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Solar Energy Conversion Process: Light and Heat

The scientific struggle to increase the efficiency in which renewable energy is used and then reused has proven to be a daunting task. Large wind farms and fields of solar panels are commonly used to generate energy through solar radiation. Congruently, investors are having a troublesome time competing with traditional oil and electric suppliers.

latest news
Supply fears hit UN carbon credits

FT, 6 Sep 2010

Uncertainty about the supply of UN-issued carbon credits has led to their price hitting a four-month high. Certified Emission Reductions (CERs) have surged on international carbon markets in recent weeks after a UN board acted over concerns that chemical plants in China and elsewhere in the developing world were deliberately overproducing HFC 23, a potent greenhouse gas, in order to claim the saleable credits for subsequently destroying it.

A carbon border tax can curb climate change

FT, 6 Sep 2010

As global growth picks up after the economic crisis, carbon emissions are going back up too. With China and India back on track to double their gross domestic product every decade, and with coal providing nearly 30 per cent of global energy, the chances of stabilising and reducing emissions are low. Indeed, little progress has been made in the last two decades. Only recessions lower emissions – and then only for a short time.
Low-carbon market to treble by 2020 - HSBC

Reuters, 6 Sep 2010

The world's low-carbon energy market is likely to treble by 2020, HSBC analysts forecast on Monday, saying that rising concerns about resource scarcity would support broad consensus on the threat of climate change.
Novacem: Cement That Eats Carbon

Bloomberg, 3 Sep 2010

The construction materials industry emits gobs of carbon dioxide, but a British startup has devised a new cement that absorbs and stores CO2 when it's produced

No rights, no REDD: Communities

01/07/2010 by JAKARTA POST

Adianto P. Simamora

Indigenous communities have warned the government they will reject the implementation of a planned carbon credit scheme unless the government guarantees their rights to livelihood in the forests.

The Alliance of Archipelagic Indigenous People (AMAN), which claimed to have 1,163 community members, said the international scheme — which is designed to reduce deforestation — could trigger new conflicts if land tenure disputes remained unsettled.

“Our stance is clear — no rights, no REDD. It is what we have told AMAN’s members across the country,” AMAN secretary-general Abdon Nababan told a discussion on climate change Wednesday, referring to the international policy.

REDD stands for reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation, which should it be agreed to would come into effect after 2012.

Under REDD, participating forest nations would be compensated by developed nations through a carbon credit scheme for preventing deforestation.

Abdon said many indigenous communities were already protecting their forests and had very small carbon footprints.

“Indigenous people have practiced “small-scale REDD” — so why are they then forced from their land to allow in oil palm plantations?” he said.

“Indigenous people only seek recognition of their land rights from the government, not money from rich nations through REDD,” he said.

Article 18 of the amended 1945 Constitution says the state recognizes and respects units of customary communities as well as their traditional rights.

However, the 1999 Forestry Law says customary forests are state forest that happen to be located in customary areas.

“The Forestry Law has become a source of problems in regard to the land rights of indigenous people,”
he said.

Indonesia has more than 120 million hectares of forests, but clears more than 1 million hectares per year, making it the fastest deforesting country in the world.

Special Envoy to President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono on climate change, Rachmat Witoelar, said indigenous communities were important stakeholders in forest protection. “But we must be careful with the issue since many of the groups could claim they are indigenous people; I myself have no clear understanding who indigenous people really are,” he told the discussions.

Rachmat said Indonesia’s plan to cut 26 percent of emissions could be reached if all stakeholders were committed to protecting the country’s forests.

Senior adviser for international forest carbon policy at the Nature Conservancy Wahjudi Wardojo also said local communities played a crucial role in preventing deforestation.

“But, the approach cannot be generalized because even neighboring villages have different customary laws,” he said.

Copyright 2010 Jakarta Post

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