Members of the (NEFF) attended the in November to confer with other experts and leaders about how forests can help fight climate change.
Forests are an essential part of the effort to meet the U,N. goal to cap global temperature rise at 1.5 degrees Celsius, said Andrea Colnes, deputy director and climate fellow at the New England Forestry Foundation.
鈥淭he only chance we have of getting to 1.5 degrees really no longer depends on reducing emissions,鈥 Colnes said. 鈥淲e also have to figure out how to remove carbon from the atmosphere. And forests are the one major way the world has of removing carbon from the atmosphere at this point.鈥
Colnes said one major sticking point has been incentivizing the logging industry 鈥 especially smaller businesses 鈥 to follow more sustainable practices. She said NEFF was inspired by international programs designed to incentivize countries in the global South.
鈥淚n 海角换妻, [our] program will be designed to provide incentives to landowners to put in place climate-smart forest management plans, and manage them through support and education and training,鈥 Colnes said.
Colnes also suggested encouraging the use of sustainable lumber in construction projects, the production of which creates fewer carbon emissions than concrete or steel. She said that would, in turn, provide more funding for logging businesses to invest in more sustainable practices.
COP27 ended on Nov. 20.