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Danna Smith

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Teaming Up With Our Former Foes

Posted: 10/8/09

Today, Dogwood Alliance and one-time foe Staples teamed up with other conservation groups, wood products companies and landowners to announce a new, comprehensive project that will protect forests, combat climate change and help develop sources of paper and wood products certified to the high standards of the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC).

The Carbon Canopy is focused on forests in the Southern US, the largest paper and wood-producing region in the world where 90% of the forests are privately owned. Logging practices such as large scale clearcutting and the conversion of natural forests to plantations have created concerns about the long-term health of the region's forests.

As a first step to addressing these concerns, the Carbon Canopy will develop a pioneering project that will be based on rigorous environmental standards to determine how the emerging US forest carbon market can be credibly leveraged to pay private landowners to expand carbon stores in working forests in the South. The ultimate goal is to create financial incentives for landowners to increase forest conservation and restoration efforts, and to certify management practices to the high standards of Forest Stewardship Council (FSC).

Through the pilot project the Carbon Canopy will "test" how Southern forest landowners might benefit financially from expanding forest conservation and restoration on the ground in a working forest certified to the high standards of FSC certification. The pilot project will be focused on increasing the abundance of older, more mature natural forests through select logging and thinning. In addition to expanding carbon sequestration the management practices will ensure the protection of water quality and biodiversity. The initial project will meet the rigorous carbon accounting standards of the Voluntary Carbon Standard (VCS) and the Climate Action Reserve (CAR) and the management practices will meet the high standards of FSC certification. Staples and Interface, have offered to pay the pilot project landowner(s) for increases in carbon stored and sequestered as a result of improved forest management practices on the ground. Pacific Forest Trust will manage the development of the pilot project.

Never before have we seen this kind of collaboration in the South between forest industry, large US corporations, landowners and environmental groups to find real solutions. Through investing in the protection, conservation and restoration of forests, we can not only reduce carbon emissions, but we can also ensure a healthy forest legacy for future generations, while providing a helping hand to the millions of families and individuals who manage forestland in the Southern US.

Here is what our friends at Staples had to say about the Carbon Canopy, "This project is a continuation of the important work that we began with Dogwood Alliance years ago to effect change and responsibly preserve and cultivate the forests of the US," said Mark Buckley, vice president of environmental affairs of Staples Inc. "We are excited to be a part of a project focused on the longevity of our forests, one that will benefit the stewards of the land, positively impact future generations and support local and regional economies by creating products originating from forests managed to a high environmental standard."

Carbon Canopy partners include: Staples, Dogwood Alliance, Columbia Forest Products, Pacific Forest Trust, FSC US, Rainforest Alliance, Green Press Initiative, Domtar, The Home Depot, Environmental Defense Fund, Interface, The Forestland Group and The Keystone Center.

 
 
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02:24 PM on 10/09/2009
This is pioneering work, charting new ground. And with that comes a lot of weed whacking. What is obvious to me is that until we start placing real financial value on forest protection and conservati­on, forest landowners will continue to have only two options to make $ from owning forests: develop or log. We must change this dynamic and create some value for leaving more trees in the woods. The problem is that we need to make sure it's done credibly -- otherwsie we could see comapnies paying for forest carbon from bad logging practices -- now that would be a total sham! Carbon Canopy is committed to a high standard of transparen­cy, rigouous carbon accounting protocols and will ensure positive change on the ground -- not only additional­, permanent and verifiable expansion in carbon stocks, but also biodiversi­ty and watershed protection­. Management practices will be certified to the high standards of FSC certificat­ion.
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05:36 PM on 10/08/2009
If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. Another good one is "there is no free lunch". I want to read what others have to say. Others that have been there and done that. As an old progressiv­e, all I can say is it would be nice to read comments made by progressiv­es who have been around the block and seen how much work it takes to make progress, and to keep it. So much of what was accomplish­ed in the 60's has been rolled back, and many of the youngsters out there don't even know that. It is good to be open, hopeful, etc., but it would also be good to hear that progressiv­es outnumber people who would sell their grandmothe­r for a trip to Boca.