Point Carbon. Ecuador wants an initiative to avoid deforestation by preventing oil extraction at a national park to be considered for inclusion as a flexible mechanism in the successor treaty to the Kyoto protocol, according to its ministry of foreign affairs.
Ecuador has put a moratorium on oil exploration in one of the country’s
largest reserves located in the Yasuni national park, and wants to
create a fund into which donors could pay for voluntary emission
reduction credits for the avoided deforestation.
Lucia Gallardo, environmental adviser to Ecuador's minister of foreign
affairs, said that because the proposal can not currently qualify to be
part of the Kyoto protocol's clean development mechanism, it should be
considered for inclusion as a flexible mechanism in the post-2012
negotiations.
She told Point Carbon it could find support among other developing oil-exporting countries.
“It is also the first time in history that a country dependent on oil
exports for one-third of its income has proposed forgoing oil
extraction to support global sustainability objectives,” she said.
Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa highlighted the Yasuni initiative at
the high-level climate talks at the UN on Monday. Correa said that by
not exploring for oil in the Yasuní zone, his country stands to lose
$720 million (€510 million) dollars in investments per year, which he
said was significant for a country of Ecuador's size.
"We are [ready] to make this immense sacrifice, but are demanding
responsibility from the international community," he said. In exchange
for preventing the emission of an estimated 436 million tonnes of
carbon dioxide from the deforestation that oil exploration would cause,
Correa said that the international community should pay into the fund
by buying voluntary credits. He hopes this will generate $4.6 billion
dollars to fund programmes that would encourage energy diversification
and other development projects in Ecuador.
So far, countries such as Spain, Germany, Belgium, Italy and Norway
have expressed interest in the avoided deforestation efforts at Yasuni,
according to Gallardo.
Correa said this compensation is fair, considering Ecuador contributes
less than 1 per cent of the worldwide emissions.“What we need is the
compensation for the damages caused by the disproportionate amount of
historical and current emissions of greenhouse gases by industrialised
countries,” he said.
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