Title: Reducing Emissions from All Land Uses (REALU) -
1Reducing Emissions from All Land Uses (REALU) -
a whole landscape approach to reducing
emissions
Florence Bernard, Peter Minang, Meine van
Noordwijk, Elizabeth Kahurani (ASB
Partnership, Nairobi, Kenya f.bernard_at_cgiar.org)
Why REALU?
Figure 1. Emissions captured and part of land
cover change matrix
included in the accounts under different REDD
scenarios
REALU looks beyond REDD to a possible and
fair inclusion of all transitions in land cover
(trees outside forest, agroforestry systems and
community-based forest management) that can
achieve carbon storage and emissions avoided.
- REALU recognizes REDD but tries to address
- the challenges of REDD as follows
- The absence of a globally agreed definition of
Forest will impede implementation of REDD or
REDD - Drivers of deforestation are largely outside the
forests and are not addressed within REDD - Current REDD construction ignores high potential
emissions reduction and sequestration in other
land use - REDD as just a partial accounting of land use is
challenged by cross-scale issues such as
additionality, leakage, and permanence
How different is REALU from REDD?
Figure 2. The four pillars that support a
whole-landscape agenda for
carbon management
- REALU towards the ultimate goal of adaptative
sustainable livelihoods and climate resilience - The REALU architecture consists of four pillars
addressing - specific land uses and sectors
- Reducing forest-based emissions (REDD)
- Reducing emissions from peat (REPeat)
- Restocking land through trees and soil carbon
(REStock) - Reducing emissions from agricultural greenhouse
gasses (REAGG) - Emission reduction outside of Annex-I countries
needs to be - based on principles or foundation stones
- National sovereignty within differentiated global
responsibility. - Respect of rights of indigenous people and rules
for free and prior informed consent. - Integrity of global accounting systems.
Linking REALU and NAMAs example of Indonesia s
emission reduction efforts
- NAMAs combine a set of actions necessary to
facilitate the transition to low-carbon growth
for different sectors of the economy, including
agriculture and forestry. With NAMA, all land
uses qualify for emission reduction, regardless
of forest definition. - Indonesia hopes that combining NAMA with
international co-investment, it can achieve a
further emission reduction of 15 (in addition
to its 2020 emission reduction goal by 26
without reliance on foreign co-investment). - REALU is land-based NAMAs as it considers
Emissions from all land uses, therefore it is a
first step at NAMAs from a land use sense.