
Conservation, Carbon, Communities: Swedish carbon purchases through forest plantations in Uganda
Project overview
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Short summary
The project has studied a climate initiative in Uganda in the form of forest plantations established by a Norwegian company – examining the different stakeholders’ views on the purpose of the plantations and how this affects their potential to contribute to local sustainable development.
Forests are given an important role in global climate change negotiations and various global schemes for planting and conserving forest have emerged with the dual purpose of meeting developing countries’ aspirations of (sustainable) development and poverty reduction, and industrialized countries’ wishes to find cost effective ways of reducing their climate change impacts.
In this research project one such scheme was studied where a Norwegian company plants forest for timber production in Uganda and simultaneously benefits from being certified as a CDM (Clean Development Mechanism) project. The certified emission reductions generated from the plantation were purchased by Sweden and these emission reductions were therefore counted as Swedish.
In our previous research we studied how the different actors engaged in the plantation perceive the role of the plantation and how they related it to sustainable development. The CDM project plan argues that the forest reserve in which the plantation is located was heavily degraded due to local people’s overuse of resources and cultivation in the forest and that the plantation therefore will contribute directly to local sustainable development through replanting forest. Research on past forest conservation projects in Africa showed however that forest degradation often has been assumed and connected to local practices without empirical proof, with negative outcomes for local people.
We therefore investigated the degradation claims made, and also analysed how different involved actors have differing main motivations for the project, such as carbon emission reduction or local development, and how this might influence the view of sustainability that guides the project. We concluded that the assumptions about local deforestation had not been properly verified and that therefore the carbon emission reductions had likely been overestimated. The project also had several negative local effects, which affected women and poor household the most. Due to various factors locally in Uganda, it was difficult for the company to run the project the way they had intended to and for the Swedish Energy Agency to make the demands they wanted to make.
The final report can be downloaded as a PDF
This research project was followed up through two new projects:
Towards a more Sustainable Consumption of Carbon Emission Reductions, focusing on translating the lessons learned into practically applicable tools.
Read about the project Towards a more Sustainable Consumption of Carbon Emission Reductions
We are Planting Trees in Africa, focusing on more in-depth research on the chain of actors in carbon compensation from Swedish actors to local farmers in areas where trees are planted in Africa.
Read about the project We are planting trees in Africa.