   Los Angeles Times;   Washington post;   Reuters;   The Jakarta Post;   Associated Press  China Post;   CNBC;   Science Daily;   The Huffington Post;   CBS News;   Chicago Tribune;   Jakarta Globe;   Indonesia Post;   Kansas City Star;   The Boston Globe;   Yahoo news;   Taiwan news;   Southern Ledger;   SeattlePI;   WCTV;   The Monteray Herald;   Seattle times;   San Francisco Chronicle;   Newsday;   Baltimore Sun;   Forbes;   Agence France Presse-English;   Agencia EFE (Spain);   Reuters—Portuguese;   RedOrbit;   WNYT News Channel 13;   Star Tribune;   Salem Radio Network News;   ClearNet Business (NZ);   NewsER;   Fort Mill Times;   First Science;   FAO United Nations: Forest News;   WTOP 103.5;   Intell Asia;   Journal Gazette;   The Daily Reflector;   The Star;   Statesman;   World Environment News;   Fox 13 Now;   Straits Times;   Environmental News Network;   KSTP News;   The News Tribune;   KSL News Radio;   Daily Advance;   Science Daily;   Sun Sentinal;   AL;   Sulekha;   Morning Star;   Planet Ark;   News Guide;   Terra Daily;   PhysOrg, Mongabay.com


The Abstract is below, and the full paper can be downloaded HERE:

Abstract:

One reason for the rapid loss of species-rich tropical forests is the high opportunity costs of forest protection. In Kalimantan (Indonesian Borneo), the expansion of high-revenue oil palm (Elaeis guineensis) plantations currently threatens 3.3 million ha of forest. We estimate that payments for Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD) could offset the costs of stopping this deforestation at carbon prices of US$10–33 per tonne of CO2, or $2–16 per tonne if forest conservation targets only cost-efficient areas. Forty globally threatened mammals are found within these planned plantations, including the Bornean orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus) and Borneo pygmy elephant (Elephas maximus borneensis). Cost-efficient areas for emissions reductions also contain higher-than-average numbers of threatened mammals, indicating that there may be synergies between mitigating climate change and conserving biodiversity. While many policy and implementation issues need clarification, our economic assessment suggests that REDD could offer a financially realistic lifeline for Kalimantan’s threatened mammals if it is included in future climate agreements.

 


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