Capturing Carbon and Conserving Biodiversity
The Market Approach
Cloth: 978 1 85383 950 4
Price: $166.00  

Paper: 978 1 85383 951 1
Price: $58.50  

Publisher: Earthscan Publications Ltd.
June 2003 , 250 pp., 6" x 9 1/4"
figures & tables
For decades conservation has been based on the donor-driven principle. It hasn't worked. For centuries, environmental pollution or degradation has been addressed by the same attitude, the "Polluter Pays" principle. It hasn't worked.

The cycle has to stop. But while everyone talks about using a market-driven approach, few know how to do it. Faced with the situation on the ground what do you do? What is happening? How can you engage a system so that it is self-sustaining and the people self-motivated?

This book is written by the leading conservation biologists, ecologists, biologists, economists, lawyers, community and tribal specialists, financial specialists, market makers, environment specialists, climatologists, resource managers, atmospheric scientists, project developers and corporate fund managers.

Table of Contents:
Part I: Carbon Sequestration—Global Carbon Dynamics and Forestry; Management of Forests; Free market approach; Changes of Land Use; Multilateral Banks and GEF; Measuring Forest-Based Projects; Part II: Environmental Services—Land Use and Climate Change Policy; Temperate Areas; China and India; Indigenous People/ Local Institutional Needs; Botanical Impacts; Animal Conservation; Markets; Part III: The Future Model—Kyoto Framework; International negotiations; Developing Countries; Emissions Trading; Bibliography, Index.


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Reviews & Endorsements:
"The failure of traditional forms of conservation to stop ecological devastation is clear. It ishoped that market-based approaches can reduce carbon emissions and save the planet from global warming. Yet the critical question remains: How do we do it? This title makes the case for the maximum use of carbon sinks, particularly in the developing wold. The authors reveal the benefits of a market-based system of reducing and sequestering carbon, combined with emissions trading."
- Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society