Mount
Tamalpais Declaration
San Francisco, May 2000
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We, the undersigned non-governmental
organizations, wish to express extreme concern about the role envisaged
for tree plantations in helping industrialized countries meet their
commitments to reduce greenhouse gas emissions under the Kyoto Protocol
of the Framework Convention on Climate Change. The Sixth Conference
of the Parties, in November 2000 in the Hague, will likely determine
the content of the so-called Clean Development Mechanism, which could
allow many Northern countries to meet their emissions reductions targets
by implementing projects in the South.
Trading carbon sequestered
in tree plantations for carbon resulting from burning of fossil fuels
cannot justify postponing deep reductions in CO2 emissions in industrialized
countries. First, the trade would perpetuate and exacerbate existing
inequalities between rich and poor nations and between rich and poor
within particular nations. Second, the trade would increase the area
of industrial tree plantations, which are already posing severe social
and ecological problems worldwide. Third, the claim of quantifiable
"climate neutrality" on which this trade rests has a highly
questionable scientific basis and sanctions external political interference
in the policymaking of the countries of the South.
For a century and a half industrial
societies have been moving carbon from underground reserves of coal
and oil into the air. Today about 175 billion more tons of carbon
are circulating in the atmosphere in the form of CO2 than before the
industrial revolution, the great bulk having come from the North.
At least six billion tons are being added every year. Just over 122
corporations account for 80 per cent of all carbon dioxide emissions.
The transfer of carbon from
fossil fuels to the atmosphere cannot go on indefinitely. Some 4,000
billion tonnes of carbon in fossil fuels are still under the earth's
surface -- more than ten times the amount of carbon stored in forests.
According to current scientific consensus, adding as little as few
hundred billion tons of this to the air would result in climate change
unprecedented in human history, bringing extreme storms, droughts
and floods, disrupting agriculture, increasing pest infestations,
drowning islands and coastlines and creating millions of "climate
refugees".
Climate change will affect
the poor most severely. When Hurricane Mitch ravaged Central America
it generated hundreds of thousands of environmental refugees. Many
small island states may eventually disappear under the sea. In the
US it is the poor who are most affected by pollution from oil companies,
power utilities and automobiles. Climate change will also severely
affect the forests and agriculture that are the sole means for livelihood
for millions of people.
The 1997 Kyoto Protocol of
the Framework Convention on Climate Change, under which industrialized
countries pledge to reduce emissions by 2010 by an average of 5.2
per cent below 1990 levels, does not go remotely far enough to stave
off these dangers. Even if the Protocol were ratified and fully implemented,
it is estimated, it would not be able to moderate an expected warming
trend of 1.4o C. by 2050 by more than around 0.05o C.
Yet instead of strengthening
the Protocol in ways that would reduce the use of fossil fuels, some
governments are advocating the creation of plantations-based carbon
sinks and stores in order to justify lesser reductions in fossil fuel
use. Under the Clean Development Mechanism, such projects could be
created in the South to "compensate" for industrial emissions
in the North.
We are in no doubt about the
role of forest conservation in maintaining a livable climate. We are
strongly in favor of maintaining and restoring diverse forest ecosystems
under local control. We also support the equitable distribution of
wealth and common property North and South. But measures to maintain
carbon reservoirs both below and above ground must be carefully distinguished
from the carbon-trading plantation schemes now being mooted under
the Kyoto Protocol. These are based on false premises and are likely
to be counterproductive. We oppose the inclusion of plantations as
"sinks" in the Clean Development Mechanism for four main
reasons:
- Using "sinks"
to help Northern countries meet their Kyoto Protocol emissions reductions
targets cannot promote a livable climate since those targets are themselves
insufficient to do so.
- Trading emissions for tree
carbon would intensify regressive redistribution of world resources.
Licensing the burning of fossil
fuels by financing tree plantations to "absorb" carbon dioxide
would expand the ecological and social footprint of the rich, making
existing social inequalities worse. Citizens of a Northern country
which use (say) 20 times more per capita of the atmosphere for CO2
dumping than citizens of a Southern country would be entitled, under
the rationale of carbon trading, to use 20 times more tree plantation
land in order to compensate. This land would be taken disproportionately
from poorer people in the South, where real estate is cheaper and
tree growth rates faster. In addition, a carbon-trading system would
put Southern countries at a disadvantage when they begin making emissions
cuts, since the easiest cuts would have already been purchased and
credited to Northern countries. It has often been pointed out that
the North owes the South an immense "carbon debt" for its
historical overuse of global carbon-cycling mechanisms. Far from abiding
by the "polluter pays" principle, using trees to "compensate"
for emissions would only increase this resource debt.
Such schemes would also sanction
and deepen inequalities within both Southern and Northern countries.
For example, corporations that buy carbon-dioxide emission rights
in the North by sponsoring carbon "offset" plantations in
the South would be allowed to go on releasing, along with CO2, many
other pollutants that pose local health risks. Corporations site a
disproportionate number of such factories in poor communities of color.
- Large-scale industrial tree
plantations are a threat to communities and ecosystems the world over.
Millions of hectares of new
plantation land would have to be taken over in any attempt to counteract
even a small fraction of industrial emissions. Experience with large-scale
tree plantations indicates that such "offset" projects would
usurp needed agricultural lands, replace valuable native ecosystems,
worsen inequity in land ownership, increase poverty, lead to evictions
of local peoples, and undermine local stewardship practices needed
for forest conservation. In Chile, Indonesia, the Nordic countries
and elsewhere, tree plantations have destroyed natural forests, while
in South Africa, Argentina and Uruguay they have replaced other valuable
ecosystems such as grasslands. In countries such as Brazil, Thailand
and Chile tree plantations are at the root of serious land conflicts
among local communities, landowners, corporations and the state. Nearly
everywhere they have led to loss of water resources and biodiversity.
Inherent in industrial plantation forestry models and exhaustively
documented by the World Rainforest Movement and others over many years,
these deleterious effects of plantations would only be accentuated
if genetically modified trees were employed.
-Using tree plantation projects
to "compensate" for the climatic effects of carbon-dioxide
emissions is scientifically incoherent and sanctions external political
interference in the social policies of host countries.
A market in "carbon offsets"
presupposes a notion of "climate neutrality" or "climate
equivalence". In order for a plantation "offset" project
to be tradable for a given amount of industrial emissions, a single
determinate number would need to be calculated to represent the amount
of carbon sequestered or stored as a result of the project over and
above what would have been sequestered or stored in its absence.
Deriving such a number involves
quantifying two types of project effect. Both would influence the
net amount of carbon sequestered or stored.
One type of effect is physical.
Unlike underground oil or coal, carbon stored in live or dead trees
can quickly reenter the atmosphere at any time. Fires, whether human-set
or not, are unavoidable features of both forests and plantations,
and rates of decay difficult to anticipate. As CO2 concentrations
in the atmosphere rise, moreover, heightened rates of respiration
could turn forests and plantations alike into net sources of CO2 emissions,
while diebacks and fires due to localized climate change are bound
to increase. In addition, plantations typically reduce the capacity
of soils to store carbon, both inside and (through increased erosion)
outside project areas. Vulnerable, dynamic and unpredictable, plantations,
unlike underground reserves of oil and coal, are insecure storage
places for carbon. These considerations alone indicate that no equivalence
between industrial emissions and trees can be established of the type
which would be necessary for the establishment of a "carbon offset"
plantation market.
The second type of effect
is social, and would exert an equally important influence on the amount
of carbon sequestered or stored. Carbon "offset" projects
could, among other things:
*Displace communities in the
immediate neighborhood, which could lead to the project's destruction
or cancellation or forest clearance and CO2 releases elsewhere.
*Undermine existing technologies
or social networks preventing climatically-destabilizing forms of
industrial land clearance and loss of local knowledge of sustainable
agricultural or forest-conservation practices.
*Reduce investor interest
in energy conservation or renewables.
*Displace timber operations
to other locations and influence wood and land prices and thus incentives
for logging.
*Change consumer demand, landfill
legislation and other social factors influencing how quickly plantation
products, including paper and furniture, were converted to carbon
dioxide.
*Siphon funding away from
existing forms of carbon protection.
*Provide incentives to degrade
forests or other lands outside project boundaries in order to attract
new money for carbon projects.
Such social effects are impossible
to quantify. It is not even possible, in fact, to determine a single
social outcome for any given project, which would be a prerequisite
for both quantification and a "carbon trade". First, predicting
the extent of the social effects of a plantation project would be
impossible. These effects, moreover, are not a matter for prediction,
but for democratic decision. Many different "atmospheric outcomes"
of a single project are possible, depending on what policies are adopted.
For example, people evicted by a plantation "offset" project
are likely to behave in different ways toward forests in their region
depending on their land rights, which in turn depends on national
policy. To assign a single number to their behavior would be to prejudge
which policy will be in effect. It could even be said implicitly to
support that policy. Second, continuous monitoring of the extent of
all social effects of a plantation project would be impracticable
and vastly uneconomical (involving, among other things, close attention
to the actions of thousands of rural people in the vicinity of the
project as well as to the psychology of investors in renewables in
distant cities). Third, controlling the behavior of all people affected
by an "offset" project in such a way that the effect of
their actions on atmospheric carbon became precisely calculable over
the many decades during which a project's carbon would have to be
sequestered would also be impossible. The attempt to do so, moreover,
would be politically unacceptable.
By the same token, it is impossible
to compare quantitatively the atmospheric effects of a plantation
with "what would have happened without it". What would have
happened without any particular project depends on many variables,
some of them influenced by policy choices and political action which
economists, biologists, foresters or climate scientists are not entitled
to prejudge. Yet without such prejudgments, a carbon "commodity"
is impossible.
In sum, the climatic effects
of a plantation "offset" project cannot be calculated simply
by (say) comparing the amount of carbon stored in local vegetation
and soils before and after the project and by monitoring changes in
vegetation outside the project site. Deeper issues are involved that
cannot be resolved through "learning by doing".
We, the undersigned NGOs,
strongly support national and international efforts to address climate
change, especially through energy conservation, consumption reduction,
more equitable resource use, and equitable development and sharing
of renewable sources of energy. We hold that a widespread trade in
tree plantation "offsets", through the Clean Development
Mechanism and other means, would block or undercut these necessary
and urgent measures, which constitute a rare opportunity to move on
from dominant and failed patterns of development. We urge governments
not to include plantations as carbon sinks in the Clean Development
Mechanism and to address industrial emissions separately from tree
plantations. A livable climate can be assured only by a commitment
to tackling the root causes of global warming.
- Ricardo Carrere, WRM, Uruguay
- Marcus Colchester, Forest Peoples Programme, UK
- William Appiah, TWN Ghana
- Witoon Permpongsacharoen, TERRA, Thailand
- Yoichi Kuroda, JATAN, Japan
- Randy Hayes, Rainforest Action Network, USA
- Larry Lohmann, Corner House, UK
- Patrick Anderson, Rainforest Information Centre, Australia
- Saskia Ozinga/Jutta Kill, Fern, UK
- Sofia Ryder/Chantal Marijnissen, Fern, Brussels
- Eric Bosire, Forest Action Network, Kenya
- Keith Cooper, WESSA / Timberwatch, South Africa
- Conselho Indigenista Missionário, Brazil
- Takahiro Kohama, Japan Tropical Forest Action Network, Japan
- Kingkorn Narintarakul, Northern Development Foundation, Thailand
- Bill Barclay, Greenpeace, USA
- Lafcadio Cortesi, Greenpeace Pacific, USA
- Joshua Karliner/Amit Srivastava, TRAC--Transnational Resource &
Action Center, USA. - Ned Daly, Consumer's Choice Council, EE.UU
Sign-on
here
Additional individual / organizational signatories:
- María Selva
Ortiz, Redes / Amigos de la Tierra, Uruguay
- Ajoy Kumar Kar, University of New England, Australia
- Hildebrando Velez, Censat Agua Viva / FoE Colombia
- Chowdhury M.F., IEDS / FoE, Bangladesh
- Hernan Verscheure, CODEFF / FoE, Chile
- Corazon Valdez Fabros, Nuclear Free, Philippines
- Jaromir Blaha, FoE, Czech Republic
- Benoit Ndameu, CED/ FoE, Cameroon
- Mensah Todziro, FoE, Togo
- Harri Lammi, FoE, Finland
- Yuri Onodera, FoE, Japan
- Simone Lovera, Sobrevivencia / FoE, Paraguay
- Fabby Tumiwa, CAN, Indonesia
- Leoni van der Maeser, Native Forest Network, Australia
- Sandra Moniaga, ELSAM, Indonesia
- Willem Smuts, Minerals and Energy Policy Centre, South Africa
- Laurie Parise, Rainforest Foundation, US
- Ana Maria Baptista, SCISC (Sociedade Civil Irmós da Santa
Cruz), Brazil
- Allene R. Wahl, PhD, CNC, Chemically Induced Immune Disorders, USA
- Dr. Traudi Troll-Vyplel, ECOTERRA-Austria, ECOTERRA Intl.
- Hassan Musse Idiris, ECOTERRA-Somalia, ECOTERRA Intl.
- Pascal Anziani, ECOTERRA-France, ECOTERRA Intl.
- Dr. Andres Swarazak, South-America-Node, ECOTERRA Intl.
- Mary Redwood, North-America-Node, ECOTERRA Intl.
- Dr. Arnold Steinhauer, Europe-Node, ECOTERRA Intl.
- Ursula Schloer-Aznar, SE-Asia-Node, ECOTERRA Intl.
- Prof. Julian Bauer, Africa Node, ECOTERRA Intl.
- Jill Hamilton, Green Party, SouthAfrica
- Elita Esmeria de Oliveira, SCISC (Sociedade Civil Irmós da
Santa Cruz), Brazil
- Jean Arnold, Executive Director, FALLS BROOK CENTRE, New Brunswick,
Canada
- Colin Nicholas, Coordinator. Center for Orang Asli Concerns, Malaysia
- Clarita Müller-Plantenberg, University of Kassel, Germany
- Joseph Domask, Ph.D., Research Program Officer, Global Forest Program,
WWF, US
- Magda Lanuza, Centro Humboldt, Nicaragua
- Rev. Douglas B. Hunt, Ph.D., Washington and United Nations Representative,
Network for Environmental Economic Responsibility/UCC, US
- Joe Franke, MS, First Nations Health Project, Inc.
- Sandy Gauntlett, Associate Researcher, International Research Institute
for Maori and Indigenous Education, Auckland University, New Zealand
- Philip Owen, SAWaC, South Africa
- John McAllister (concerned individual and Grassland Conservationist),
South Africa
- Richard B. Wilcox, Instructor in Environmental Studies, Tsuda College,
Tokyo, Japan
- Patrick McCully, International Rivers Network, USA
- Rettet den Regenwald e.V, Germany
- Gabriel Rivas-Ducca, COECOCEIBA-Amigos de la Tierra, Costa Rica
- Wong meng chuo, IDEAL (Integrated Development For Ecofriendly and
Appropriate Lifestyle), Malaysia
- Green Earth Organization (GEO), Ghana
- Jeremy Acton, New Eden Foundation, South Africa
- Tom Roche, Director, Just Forests, Ireland
- Lorena Gamboa, Rainforest Rescue, Ecuador
- Isabela Figueroa, Abogada, Ecuador
- Carlos Cyrus Correa, Argentina
- Andrei Laletin, Friends of the Siberian Forests", Russian Federation
- Chris Lang, Germany
- Carolyn Marr, Down to Earth, International Campaign for Ecological
Justice in Indonesia, England
- Jorge Varela, Comite para la Defensa y Desarrollo de la Flora y
Fauna del Golfo de Fonseca, CODDEFFAGOLF, Tegucigalpa, Honduras
- Mary Maguire, Magick River, Malaysia
- Diego Martino, MA/PhD Candidate, Carleton University, Canada.
- Clare Passingham, Oxford ChacoLinks, UK
- Raquel L. Bayley, Presidenta del INDES (Instituto de Desarrollo
Social y Promoción Humana), Argentina
- Richard Sherman, Earthlife Africa Johannesburg
- Anne Hutchings, University of Zululand, South Africa
- Mucio Tosta Gonçalves, Brazil
- Lucio Cuenca Berger, Coordinador NacionalObservatorio Latinoamericano
de Conflictos Ambientales, Chile
- Jeanne Trombly, Fiber Futures, San Francisco, US
- Nancy Hurwitz, ReThink Paper, San Francisco, US
- Bernice A.See, Asian Indigenous Women's Network, Philippines
- Nicolas Binfa Alvarado, Red Nacional de Accion Ecologica, Chile
- Paula Palmer, Executive Director, Global Response, USA
- Patricio Yañez R., MACH (Movimiento Agroecológico
Chileno), Chile
- Anna Ponte, AVVA Frontera Gran Sabana, Venezuela
- Claudia Piccini Ferrín, Guayubira, Uruguay
- Carol yong, Concerned individual, Malaysia
- Nnimmo Bassey, ERA / FoE , Nigeria
- Alberta Wilderness Association, Canada
- Friends of the Oldman River, Canada
- Harrie Oppenoorth, Novib, Holland
- Bruce Allen, US Greens Abroad, Japan
- Sam Gunsch, Executive Director, Edmonton Chapter-Canadian Parks
And Wilderness Society, Alberta, Canada
- Mary Byrd Davis, Yggdrasil Institute (a project of Earth Island
Institute, USA
- Grant Rosoman, Greenpeace Pacific, New Zealand
- Jane D'Cruz, Malaysia
- Mercedes Schoenenman, Fundación Arasý, Argentina
- Marcelo Calazans, FASE-ES, Brazil
- Prof. José Moya, Coordinador de Relaciones Institucionales
de "FORJA", Venezuela
- Mr. Norbert Suchanek, Journalist & Writer, Germany
- Grace Akumu, Executive Director, Climate Network, Africa
- Jean Hudon, Earth Rainbow Network Coordinator, Quebec, Canada
- International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs (IWGIA), Denmark
- Manuel Ludueña, Fundación Ecológica Buenos
Aires Alerta, Foro Ambiental Ciudadano, Argentina
- Environment Trust Foundation, Chen, Juei-Ping, Taiwan
- Flavia Liberona, RENACE, Red Nacional de Acción Ecológica,
Chile
- Javier Baltodano, COECOCEIBA / FoE, Costa Rica
- Ilse Steyl, Dept of Water Affairs & Forestry, South Africa
- Francis Darvall, Five Assegais Nature conservansy, South Africa
- Homero Penagos, RAPAL Panama
- Ole Fjord Larsen, Secretary, The United Peoples, Denmark
- Maria Sol Vallejo, Fundación Rainforest Rescue, Ecuador
- Maria Cristina Criollo, Fundación Rainforest Rescue, Ecuador
- Marcelo Loureiro, Sección Vertebrados, Facultad de Ciencias,
Uruguay
- Rick Steiner, Professor, University of Alaska, USA
- The Green Party of South Africa
- Hsun-Yi Hsieh, Environmental Trust Foundation, Taiwan
- Alejandro Núñez, Fundación para el Desarrollo
de la Ecología y la Vida (FUNDEVIDA), Dominican Republic
- Todd Orsell, USA
- Aajonus Vonderplanitz, Optimal Ways of Living, Charitable Trust,
USA
- James Hopson, USA
- Felipe Sotomayor, EARTH, Costa Rica
- Kees Konings, The Netherlands
- Jackie Puccetti, USA
- Cyndi Seidler, USA
- Cesca Lawrence, Global Awareness Network, USA
- Dag Fredriksson, FoE Sweden / Miljöförbundet Jordens Vänners
kansli, Sweden
- Myron Scheinhaus, USA
- Wes Peterson, Earth, USA
- Susana Garay, MPYMA, Argentina
- Pablo Bergel, Iniciativa ArcoIris de Ecologia y Sociedad, Buenos
Aires, Argentina
- Ronnie Siakor, Save My Future (SAMFU) Foundation, Liberia
- Wolf Avni, Giants Cup Wilderness Reserve, Kwazulu Natal, South Africa
- Geodisio Castillo, AEK/PEMASKY, Panama
- Michael Finley, Chair, Saskatoon Nature Society, Saskatton, Canada
- Susanne Schulz, Asociación LIHUE, Rio Negro / Patagonia,
Argentina
- Liane Greeff, Environmental Monitoring Group, South Africa
- Richard Worthington, Earth Life, South Africa
- Angie Zelter, Reforest the Earth, UK
- Leo vd Vlist, Centre for Indigenous Peoples, The Netherlands
- Ged Crawford, Crawfies Trout, South Africa
- Daniel Sánchez, Amigos De La Tierra, Spain
- Ian Baird, GAPE, Vientiane, Lao PDR
- Mandy Haggith and Bill Ritchie, Worldforests, Scotland
- Francesco Martone, Coordinator of Reform the World Bank Campaign,
Italy
- Alberta Dettori, Rome, Italy
- Luca Greco, Rome, Italy
- Fabrizia Pratesi, Rome, Italy
- Brian Clavier, Prince Albert Earth Advocates, Prince Albert, Canada
- Alexandra Birch, Madrid, Spain
- Juan Carlos Villalonga, Greenpeace Argentina
- Oilwatch, Ecuador
- Accion Eclogica, Ecuador
- Atossa Soltani, Amazon Watch, California, USA
- Udana Power, Mystic Garden Entertainment, USA
- Sandhyarani Naik, Ghumusar Mahila Sangathan, India
- Evelin Ananya, Ghumusar Mahila Sangathan, India
- Hemant Naik, Indian Institute of Social Work, India
- Alan Maher, UK
- Rein Ahas, Estonian Green Movement (EGM), Estonia
- Taavi Pae, EGM, Estonia
- Anto Aasa, Tartu Student Nature Protection Circle, Estonia
- Heffa Schuecking, Urgewald, Germany
- James Arvanitakis, Camapign Director - AID/WATCH, Australia
- Chérie Hoyle, Urban Ecology Australia Inc, Australia
- Paul F Downton, EcopolisP/L, Australia
- Juan D. Castillo, Tokyo, Japan
- Rüdiger Jehn, AK Regenwald Aschaffenburg, Germany
- Carlos A. Vicente, Acción por la Biodiversidad
- Chris Riedy, Organization: Institute for Sustainable Futures, Australia
- Nita Alvarez, The Alvarez Group, USA
- Chen, Juei-Ping, Environment Trust Foundation, Taiwan
- Barbara Sbrocca, Italy
- Claude Sarrazin, France
- Robert Puca
- Tim Cadman, Native Forest Network Southern Hemisphere, Australia
- Bernardo Limikid, Chairperson Lumad Mindanao Peoples Federation,
Philippines
- Steve Sugarman, Social & Environmental Entrepreneurs, USA
- Orin Langelle, Coordinator ACERCA, Action for Community & Ecology
in the Regions of Central America, USA
- 18 signatures from The US Greens Abroad, Japan:
Prudence Foster, Juan D. Castillo, Jonathan Scott Walsh, Morgan Gibson,
Jens Wilkinson, Clyde Davenport, Serena Sato, Pat Ormsby, Loren Bundt,
John Casey, Peter Totten, Joe LaPenta, David Loy, John McLaughlin,
Kathy Riley, Bruce Allen, Richard Wilcox, Richard Evanoff
- Janice Evans, United States
- Michael Lynch, Director, Tasmanian Conservation Trust, Australia
- Rowena Skinner, The Environment Centre of WA, Australia
- Alec Marr, National Campaign Director, The Wilderness Society, Australia
- Alejandro Argumedo, Asociacion ANDES/Indigenous Peoples' Biodiversity
Network, Peru
- Yuriko Hayami, Japan Tropical Forest Action Network (JATAN), Japan
- Ms Greetje Lubbi, director Novib, The Netherlands
- Luc Bouthillier, Associate prof. Forest Policy, Université
Laval, Québec, Canada
- James J. Richards, Santa Barbara Art Studios, USA
- Sharon Mullane, Citizen of the Earth, USA
- María Mónica de Rivas, Web Eco-argentina, Argentina
- David MacKinnon, Trees for life, Australia
- Caroling Geary, Wholeo, USA
- Michael Buss, State Government, USA
- Growing Earth's Apprentices, Serbia
- Hilde Stroot, Friends of the Earth, Netherlands
- Gerardo Honty, CEUTA, Uruguay
- Malú Sierra, Coordinadora Nacional, Defensores del Bosque
Chileno, Chile
- Toni De Marco, Global Dialog, USA
- John Friede, Director, Worldview, Ltd., USA
- Carina Romero, Sausalito, Ca. USA
- Robert E. Rutkowski, Usa
- Tim Keating, Rainforest Relief, Director, Brooklyn, NY, USA
- Marilyn Cohen, Institute for Internal Healing, USA
- Mike Read, Mike Read Associates, Australia
- Sem kiong Angin, Indigenous Peoples Development Centre(IPDC), Sarawak,
Malaysia
- Haki KOLA, Director of the project, Ministry of Agriculture and
Food, Albania
- Mandy & Ken, Knights Mountain Workshop, Ireland
- Proceso Organizativo del Pueblo Rom (Gitano) PROROM, Colombia
- Nancy Fresco, Northern Alaska Environmental Center, Alaska
- Carla Cassata
- Raquel Barquero, Spain
- Cristian de Haro, Vicepresidente, Fundación Cethus, Buenos
Aires, Argentina
- Thomas Wallgren, Coalition for Environment and Development, Finland
- Pablo Kaplún, Coordinador General, Asociación Civil
"Geografía Viva", Caracas, Venezuela
- Carlos Albacete, Piedad Espinosa, Trópico Verde, Guatemala
- Susana Cruickshank, DECA Equipo Pueblo, A.C, Mexico
- Noah Madlin, Rainforest Action Group For Indigenous People, USA
- Sonia Torres Arguedas, Frente Nacional de Oposición a la
Minería de Oro, Costa Rica
- Sergio Ziga Aguilar, Fundación Bosques Nuevos para la Vida,
Costa Rica
- Rafael Espinoza Montero, Asociación Pro Ecología,
Rescate y Desarrollo Cultural Oromontano, Costa Rica
- Mary Ann Jasper, USA
- Yoshiki Seki, Waseda University, Institute of Asia Pacific Studies,
Japan
- Mihoko Shimamoto, Faculty of Social Sciences, Hosei University,
Japan
- Pacific Environment and Resources Center
- Greg Muttitt, Corporate Watch, UK
- Seiji Hashimoto, Tropical Forest Kyoto, Japan
- Toyoyuki Kawakami, APEC Monitor NGO Network (AM-Net), Japan
- Prof. A.E. van Wyk, Department of Botany, University of Pretoria,
South Africa
- Megumi Minami, People's Forum 2001, Japan
- Tomoko Sakuma , People's Forum 2001, Japan
- Zilia Castrillón Márquez, Cali, Colombia
- Dra.Julia Cócaro, ONGs V.I.D.A. y Mo.Vi.T.De.S., Fray Bentos
- Uruguay
- Ramón Martín Medina, ONG Mo.Vi.T.De.S. - Movimiento
Vida Trabajo Desarrollo Sustentablel, Fray Bentos - Uruguay
- René Capriles - Revista Eco 2, ECO 21, Brazil
- Kohji Yonezawa, "Save the world forest" website manager,
Japan
- Miguel Angel Soto Caba, Campaña de Bosques - Greenpeace,
Spain
- Louis Cangemi, Bodywork by Louis, USA
- Eiji Hirai, Japan Tropical Forest Action Network Nagoya, Japan
- Syunpei Kanbe, Africa and Kambe Syunpei Tomonokai, Japan
- Carlos Waite Brignole, Proyecto Bahuaja Sonene, Peru
- Dr. Lourdes Giordani, Albright College, USA
- Jeanne L. Coates, USA
- María Teresa Ramírez Arbo, Fundación Ambiente
Total - Chaco, Argentina
- Lauren Eastwood, Association of Third World Studies, USA
- Bradley Gordon, City News Service, California, USA
- Berenice Perez Hincapie, Tierracolombiana, Colombia
- Belinda Eaglestone, South Africa
- Luis Babiano Amelibia, Departamento de Antropologia social de la
Universidad de Sevilla, Spain
- Susana Garay, Movimiento por la Paz y el Medio Ambiente, Argentina
- Ricardo Apis, Asociación Superficiarios Patagonicos (Medio
Ambiente y Derecho Propiedad), Argentina
- Reinhard Behrend, Rettet den Regenwald e.V., Germany
Dear friends,
In order to strengthen opposition to the promotion of large scale
tree plantations as a means of "offseting" carbon dioxide
emissions, we ask for your supporting sign-ons.
We will be including new signatures
every day as they arrive.
You can also use this version
to collect signatures and send them to us by e-mail: wrm@wrm.org.uy
or fax: 598 2 410 0985.
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