Importance of forests in making the earth habitable for mammals has been recognized by a new study and their destruction will lead to decline of all mammals, including humans.
Importance of forests in making the earth habitable for mammals has been recognized by a new study and their destruction will lead to decline of all mammals, including humans. The value of forests and tree-based ecosystems extends far beyond carbon sequestration; they are the foundation of sustainable societies.
A new report, launched in Jakarta, Indonesia on 21 March - the International Day of Forests - promotes REDD+ and the Green Economy as together providing a new pathway to sustainable development that can benefit all nations.
It claims this approach can conserve and even boost the economic and social benefits forests provide to human society.
Building Natural Capital - How REDD+ Can Support a Green Economy outlines how REDD+ can be integrated into a Green Economy to support pro-poor development while maintaining or increasing forest cover.
According to the report, REDD+ needs to be placed in a landscape-scale planning framework that goes beyond forests to consider all sectors of a modern economy and the needs of agriculture, energy, water resources, finance, transport, industry, trade and cities.
In this way, REDD+ would add value to other initiatives, such as agroforestry projects that are being implemented within these sectors, and be a critical element in a green economy.
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While it is recognized that what lies ahead is a long process of societies adapting to new conditions, REDD+ could be integral to increasing agricultural and forestry outputs to meet future needs, while at the same time enhancing the conservation of forests and ecosystem services.
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Nearly 1.6 billion people worldwide depend on forests as a source of food, medicines, timber and fuel.
Source-ANI