CO2 Forest Day Programme Book Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change

Co-hosted by CIFOR and CPF partners: ProgrammeForest Day Book

UNFCCC COP 13 Parallel Event 13 COP UNFCCC UNFCCC COP 13 Parallel Event UNCCD Nusa Dua, Bali, 8 December 2007

with additional financial contributions from:

Printed on recycled paper Contents

1. Foreword 3. Acknowledgements 6. Timetable 8. Session 1: Opening Plenary 10. Session 2: Parallel Side Events 23. Session 3: Cross-cutting Themes 28. Session 4: Parallel Side Events 38. Session 5: Closing Plenary 39. List of Poster Presentations 44. List of Exhibitions 45. Floor Map 46. Guidelines: Side Events 47. Guidelines: Poster Presentations 48. Guidelines: Exhibitions 49. List of Participants

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Foreword

Welcome to the inaugural Forest Day.

Right now the eyes of the world are on Bali, as we prepare to face what promises to be the most significant environmental, social and economic issue of our time – climate change. And more than ever, forests are high on the agenda of any discussion around climate change, both as a source of emissions and as a strategy for adaptation. According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), land conversion and in developing countries emits around 1.7 billion tonnes of carbon annually, the fourth highest cause of global emissions. In Indonesia alone, an estimated 1.8 million hectares of forests have been disappearing each year, or about 2 percent of forest cover.  Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD) Forest is now under intense discussion as a mitigation strategy to be included in a Day successor to the . REDD has the potential to help protect and enhance the livelihoods of forest-dependent communities in addition to addressing climate change. At the same time, REDD brings risks that will require careful management, especially under conditions of weak governance and institutions. Forest Day brings together many of the world’s key forest stakeholders during the 13th Conference of the Parties (COP) of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), as a platform to debate issues and identify priorities in order to ensure that forests are suitably incorporated into any future climate change mitigation and adaptation strategies. Participants in this historic event include experts, enthusiasts and decision- makers from government departments, non-government organizations, research and academic institutions, community groups and the private sector. This cross-section of perspectives and priorities will no doubt generate vigorous debate and provocative dialogue around a whole range of issues. I am confident, however, that Forest Day will produce more than “hot air”. We expect that this debate and dialogue will lead to practical recommendations

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forest and Climate Change to feed into the COP deliberations, as well as new insights that will inform the strategies of participating organizations. Forest Day is a joint venture of the members of the Collaborative Partnership on Forests (CPF), with the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) providing the leadership. We are grateful for the financial support that has been contributed by CPF members and sponsors of side-events and posters, as well as by the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, the CGIAR Secretariat, US Forest Service, and The Ministry of Forestry of the Republic of Indonesia. I’d also like to recognise the encouragement that Forest Day has received from the UNFCCC Secretariat. Their support has lent the event the credibility that it warrants and helped to attract the caliber of delegates that you see around you today. If we are to tackle an issue as important and as complex as forests and climate change, it will take commitment, collaboration and mutual understanding. We hope that Forest Day will contribute to fostering these objectives in meeting the challenges ahead.  Forest Day Frances Seymour Director General Center for International Forestry Research

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Acknowledgements

The Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) CIFOR was established in 1993, in response to global concerns about the social, environmental and economic consequences of forest loss and degradation. CIFOR’s research seeks to conserve forests and improve the well-being of forest-dependent communities through research and analysis that will provide information to a range of stakeholders to develop appropriate policy at a local, national and international level. Based in Bogor, Indonesia, CIFOR works in more than 30 countries worldwide, and is part of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR).

The Collaborative Partnership on Forests (CPF)  CPF is an innovative partnership of 14 major forest-related international Forest organizations, institutions and convention secretariats. It was established in Day April 2001, following the recommendation of the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations (ECOSOC). The objectives of the CPF are to support the work of the United Nations Forum on Forests (UNFF) and to enhance international cooperation and coordination on forest issues.

The CPF is currently comprised of 14 member organizations: • Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) • Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) • International Tropical Timber Organization (ITTO) • International Union of Forest Research Organizations (IUFRO) • Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) • Secretariat of the Global Environmental Facility (GEF) • Secretariat of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) • Secretariat of the United Nations Forum on Forests (UNFF) • United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) • United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) • United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change • World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF) • World Bank (WB) • World Conservation Union (IUCN)

Funding Partners • Members of the CPF: CIFOR, FAO, ITTO, IUFRO, CBD, GEF, UNCCD, UNFF, UNDP, UNEP, ICRAF, WB, IUCN. • The Charles Stewart Mott Foundation and the David and Lucile Packard Foundation provided financial support for convening and consultation to develop a research agenda on climate change and forests, part of which has been used to support Forest Day. • The CGIAR Secretariat provided financial support for the production of Forest Day promotional materials. • The US Forest Service provided financial support to defray the travel costs of speakers from developing countries. • The Ministry of Forestry of the Republic of Indonesia is hosting the closing reception of Forest Day.  Forest Day

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forest and Climate Change x 13 x 12 R + P Event Cross- cutting Parallel Parallel Parallel Plenary Plenary Themes Side Event Side Event Side Event Side Event

Drafting Octopus Committe Octopus HCVF-RN HCVF-RN Samudra CI Cigar GCP GCP Ball A Ball Grand Grand Cross-cutting Theme 4 4 Theme Cross-cutting UCS Banda NDRC Sumba

Bali FAO FAO GTZ GTZ Cigar Octopus WB LBNL LBNL Legian Lombok Cross-cutting Theme 3 Theme Cross-cutting WRI

Sanur CCBA CCBA

Samudra  Forest

Bali Day GEF GEF ITTO ITTO SESSION 1 SESSION 2 SESSION 3 SESSION 4 SESSION 5 with coffee (and lunch) (Hosted by MoF Indonesia) (Hosted by Sumba

Forest Day Plan Day Forest PEP PEP Sanur Ball A Ball Grand Grand IUFRO Registration and Poster Session and Poster Registration Closing Plenary: Grand Ball Room Closing Plenary: Grand Opening Plenary: Grand Ball Room Opening Plenary: Grand

ES Grand Ball B Grand Closing Reception Followed by Press Conference in Sanur and Legian ES Kuta Samudra Cross-cutting Theme 2 Theme Cross-cutting MPI IDLO IDLO Moyo Ball B Grand Grand ASB ASB ICRAF ICRAF Legian (ICRAF) Lombok Kuta FFPRI FFPRI Banda WBCSD ICFPA & ICFPA Grand Ball A Ball Grand Cross-cutting Theme 1 Theme Cross-cutting Moyo SCBD SCBD Ball B Grand Grand GOLD GOFC- Break and Poster Session Break and Poster continued) Break (and lunch Coffee Break Break Press Room will be at Ayodya Management Meeting Room Ayodya Press Room will be at Time 10.00 - 09.00 11.30 - 10.00 12.00 - 11.30 13.30 - 12.00 14.00 - 13.30 15.30 - 14.00 15.30 - 16.00 - 15.30 17.30 - 16.00 17.45 - 17.30 18.15 - 17.45 20:00 - 18.30 Note: • Timetable

09.00-10.00 Registration and Poster Session (with coffee)

10.00-11.30 Session 1: Opening Plenary (Grand Ballroom)

11.30-12.00 Break

12.00-13.30 Session 2: Parallel Side Events (lunch box served)

1. Evolving a Technical Sourcebook for REDD Implementation

2. Forests, Climate Change and the Forest Industry – The Business Perspective Introduction

3. Carbon Emission Abatement Costs from Reduced Deforestation

 4. Drivers of Deforestation and Implications for Incentive Schemes

Forest 5. The Future of the Land Use Sector in Carbon Markets Day 6. Linking Decision-making with Knowledge about Forest Adaptation to Climate Change – the Contribution of the Joint CPF Initiative on Science and Technology

7. SFM for REDD - from Acronyms to Implementation in the Tropics

8. Maximizing Multiple Benefits for Climate, Communities and Biodiversity from Forest Carbon Projects

9. Estimating REDD and Afforestation Carbon and Economic Benefits, and Addressing Implementation Issues

10. Sustainable Forest Management and Climate Change Mitigation - Building on Past Experience

11. Carbon Markets and other Funding for Reducing Emissions from Tropical Deforestation

12. The Forests Now Declaration - Forests Now in the Fight Against Climate Change

13. High Conservation Value (HCV) Forests and Land Use Planning for REDD

13.30-14.00 Break (and lunch continued)

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Session 3: Cross-Cutting Themes

1. Setting the Baseline and Estimating the Forest Carbon – Methodological 14.00-15.30 Challenges

2. Markets and Governance - Can we Make them Work?

3. Efficiency vs Equity - What are the Trade Offs and Can Theybe Managed?

4. Adaptation to Climate Change – Achieving Increased Resilience and Livelihood Improvements

15.30-16.00 Coffee Break

16.00-17.30 Session 4: Parallel Side Events

1. Appropriate Tools and Incentives are Required to Optimize Potential Biodiversity Benefits of REDD

2. Perspectives Toward Healthy Tropical Forest

3. Estimating Carbon Stocks in Forested Landscapes  4. Biofuel for Climate Change Mitigation and Sustainable Development - A Legal Perspective on the Opportunities and Challenges of Biofuel in Forest Developing Countries Day

5. Synergies Between the Rio Conventions - Carbon Forestry Projects that Contribute to Biodiversity Conservation and Combating Degradation

6. REDD and Poverty

7. Sustainable Forests and Carbon Management

8. Old Subject, New Tricks - How Will Existing Forestry Institutions Deliver Climate-Conscious Forest Management?

9. Reducing Emissions from Deforestation in Developing Countries (REDD) - Concept and Practical Efforts

10. Boreal Forests Role in Fighting Climate Change

11. Experiences in National-Level Deforestation Baseline Analysis

12. Getting Ready for the Forest Carbon Market

17.30-17.45 Break

17.45-18.15 Session 5: Closing Plenary (Grand Ballroom) Followed by Press Conference in Sanur and Legian rooms

18.30-20:00 Cocktail Reception (hosted by MoF Indonesia)

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Session 1: Opening Plenary (10.00-11.30) KEYNOTE ADDRESS His Excellency Dr. Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono President of the Republic of Indonesia - invited

WELCOME & INTRODUCTIONS Frances Seymour (Indonesia) Director General, Center for International Forestry Research

VIDEO MESSAGE  Wangari Maathai (Kenya) 2004 Nobel Peace Prize Winner Forest Day PANEL SPEAKERS Katherine Sierra (USA) Vice President, Sustainable Development, The World Bank; Chair, Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research.

Victoria Tauli-Corpuz (The Philippines) Chair, UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues; Founder and Executive Director, Tebtebba Foundation; Convenor, Asian Indigenous Women’s Network.

Rudy Rabbinge (The Netherlands) Dean of Wageningen Graduate Schools, Wageningen University and Research Centre; Chair, Science Council of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research.

Ernesta Ballard (USA) Senior Vice President, Corporate Affairs, Weyerhaeuser Company.

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change There is no doubt that the world’s forests will play a significant role within any global strategy to address climate change. Just what this role will be is yet to be decided. The range of issues and perspectives regarding forests and climate change are as many and as varied as the stakeholders. Many of these stakeholders are involved in the UN COP and are currently engaged in discussions on emission reduction and adaptation strategies, targets and timeframes. Forest Day will provide a platform for discussion among decision makers and a broad cross-section of scientists, academics, entrepreneurs and other interested parties, in order to help shape the global forest agenda. The Opening Plenary will involve a distinguished panel of forest-related experts to introduce some of the key issues and to encourage further exploration of these issues through the assortment of interactive forums, presentations, workshops and poster sessions that are available throughout Forest Day.

 Forest Day

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change SessionParallel 2: Side Events (12.00-13.30)

1. Evolving a Technical Sourcebook for REDD Implementation Global Observations of Forest Cover and Land Dynamics (GOFC-GOLD) Location: Moyo Room

As the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change nears the end of a 2 year period of evaluation of the issue Reducing Emissions from Deforestation in Developing Countries, participating countries have agreed on the need to address this globally important source of greenhouse gas emissions. The value of remote sensing tools for deforestation monitoring, coupled with ground/based inventories, has been officially referenced to support policies to reduce these emissions. GOFC-GOLD has maintained close communication 10 with the negotiation process and provided technical guidance. GOFC-GOLD and associated organizations have drafted a user-friendly technical sourcebook Forest on available methods and procedures for estimating carbon emissions from Day deforestation and forest degradation. The document builds upon existing UNFCCC approved methodologies, scientific consensus on remote sensing methods, and provides additional explanation, clarification and enhanced methodologies for obtaining key data.

Chair: Martin Herold 12.00 – 12.15 Background and scope of the sourcebook (Martin Herold) 12.15 – 12.30 Monitoring deforestation (Ruth DeFries) 12.30 – 12.45 Monitoring forest degradation (Carlos Souza Jr.) 12.45 – 13.00 Monitoring and estimating changes in forest carbon stocks (Sandra Brown) 13.00 – 13.15 Guidance on reporting (Giacomo Grassi) 13.15 – 13.30 Review process and discussions (Martin Herold & Frederic Achard)

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change 2. Forests, Climate Change and the Forest Industry – The Business Perspective Introduction International Council of Forest and Paper Association (ICFPA) & World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD) Location: Banda Room

One of the key themes in COP13 will be the various roles of forests and forestry in climate change, which are extensively discussed in chapter 9 of the fourth assessment report (Working Group III). Sustainable forest management, including afforestation and reforestation, are key themes as are the activities of the forest industry sector. The forest industry (private forest owners, forest products companies) has several roles in the climate change debate. One role is as an eco-efficient user of energy and responsible manager of greenhouse gasses emissions. Others include sustainable forest management, producers of wood- based products and enablers of new technologies for biofuels, bio-chemicals, etc. These different roles of the forest industry in climate change are expanding and becoming clearer as the scientific and policy debates develop; including in wood products, the deployment of intensively managed 11 planted forests to meet expanded demand for fiber (for products and energy) Forest and the production of bio-energy/fuels. Day The goal of this side event is to present the business perspective on forests, forestry and climate change. This side event will aim at introducing the industry and presenting the latest studies and material on these different roles. The side event will combine presentations, an expert panel and audience discussion in order to be able to explore some shared conclusions on the future role of the sustainable forest products industry.

Chair: To Be Confirmed 12:00 – 12:10 Welcome and introductions. Introducing the forest based sector and its different roles in climate change (ICFPA, TP) The profile 12:10 – 12:30 Key-note:The Carbon profile of the global forest sector (Reid Milner, NCASI) 12:30 – 12:40 Questions and answers (Panel) Specific focus: Forests and bio-energy 12:40 – 12:50 Global view: Forests and bio-energy (Wulf Kilmann, FAO) 12:50 – 13:00 Enabler of bio-energy: EU Bio-energy impact assessment (Marco Mesink, CEPI)

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Panel 13:00 – 13:20 Panel discussion (Panel)

13:20 – 13:30 Sustainable forest product industry/Recommendations and conclusions (James Griffiths, WBCSD)

3. Carbon Emission Abatement Costs from Reduced Deforestation Alternatives to Slash and Burn/World Agroforestry Center (ASB/ICRAF) Location: Legian Room

Interest in REDD was strengthened in 2006 with the release of the Stern Report on the Economics of Climate Change. From an analysis of the economics of various emission sources, Sir Nicholas Stern and his colleagues concluded that reducing emissions from tropical deforestation could be one of the most cost-effective ways to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions. Other efforts to aggregate the marginal costs of avoided deforestation with other sources of GHG emission 12 reduction have yielded variable results, with avoided deforestation ranging Forest from very inexpensive to relatively expensive. There is an urgent need to refine Day estimation methods and generate estimates for the wide range of conditions that exist across the humid tropics. Working at sites across the tropical forest margins, the ASB partnership has produced some of the most reliable and widely-used sources of information on carbon stocks associated with alternative land uses. In a new study, researchers from a number of national and international organizations have built on previous ASB results and methods to produce estimates of the carbon emissions and economic returns to land associated with land use change in sites in Indonesia, Peru, Brazil and Cameroon. Preliminary results from those studies, as well as studies of the abatement costs associated with community forestry, will be presented and discussed.

Chair: Brent Swallow (ICRAF) 12.00 – 12.10 REDD and the Challenges of estimating abatement costs for avoided deforestation (Brent Swallow, ICRAF) 12.10 – 12.20 Returns to land and comparative abatement costs in mixed land use systems in Cameroon (ASB team member from Cameroon) 12.20 – 12.30 Landscape Analysis of Abatement Cost in the Philippines: The Lantapan ASB Case Study (Rodel Lasco, ICRAF) 12.30 – 12.40 Estimated investments required to avoid deforestation in the Amazon: A Peruvian perspective (Miguel Barandiaran, INIA)

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change 12.40 – 13.00 Landscape-level analysis of abatement costs in four landscapes in Indonesia (Meine Van Noordwijk, ICRAF) 13.00 – 13.10 Abatement costs of avoiding emissions from forest degradation (Margaret Skutsch, University of Twente) 13.10 – 13.30 Roundtable Discussion and Implications

4. Drivers of Deforestation and Implications for Incentive Schemes Max-Planck-Institute, Germany (MPI) Location: Grand Ball Room B

Quantitative relationships between national circumstances, socio-economic and political drivers of deforestation are shown at national and subcontinental level. However, every country has its own specific history and situation. Clustering of countries to define reduction ambitions is therefore inappropriate. What does this complex situation mean for international negotiations? Countries need to find their own appropriate ways to fight the causes of deforestation but require sustained incentives to keep up the national success of REDD. An incentive 13 mechanism focused on emission reductions will fail to be effective in the mid- Forest term. Day

Chair: Annette Freibauer (MPI) 12.00 – 12.05 Drivers of deforestation and implications for incentive schemes: Introduction (Annette Freibauer, Max-Planck-Institute for Biogeochemistry, Germany) 12.05 – 12.20 Correlations between national circumstances and deforestation: common regional patterns (Michael Hüttner, Max-Planck-Institute for Biogeochemistry, Germany) 12.20 – 12.35 Governance and socio-economic drivers of deforestation (Gisleine Cunha Zeri, Max-Planck-Institute for Biogeochemistry, Germany)

12.35 – 12.50 Uncertainties at country-level and implications for design options of incentive schemes (Anke Herold, Öko-Institut, Germany)

12.50 – 13.05 Why incentives purely based on emission reductions will fail (Annette Freibauer & Danilo Mollicone, Max-Planck-Institute for Biogeochemistry) 13.05 – 13.30 Discussion

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change 5. The Future of the Land Use Sector in Carbon Markets EcoSecurities (ES) Location: Kuta Room

With the spotlight of international attention currently being on discussions about avoided deforestation (REDD) issues, this side event intends to discuss the importance of forest establishment (reforestation, forest restoration and revegetation) next to forest conservation in climate change mitigation. The event will be initiated with a presentation that serves as a starting point for an extensive panel discussion. The presentation will provide an overview about the past and present of CDM and JI forestry projects and analyse the experiences up to now. An outlook on future challenges in the land use sector (i.e. forest establishment and forest conservation) under a post-Kyoto regime will initiate a panel discussion between high-level land use experts from the private, public, policy and NGO sectors. The outcome will be a collection of views and opinions on the future of the land use sector as a whole, and the identification of challenges, based on 14 past experiences, which should be addressed and considered in any future international regime. The message is that land-use projects under Kyoto have so Forest Day far been a failure, whereas in voluntary markets they constitute a considerable share of projects. The discussion should yield ideas about what is needed to improve political and institutional conditions for land use projects that also go beyond afforestation and reforestation in a Post-Kyoto regime.

Chair: To Be Confirmed 12.00 – 12.25 Lessons learned from forestry land use projects under Kyoto and challenges ahead 12.30 - 13.30 Panel discussion: • Why was AR-CDM a failure? • What can be done to improve the situation? • Is reforestation important at all with a view to CC mitigation effectiveness? • What is the future of land use projects? (reforestation /REDD/ adaptation) • What are the co-benefits of LU projects • How can adaptation benefits be used to leverage additional funds or incentives for LU carbon projects (or vice versa)?

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change 6. Linking Decision-Making with Knowledge about Forest Adaptation to Climate Change – the Contribution of the Joint CPF Initiative on Science and Technology International Union of Forest Research Institutions (IUFRO) Location: Sanur Room

Current climate change policies and measures tend to focus on mitigation. Yet, even with mitigation in place, measures and policies will need to be developed to enable the adaptation of forests to current and projected changes in climate. In this context, the Collaborative Partnership on Forests’ Joint Initiative on Science and Technology aims to provide international decision makers with state-of- science information on the impacts of climate change on forest ecosystems, their capacity to adapt and their vulnerability. For this purpose, an international “Expert Panel on Adaptation of Forests to Climate Change” has been established to carry out a comprehensive assessment of available scientific information and prepare a report for use by international fora, including the UNFFs, the Convention on Biological Diversity and the UNFCCC. During this side-event, participants will be informed about the activities of 15 the Expert Panel on Adaptation of Forests to Climate Change up to the year 2009. Forest In addition, the side-event will provide a forum for internationally renowned Day policy makers and scientific experts to discuss the “adaptation imperative”, and how the assessment report can best support the work of the UNFCCC on adaptation to climate change.

Chair: Dr. Peter Mayer (IUFRO) 12:00 – 12:10 Forests and climate change – information needs of the UNFF (Ghazal Badiozamani, United Nations Forum on Forests).

12:10 – 12:20 Forests, climate change and biodiversity – information needs of the CBD (Jaime Webbe, Convention on Biological Diversity). 12:20 – 12:35 Forests in a Changing Climate - Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability (Prof. Andreas Fischlin, WG II of the IPCC 4th Assessment Report). 12:35– 12:50 Mainstreaming Adaptation into Development – The Contribution of the Tropical Forests and Climate Change Adaptation (TroFCCA) Project (Dr. Johnson Ndi Nkem, CIFOR) 12:50 – 13:05 The Joint Initiative on Science and Technology and the Expert Panel on Adaptation of Forests to Climate Change (Alexander Buck, IUFRO). 13:05 – 13:30 Discussion forum and policy consultation on: The Expert Panel on Adaptation of Forests to Climate Change and the UNFCCC.

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change 7. SFM for REDD - From Acronyms to Implementation in the Tropics International Tropical Timber Organization (ITTO) Location: Bali Room

The purpose of this Side Event is to share ITTO’s experience in enhancing sustainable tropical forest management in connection with reducing emissions from deforestation in developing countries in the tropics (REDD). Specifically, the Event intends to introduce the concepts of sustainable forest management in relation to REDD. These concepts will be illustrated by means of specific examples of concrete ITTO field projects. In addition, a tropical perspective of combating deforestation under the UNFCCC will be presented.

Chair: Emmanuel Ze Meka (ITTO)

12.00 – 12.05 ITTO’s experience in promoting SFM in the tropics (Emmanuel Ze Meka, ITTO) 12.05 – 12.25 Keynote Address: Governor Eduardo Braga (Amazonas State, 16 Brazil). Payment of Environmental Services and Conservation in Forest Amazonas, Brazil (with Prof. Virgilio Mauricio Viana, Secretary of Day State for Environment and Sustainable Development of the State of Amanonas, Brazil).

12.25 – 12.40 Sustainable Forest Management as a tool for reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (Dr. Jürgen Blaser, Intercooperation, Switzerland). 12.40 – 12.50 Forest Canopy Density Mapping: Climate Change Mitigation, Forest Landscape Restoration and Sustainable Forest Management, Philippine Experience (Dr. Merlinda R. Manila, DENR, the Philippines). 12.50 – 13.00 Strengthening forest law enforcement in the Republic of Congo through remote sensing technology and information systems (Susan Minnemeyer, World Resources Institute). 13.00 – 13.30 Questions and Answers

8. Maximizing Multiple Benefits for Climate, Communities and Biodiversity from Forest Carbon Projects Climate, Community and Biodiversity Alliance (CCBA) Location: Samudra Room Forest carbon projects, including avoided deforestation, reforestation and afforestation activities, are increasingly being recognized as a crucial component of any strategy to comprehensively address climate change. Forests also provide

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change many other extremely valuable services such as water regulation, soil protection and ecotourism opportunities, often vital elements for sustainable development. In addition, many of the rural poor in developing countries rely on forest products for their livelihoods, food, shelter and medicines. Forests are dynamic ecosystems that sustain society, both physically and spiritually and are bastions of biodiversity, sustaining a myriad of animals and plants, including most of the species threatened with extinction. Integrated and sensitive design can ensure that forestry projects deliver robust carbon offsets while also supporting sustainable development and biodiversity conservation. This side event will bring together a panel of leading experts and practitioners to share their on-the- ground experience and useful tools for developing forest carbon projects that maximize climate, community and biodiversity benefits.

Chair: Joanna Durbin (CCBA) 12.00 – 12.10 Introduction to optimizing multiple benefits for from forest carbon markets (Joanna Durbin, CCBA) 12.10 – 12.20 Key issues surrounding land-based carbon from a market perspective 17 (Eric Bettelheim, SFM) Forest 12.20 - 12.30 Investor interest in multiple-benefit forest carbon (Anna Lehmann, Day 3C) 12.30 - 12.40 The role of the Climate, Community & Biodiversity Standards (Jeffrey Hayward, Rainforest Alliance) 12.40 - 12.55 Making markets work for poverty alleviation: experiences from Indonesia and Guatemala (Charles Ehrhart, CARE)

12.55 - 13.10 Innovative revenue sharing between Government and communities: Makira project, Madagascar (Christopher Holmes, WCS)

13.10 - 13.25 Discussion – lifting the barriers, raising the bar and catalysing the carbon markets for multiple benefits 13.25 - 13.30 Conclusions and recommendations (Joanna Durbin, CCBA)

9. Estimating REDD and Afforestation Carbon and Economic Benefits, and Addressing Implementation Issues Lawrence Berkeley National Labs (LBNL) Location: Lombok Room

An integrated set of presentations in two sessions on REDD and afforestation, addressing: how remote sensing and forest carbon estimation is performed; tools available for screening terrestrial carbon intervention candidate locations;

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change the implications of competing baseline establishment methods; the potential quantities and costs and locations of interventions; options to address leakage and additionality and non-permanence in REDD programs; and estimating the demand for reductions.

Co-chairs: Jayant Sathaye and Ken Andrasko

12.00 – 12.10 Introduction 12.10 – 12.25 What tools are available for projecting baseline emissions for deforestation? (Sandra Brown) 12.25 – 12.40 Addressing Permanence, Additionality and Leakage in an International REDD Agreement (Brian C. Murray) 12.40 – 12.55 Assessing Comparative Advantage and Leakage in Emission Reductions from Deforestation (Brent Sohngen) 12.55 – 13.10 GHG Mitigation Potential in Global Forests: Role of transaction 18 costs and alternative baselines (Jayant Sathaye) Forest 13.10 – 13.30 Discussion Day 10. Sustainable Forest Management and Climate Change Mitigation - Building on Past Experience Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) Location: Cigar Room

This side event will provide an overview of the experience in sustainable forest management that can be applied to the challenges of climate change mitigation, particularly reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation in developing countries. It will consider technical tools and mechanisms, governance and legal frameworks, livelihood concerns, financial considerations and capacity strengthening needs in key areas, including forest law enforcement, forest fire management, reforestation and forest landscape restoration, protected area management, and reduced impact logging. It will also highlight key intersectoral issues to be addressed, particularly related to agriculture. Existing tools, mechanisms and partnerships that can support forestry efforts in climate change mitigation will be highlighted. This side event will include presentations from FAO and various partner institutions working to strengthen SFM in developing countries.

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Chair: Susan Braatz (FAO) 12.00 – 12.10 Perspectives on Forests and Climate Change Mitigation (Susan Braatz, FAO). 12.10 – 12.20 Forest Monitoring and Assessment for Climate Change Reporting (Peter Holmgren, FAO). 12.20 – 12.30 Civil Society’s Essential Involvement for Successful Government Policy Implementation (Bachrianto Bachtiar, South Sulawesi Coalition for Forest). 12.30 – 12.40 Codes and Guidelines for Sustainable Forest Management (Patrick Durst, FAO). 12.40 – 12.50 Best Practices for Improving Law Compliance in the Forest Sector (Steven Johnson, ITTO). 12.50 – 13.00 The Non-Legally Binding Instrument on All Types of Forest (Peter Csoka, UNFF Secretariat). 13.00 – 13.30 Discussion 19 Forest 11. Carbon Market & Other Funding for Reducing Emissions from Tropical Day Deforestation Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) Location: Sumba Room

Reducing emissions from deforestation will require substantial funding, both for the development of tropical nations’ technical capacities and to outweigh the opportunity costs of land uses other than forests. Although the carbon market is a leading prospect for providing this funding, it’s not yet clear what level of financial flows it can be expected to provide, how this level compares to official development assistance and other funding alternatives, and how all these flows compare to the needs. This session will present several analyses, both regional (e.g. Amazon) and global, of these amounts, based on economic analyses of the supply curves of REDD credits. The results should provide the basis for choosing funding alternatives and for evaluating whether REDD credits will be either so few as to have little impact on deforestation, or so many that they could swamp carbon markets and reduce emissions reductions in industrial and energy sectors. Their importance for policy is thus very great.

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Chair: Douglas H. Boucher (UCS) 12.00-12.15 The costs and benefits of reducing carbon emissions from deforestation and forest degradation in the Brazilian Amazon (Daniel Nepstad, Woods Hole Research Center). 12.15-12.30 Carbon Price Impacts on Land Investment at the Forest Frontier (Marisa Meizlish, New Forests).

12.30-12.45 Private sector requirements for REDD credit trading & lessons learnt from the market for LULUCF credits (Anna Lehman, 3C Group AG). 12.45 – 13.00 The Dual Markets Approach to Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (Ned Helme, Center for Clean Air Policy). 13.00 – 13.15 Supply and Demand of REDD Credits and Other Funding Sources: A review of the literature (Douglas H. Boucher, Union of Concerned Scientists). 20 13.15 – 13.30 General discussion Forest Day 12. The Forests Now Declaration - Forests Now in the Fight Against Climate Change Global Canopy Program (GCP) Location: Grand Ball Room A

Presenting the ‘Forests Now Declaration’ on behalf of over 200 leading individuals and organizations from the worlds of science and conservation that have endorsed the Declaration. ‘Forests Now’ calls on Governments to act to put tropical forests higher on the international climate change agenda. This side event will give a platform to high-level speakers from across the tropics (SE Asia, Brazilian Amazon and Congo Basin) to discuss: forests and the climate change debate; additional ecosystem services forests provide that remain undervalued; addressing deforestation to help alleviate poverty; and the need to reform carbon markets to help provide the additional sustainable sources of finance required to halt deforestation.

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Chair: Andrew Mitchell (GCP) Introduction. The Forests Now Declaration: Broad-based support for action on Forests Now 12.00 – 12.20 From Brazil to Bali: Overview and Statements in support of the Forests Now Declaration (Andrew Mitchell, Global Canopy Programme & Dr. Antonio Donato Nobre). Political Perspectives 12.20 – 12.30 The Political Perspective: Views from Amazonas State Government, Brazil (Govenor Braga, Amazonas State or Professor Virgilio Viana, Secretary for Environment and Sustainable Development, Amazonas State, Brazil). 12.30 – 12.40 The Political Perspective: Views from the Congo Basin Forests (Political representative from Congo DRC, tbc). 12.40 - 12.50 The Political Perspective: Views from the Coalition For Rainforest Nations (Kevin Conrad, Coalition for Rainforest Nations). 21 Financial Perspectives Forest 12.50 - 13.00 Why forests need markets NOW (Eric Bettelheim, Sustainable Day Forestry Management). Panel Discussion: The Case for the Carbon Markets 13.00 - 13.30 The risks and rewards of bringing forests to the carbon markets NOW: Andrew Mitchell (Chair), Antonio Donato Nobre (INPA, Brazil); Kevin Conrad (Coalition for Rainforest Nations); Govenor Eduardo Braga (Amazonas State) or Virgilio Viana (Secretary for Environment and Sustainable Development, Amazonas State, Brazil); Representative of Congo DRC; Eric Bettelheim (Sustainable Forestry Management).

13. High Conservation Value (HCV) Forests and Land Use Planning for REDD High Conservation Value Forest Resource Network (HCVF-RN) Location: Octopus Room

Sustainable land use planning requires a landscape level approach that integrates environmental and socio-cultural values with economic needs. At the level of Forest Management Units or forest set-asides within production landscapes, understanding and managing the full range of conservation values is critical to long-term sustainability, including risk assurance against the loss or degradation of forest carbon assets.

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change The HCV framework provides a flexible toolkit to identify, map, manage and monitor the critical conservation values present in a forest area (see www.hcvnetwork.org), including species biodiversity, endangered habitats, landscape level ecosystems, ecosystem services, basic needs of forest-dependent communities, and cultural identity values. The HCV concept originated in FSC forest certification, but is now widely applied in other contexts, including notably in land use planning, in the RSPO principles and criteria for sustainable palm oil production, in responsible investment and purchasing policies, and in conservation advocacy. Landscape level HCV assessments combined with ecosystem carbon asset analysis can help national policy makers, REDD investors and land use managers to identify the multiple ecosystem values, balance cost-benefit decisions of land use options, and control risk within managed landscape units.

Chaired by: Rod Taylor (TBC) 12:00 - 12:10 Introduction to High Conservation Value Forests (Christopher Stewart, 22 HCV RN Secretariat). Forest 12:10 - 12:30 The HCV Framework and land use planning for REDD (Ruth Day Nussbaum, HCV RN Secretariat). 12:30 - 12:50 HCVF and standard setting for forest carbon projects (Ken Creighton/ Martin Walter, WWF).

12:50 - 13:00 HCVF case studies, Indonesia (Gary Paoli, Indonesian Resource Institute , tbc). 13:00 - 13:05 FSC Viewpoint on HCVF (Nina Haase, FSC). 13:05 - 13:10 TNC Viewpont on HCVF (Ben Jarvis, TNC). 13:10 - 13:15 World Bank Viewpoint on HCVF (Gerhard Dieterle). 13:15 - 13:20 Forest Peoples’ Programme Viewpiont on HCVF (Marcus Colchester). 13:20 - 13:25 WWF viewpoint on HCVF (Rod Taylor TBC). 13:25 - 13:30 Panel Q&A

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Session 3: Cross-Cutting (14.00-15.30)

1. Setting the Baseline and Estimating Forest Carbon – Methodological Challenges Location: Grand Ballroom A Facilitator: Bernhard Schlamadinger (TerraCarbon LLC, USA/Austria)

Panel Member Organization Ruth De Fries Department of Geography and Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center, University of Maryland, USA Sandra Brown Winrock International, USA Lucio Pedroni Tropical Agricultural Research and Higher Education Center, 23 Costa Rica Forest Peter Holmgren Food & Agriculture Organization of the UN, Italy Day

Time Description 14.00 – 14.05 Introduction of panelists 14.05 – 14.30 Opening questions addressed to panel 14.30 – 15.15 Discussion, questions delivered to panel members, input from cards 15.15 – 15.30 Final comments from panel

Illustrative Issues to be addressed • What new methods of analysis in forest assessment are feasible for the setting of acceptable and credible reference levels? • How could historical data be used to set reference levels? Should socio- economic modeling be used? • How can REDD payment schemes be constructed in terms of baselines and verification to address issues such as perverse incentives and leakage? • Should forest degradation be included in an accounting system to address sustainable forest management and changes in carbon stocks, rather than forest cover only?

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change • How can we cost-effectively increase the accuracy of carbon emission estimates for peatlands? Can we use modeling and other indirect (e.g. IPCC tier 1 and 2) approaches? • What is the appropriate level of participation for local forest agents, actors and beneficiaries in developing and implementing these methods? • In light of these discussions, what are the key issues for the research agenda? Where are the research gaps?

2. Markets and Governance - Can We Make Them Work? Location: Grand Ballroom B Facilitator: Josef Leitmann (The World Bank, Indonesia)

Panel Member Organization

Virgilio Viana Secretary of Environment and Sustainable Development for Amazonas State, Brazil Benoit Bosquet The World Bank, USA 24 Luca Tacconi Australian National University, Australia Forest Day Agus Sari (tbc) EcoSecurities, Indonesia

Time Description

14.00 – 14.05 Introduction of panelists 14.05 – 14.30 Opening questions addressed to panel 14.30 – 15.15 Discussion, questions delivered to panel members, input from cards 15.15 – 15.30 Final comments from panel

Illustrative Issues to be addressed • Under what conditions can REDD mechanisms compete or synergize with other global and local economic interests driving forest landscape transformation and forest resource use? • What have been the lessons learned from early attempts to bring forests into global carbon markets? • What are the most important opportunities and risks of REDD from the perspective of the international investment community, and from the perspectives of local stakeholders in forested areas? • What are the implications for how to structure international markets for forest carbon, and national-level REDD strategies?

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change • What are the challenges in linking sub-national level REDD initiatives to national and global regimes? • How can REDD initiatives be designed to address rather than be hindered by chronic governance challenges such as incomplete decentralization and illegal logging? • In light of these discussions, what are the key issues for the research agenda? Where are the research gaps?

3. Efficiency vs Equity - What are the Trade Offs and Can they be Managed? Location: Octopus Room Facilitator: Stewart Maginnis (International Union for the Conservation of Nature, Switzerland)

Panel Member Organization Peter A Minang World Agroforestry Centre, Kenya Jürgen Blaser Intercooperation, Switzerland 25 John O. Niles Carbon Conservation, Australia Forest Chris Karamea Insley 37 Degrees South, New Zealand Day

Time Description 14.00 – 14.05 Introduction of panelists 14.05 – 14.30 Opening questions addressed to panel Discussion, questions delivered to panel members, input 14.30 – 15.15 from cards 15.15 – 15.30 Final comments from panel

Illustrative Issues to be addressed • To what extent can REDD rules and procedures be simplified to enhance participation by the poor, while ensuring adequate safeguards and accountability? • What lessons may be learned from the Clean Development Mechanism (e.g., transaction costs, conditions for and distribution of the rights to sell)? • How can national and sub-national payment regimes be constructed to efficiently and cost-effectively deliver reduced carbon emissions in ways that promote improved equity and governance? • How should REDD strategies be balanced across “quick fix” emission reduction opportunities vs. embarking upon societal-scale changes to ensure the success of REDD measures in the long term?

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change • At what scale should REDD measures be implemented (e.g. international, national, regional?) to effectively manage the trade-offs between efficiency and equity? • In light of these discussions, what are the key issues for the research agenda? Where are the research gaps?

4. Adaptation to Climate Change - Achieving Increased Resilience and Livelihood Improvements Location: Samudra Room Facilitator: Ibrahim Thiaw (United Nations Environment Programme, Kenya)

Panel Member Organization Thomas Downing Stockholm Environmental Institute, UK Carmenza Robledo Intercooperation, Switzerland Youba Sokona The Sahara and Sahel Observatory, Tunisia 26 Rodel Lasco World Agroforestry Centre, The Philippines Forest Day Time Description 14.00 – 14.05 Introduction of panelists

14.05 – 14.30 Opening questions addressed to panel 14.30 – 15.15 Discussion, questions delivered to panel members, input from cards 15.15 – 15.30 Final comments from panel

Illustrative Issues to be addressed • What are the necessary forms of external support required to enable the benefits of forest-related adaptation efforts to reach the poor? Atwhat cost? • How can adaptation methods increase flexibility in forest management and respond to the environmental and social pressures that increase vulnerability? • Can we develop “no regrets” livelihood strategies based on sustainable forest management that are beneficial to development regardless of the magnitude of future changes in climate?

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change • What are the agro-ecological activities and management practices that communities can adopt to improve resilience and forest-based goods and services in the face of climate change? • How can policies to promote REDD maximise opportunities for adaptation to climate change and generate new assets and income for the rural poor? • In light of these discussions, what are the key issues for the research agenda? Where are the research gaps?

27 Forest Day

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change SessionParallel 4: Side Events (16.00-17.30)

1. Appropriate Tools and Incentives are Required to Optimize Potential Biodiversity Benefits of REDD Convention on Biological Diversity Secretariat (SCBD) Location: Grand Ball Room B

This side event will present experiences from a wide range of projects that have created win-win situations for biodiversity conservation and carbon sequestration, and will present tools to optimize biodiversity benefits of REDD mechanisms. The event will also give stakeholders an opportunity to discuss possible ways and means to optimize biodiversity benefits of REDD.

28 Chair: Ms Jaime Webbe (SCBD) Forest 16:00 – 16:10 Introduction/Role of the CBD in supporting biodiversity co-benefits Day of REDD (Jaime Webbe, CBD Secretariat) 16:10 – 16:25 Introduction to the Forest Carbon Partnership Facility & Possibilities for integration of biodiversity aspects (Benoit Bosquet, Senior Natural Resources Management Specialist, The World Bank) 16:25 – 16:40 The Great Apes Survival Project – Identifying win-win areas (Ibrahim Thiaw, United Nations Environment Programme) 16:40 – 16:50 Can carbon concerns save Borneo’s forest wildlife? (Erik Meijaard, The Nature Conservancy) 16:50 – 17:00 Ensuring Multiple Benefits from Forest Carbon Markets: Integrating Mitigation, Adaptation, Biodiversity Conservation and Poverty Alleviation (Celia Harvey, Conservation International)

17:00 – 17:30 Panel discussion

2. Perspectives Toward Healthy Tropical Forest Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute (FFPRI) Location: Kuta Room

This side event will promote practical activities in the forest sector after the first period of the Kyoto Protocol. It must be necessary to tackle the global warming problem by integrating all the knowledge in forest science and management.

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change This session will present the situation and future perspectives on forests, forest products and social systems as well as forest information systems. The results should contribute in promoting better understanding of forest functions from various points of view, which will bring about future guidelines for the global warming problem.

Chair: Takeshi Toma (FFPRI) 16.00 – 16.05 Opening Remark (Haruo Sawada, FFPRI) 16.05 – 16.20 Operational role of remote sensing to the forest and landscape management (Gen Takao, CIFOR) 16.20 – 16.35 Local Community Forest Management Practices for Global Environmental Balance (Mustofa Agung Sardjono, UNMUL) 16.35 – 16.50 Importance of plantation wood resources in Southeast Asia (Koichi Yamamoto, FFPRI)

16.50 – 17.05 JICA Mangrove Project in Bali (Hiroyuki Hatori, JICA) 29 17.05 - 17.20 Monitoring the fragile mangrove ecosystem: Impact of tsunami Forest and recovery (Ryuichi Tabuchi, FFPRI) Day 17.20 - 17.30 Discussion

3. Estimating Carbon Stocks in Forested Landscapes Alternatives to Slash and Burn / World Agroforestry Center (ASB / ICRAF) Location: Lombok Room

Any mechanism for Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) will need to give high priority to measurement of carbon stocks. Any REDD mechanism that will be implemented through the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change will need to be expressed in terms of quantities of carbon emissions. This is a formidable challenge. The IPCC National Guidelines for Greenhouse Gas inventories (modified in 2006) indicate 60% uncertainty in estimates of changes in country-wide carbon stocks, the larger uncertainty in quantification in GHG emissions. There are many sources of uncertainty. For example, research just published in the journal Forest Ecology and Management shows that over-estimation of wood density has resulted in a systematic upward bias in estimates of carbon emissions from land use change in the Brazilian Amazon. Land use classification is another potential source of error.

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Chair: Daniel Murdiyarso (CIFOR)

16.00 - 16.15 Overview of the measurement challenges (Daniel Murdiyarso, CIFOR Indonesia). 16.15 - 16.30 New National-Level Estimates of Tropical Forest Carbon Stocks (Holly Gibbs, University of Wisconsin-Madison). 16.30 - 16.45 Optimizing land and forest classification in GIS analysis – Case Studies from Indonesia (Sonia Dewi and Meine Van Noordwijk, ICRAF). 16.45 - 17.00 Where does uncertainty stem from? Strategies for more accurate estimation of wood density for carbon pool assessment in tropical forests (Johannes Dietz, Max Plank Institute). 17.00 - 17.30 Roundtable discussion of measurement issues involving the presenters and representatives of national organizations.

30 4. Biofuel for Climate Change Mitigation and Sustainable Development? A Legal Perspective on the Opportunities and Challenges of Biofuel in Forest Developing Countries Day International Development Law Organization - Asia Pacific Regional Center (IDLO-APRC) Location: Moyo Room

Biofuel, as an alternative to fossil fuel, is increasingly considered part of the new sustainable, low-carbon economic model in developing countries. However, few alternative energy sources have attracted as much controversies as biofuel, including its impact on forests and biodiversity, and there is an evident lack of clarity on the actual benefits and risks associated with biofuel. This session proposes an overview of the potential benefits and challenges associated with the development of biofuel in developing countries in terms of climate change mitigation and ecological, social and economic sustainability, and how this may relate to the rule of law and good governance.

Chair: Patricia Parkinson (IDLO)

16.00 – 16.20 Good governance, the rule of law and sustainable development of biofuel in developing countries (Patricia Parkinson) 16.20 – 16.40 UNFCCC versus CBD – Indonesian response to alternative energy (Laode M. Syarif) 16.40 – 17.00 Biofuels and Sustainable Development - Issues for indigenous peoples and local communities (Emily Gerrard)

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change 17.00 - 17.20 Biofuels and carbon markets – Current situation and perspectives (Marc Pop) 17.20 - 17.30 Q & A

5. Synergies Between the Rio Conventions - Carbon Forestry Projects that Contribute to Biodiversity Conservation and Combating Degradation EcoSecurities Location: Samudra Room

• Technical overview of possibilities for forestry projects to provide multiple ecosystem services. • Technical aspects of designing ecosystem services projects. • Developments of markets for ecosystem services. • Opportunities (or constraints) to link carbon markets with markets of other ecosystem services. • Concrete experiences of projects with multiple payment schemes. 31 • Contribution of markets for ecosystem services to sustainable forest Forest management and conservation. Day • Mechanisms that payments for ecosystem services provide for forestry activities, and to the contributions of such activities to the objectives of the three Rio Conventions.

Chair: Carmenza Robledo (Intercooperation) 16.00 - 16.15 Designing ecosystem services projects: The supply side (Sabine Henders, EcoSecurities) 16.15 - 16.30 Marketing of ecosystem services: The demand side’s perspective (Joachim Sell, Factor Consulting) 16.30 – 16.45 Conservation Carbon: Combined Ecosystem Services (Charlotte Streck, Climate Focus) 16.45 – 17.00 Payments for biodiversity: Piloting methodologies for biodiversity offsetting (Annelisa Grigg, Fauna & Flora International)) 17.00 – 17.15 Gyuana Shield Initiative and Additionality of REDD (tbc) 17.15 – 17.30 Discussion

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change 6. Making REDD Work for the Poor Poverty and Environment Partnership (PEP) Location: Grand Ball Room A

The impacts of deforestation extend beyond biodiversity loss and increased greenhouse gas emissions. The livelihoods of many of the world’s poorest people are strongly linked to both the clearing and conservation of forested ecosystems. Mechanisms for REDD will thus have far-reaching economic implications. Rural communities rely heavily on the use of timber and non-timber resources from forests, as well as the conversion of forests to agriculture and other uses. Forest ecosystem services such as water supply and crop pollination likewise play a key role in supporting rural livelihoods. While the rural poor depend heavily on forests, in some contexts their poverty has also been identified as a significant driver of deforestation. Inevitably, any efforts to reduce deforestation and forest degradation, as a means to mitigate climate change and conserve biodiversity, must address the complex linkages between forests and poverty.

32 Chairs: Joshua Bishop (IUCN) and Charles McNeill (UNDP) 16.00 – 16.05 Introduction to the Poverty and Environment Partnership (PEP) Forest David McCauley (ADB) Day 16.05 – 16.15 Presentation of the background paper Joshua Bishop (IUCN) 16.15 – 16.25 Key features of REDD Michael Dutschke (BioCarbon.net) 16.25 – 16.35 Forests, poverty, and implications for REDD – Leo Peskett (ODI) 16.35 – 17.25 Panel discussion – Lessons learned from related experiences • The Coalition for Rainforest Nations – Kevin Conrad • Protected Areas – Lera Miles (UNEP-WCMC) • Indigenous Peoples Rights – Marcus Colchester (FPP) • Carbon Market – Eric Bettleheim (SFM Ltd.) • Forest Carbon Partnership Facility – Benoît Bosquet (WB) • Experiences in forest management: o Africa – Peter Minang (ICRAF) o Amazon – Jan Borner (CIAT) o Indonesia – Mubariq Ahmad (WWF) 17.25 – 17.30 Looking ahead – livelihood risks and opportunities from REDD Joshua Bishop (IUCN) and Charles McNeill (UNDP)

7. Sustainable Forests and Carbon Management Global Environment Facility (GEF) Location: Sumba Room

Present and future management of land and forest resources will be of critical importance in shaping future climate regimes. However, the accurate and cost- effective measurement of carbon fluxes in land-use and forestry remains an

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change important challenge. This side event, sponsored by the GEF and the Government of Japan, will focus first on contributions for improving forest management in developing countries through Japan’s Advanced Land Observing Satellite (ALOS) system. It will then introduce the GEF’s new cross-cutting Sustainable Forest Management Program (SFM) and the climate change program focusing on Land Use, Land-Use Change and Forestry (LULUCF). Discussion will link land-use changes, forest management, and the accurate measurement of carbon fluxes in developing countries.

Co-chair: Dr. Richard Hosier (GEF) & Dr. Mitsuo Matsumoto (FFPRI)

16.00 - 16.05 Introduction to GEF Sustainable Forest Management Program (Richard Hosier, Climate and Chemicals)

16.05 – 16.10 Introduction to Japanese activities for development and utilization of land observation technologies for Sustainable Forest Management (Dr. Mitsuo Matsumoto, FFPRI) 16.10 – 16.15 Japan’s ongoing actions and future strategies for enhancing sustainable forest management in developing countries (Yoshitsugu 33 Minagawa, Forestry Agency Japan) Forest 16.15 - 16.25 GEF’s Programmatic Investment in Sustainable Forest Management Day (Gustavo Fonseca, Natural Resources Management Team) 16.25 - 16.35 Kyoto and Carbon Project: A Global forest and environmental monitoring using the ALOS PALSAR (Masanobu Shimada, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) 16.35 - 16.45 Carbon Benefits: Modeling, Measurement, and Monitoring Project (Maryam Niamir-Fuller, UNEP-DGEF) 16.45 - 16.55 Challenges to evaluate reduced emission from deforestation and forest degradation using satellite in Southeast Asia (Dr. Yasumasa Hirata, Shikoku Research Center of FFPRI) 16.55 - 17.25 Q and A session 17.25 - 17.30 The GEF side (Dr. Richard Hosier) & the Japanese side (Dr. Mitsuo Matsumoto)

8. Old Subject, New tricks? How will Existing Forestry Institutions Deliver Climate-Conscious Forest Management? World Resources Institute (WRI) Location: Sanur Room

Rapid deforestation and unsustainable forest management are among the main environmental concerns of the last 30 years—yet despite decades of

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change attention by multilateral organizations, research institutions and international conventions, success has been limited and many regions continue to face the same challenges. Now, the climate issue has brought forests to the forefront of the world’s attention. Deforestation and land-use change are the second leading causes of global warming, accounting for one-fifth of global carbon emissions and over one-third of emissions from developing countries. Can the need to mitigate climate change be used to bring about a positive change in forest management? Or will a carbon-centric view of forests bring about unintended consequences, mitigating climate change at the expense of other forest values? This side event will juxtapose the emerging needs and opportunities of the climate sector with the existing institutions of the forestry sector, asking whether – and how – the latter can mobilize the flexibility and cooperation that is needed to combine climate mitigation with sustainable forest management, including good governance, poverty alleviation and maintenance of ecosystem services.

Chair: Jonathan Pershing (WRI) 34 16.00 – 16.10 Setting the stage on REDD and institutions (Jonathan Pershing, Forest Director Climate and Energy program, World Resources Day Institute) 16.10 – 16.15 Current and future forest cover changes in Southeast Asia (Hans-Jürgen Stibig, Joint Research Centre of the European Commission) 16.20 – 17.15 Panel Discussion: Jan Heino (UN FAO); Benoit Bosquet (World Bank); Dr. Boen Purnama (Ministry of Forestry of Indonesia); Kevin Conrad (Papua New Guinea); Eduardo Reyes (Panama); James Griffiths (World Business Council for Sustainable Development) 17.15 – 17.30 Conclusions and wrap up (Jonathan Pershing)

9. Reducing Emissions from Deforestation in Developing Countries (REDD) - Concept and Practical Efforts Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) Location: Bali Room

Although Reducing Emissions from Deforestation in Developing Countries (REDD) stands for a new approach, important lessons can be learnt from forest protection and sustainable forest management projects. The side event will present a concept for the design of country-based pilot programs for REDD, which will be based for one side upon the considerable

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change knowledge and experience that has been gathered on drivers and causes of deforestation and forest degradation, and in particular from implementation of ODA financed projects in the forest sector. In the main part of the side event, first experience and lessons learnt from several ongoing pilot projects will be explained by various speakers from the respective organizations. As distinct from most industrial mitigation activities, REDD will require a coordination between different levels of governance of the implementing country as well as with the various organizations supporting and financing REDD activities. Due to the diverse regional and national circumstances in tropical countries, there is obviously no one-size-fits-all approach to REDD. However, a stepwise approach towards development of REDD pilot projects can be proposed and will be presented during the side event.

Chair: To Be Confirmed 16.00 – 16.10 REDD pilot projects in German development cooperation (Frank Hoffmann, German Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development, BMZ) 35 16.10 – 16.25 REDD Pilot Project implementation in Cameroon for COMIFAC Forest (Dr. Thomas Haeusler, GAF-AG) Day 16.25 – 16.40 Degradation detection at different spatial scales: Preliminary results from a feasibility study (Dr. Rolf Wachholtz, Integrated Expert CIM, Superintendencia Forestal, Bolivia & Joerg Seifert- Granzin, Integrated Expert CIM, FAN Bolivia) 16.40 – 16.50 The Madagascar REDD project (Monique Radiharsoa, MINENVEF/ GIC/PGDRN/ESSA Forêts) 16.50 – 17.00 Biomass inventory methods, deforestation factors and baseline development in Madagascar (Dr. Manja Reuter, Institute for World Forestry, Germany) 17.00 – 17.30 Discussion (Panellists and Moderator, tbc)

10. Boreal Forests Role in Fighting Climate Change Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) Location: Banda Room

The Natural Resources Defense Council proposes to host a discussion on the social and livelihood implications of the Boreal forest, a critical carbon storehouse, as a defense against climate change. The side-event will include presentations and discussion concerning climate change and the Boreal forest and on related strategies for avoiding deforestation and land use change in a Boreal

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change forest ecosystem. Total carbon emissions from forestry have been estimated at 20-25% of CO2 emissions. To date, tropical forests have been the main focus of forest-related climate change research. However, there are a growing number of organizations and scientists looking at the complex role that Boreal forests have to play as a defense against climate change, as part of the discussion around adaptation, social implications, and impacts. The workshop will include speakers from the perspective of science, policy, indigenous communities and advocacy to discuss the role of Boreal forests in combating climate change and in moving forward on implementation of the UNFCCC.

Chair: Susan Casey-lefkowitz (NRDC) 16.00 – 16.20 Role of Global Boreal Forest in Climate Regulation 16.20 – 16.40 Canadian Aboriginal Communities: On the Climate Frontline 16.40 – 17.00 Boreal Forest Conservation and Bali: Looking Forward 17.00 – 17.30 Moderated Group Discussion 36 Forest Day 11. Experiences in National-Level Deforestation Baseline Analysis Conservation International (CI) Location: Cigar Room

This side event is designed to present and facilitate discussion around experiences in national-level deforestation baselines. Our event would include a summary of technical issues associated with developing national-level deforestation baselines, but will focus more on practical examples of national-level work done so far, with specific commentary on existing capacity in several developing countries. Examples will likely include work by Conservation International in supporting the Bolivian and Madagascar governments in producing national historical baselines of deforestation and explanation of deforestation monitoring in the Central Africa Regional Program for the Environment (CARPE), as well as others. This side event will be in partnership with NASA-supported University programs, and University and NGO partnerships in forest monitoring with the FOMAS program in the Indonesian forestry agency. Presenters will include Marc Steininger of Conservation International and Matthew Hansen of South Dakota State University.

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Chair: Marc Steininger 16.00 – 16.05 Introduction (Marc Steininger) 16.05 – 16.25 Progress and examples of national baselines of tropical deforestation (Marc Steininger) 16.25 – 16.30 Questions 16.30 – 16.50 Monitoring deforestation and selective logging in the Brazilian Amazon (Carlos Souza) 16.50 – 16.55 Questions 17.55 – 17.15 Monitoring forest clearing in Indonesia and the Congo Basin (Matthew Hansen & Belinda Arunarwati) 17.15 – 17.30 Discussion (all presenters)

12. Getting Ready for the Forest Carbon Market The World Bank (WB) and Ministry of Forestry, Indonesia 37 Location: Legian Room Forest Day Chair: Gerhard Diertele (WB) 16.00 – 16.10 Setting the Stage for the Global REDD Process (Werner Kornexl, World Bank) 16:15 – 16:25 Readiness Process in Indonesia (Dr. Nur Masripatin, Ministry of Forestry, Indonesia) 16:30 – 16:45 Developing Country Perspective on Readiness (N.N.) 16:50 – 17:00 The Role of NGOS in the Implementation of the Readiness Phase (Duncan Marsh, The Nature Conservancy) 17:05 – 17:15 Complementarities between the FCPF and the GIFC (Robin Davies, AusAID) 17:15 – 17:30 Discussion

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Session 5: Closing Plenary (17.45-18.15) SUMMARY OF FOREST DAY Frances Seymour (Indonesia) Director General, Center for International Forestry Research

RESPONSE TO FOREST DAY Roberto Acosta Coordinator of our Adaptation, Technology and Science Programme UN Framework Convention on Climate Change

CLOSING REMARKS 38 CEOs of Collaborative Partnership on Forests • Emmanuel Ze Meka (Japan) Forest Day Executive Director, International Tropical Timber Organization • Don K. Lee (Austria) President, International Union of Forest Research Organizations • Others to be confirmed

INVITATION TO RECEPTION Boen Purnama (Indonesia) Secretary General, Ministry of Forestry of the Republic of Indonesia; Chair, Eight UN Forum on Forestry Bureau.

Forest Day has been launched to provide an interactive forum through which a broad cross-section of stakeholders can engage in dialogue and debate around forests and climate change. The Closing Plenary will bring together participants to report on findings from the day, including areas of consensus, as well as those areas where opinions diverge. Frances Seymour, Director General, CIFOR, will present a summary report, which will then be responded to by Yvo De Boer, Executive Secretary, UNFCCC, and other panellists. In drawing together the major outputs of Forest Day, the Closing Plenary will help to pave the way for a successful, post-2012 forest and climate agenda, by identifying and clarifying key issues to feed into the official COP.

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change List of Poster Presentations

1. Carbon Forestry in Rural Tanzania: Local & Institutional Perceptions of Risk & Benefit Author/s: Alexander Bozmoski & Nathan Hultman Presented by: Alexander Bozmoski Institution: Georgetown University

2. How Could Redd Credits Compete with Palm Oil? Author/s: Alexandra Morel & Prof. Benoit Morel Presented by: Alexandra Morel Institution: Environmental Change Institute, University of Oxford

3. Tools for Designing & Monitoring Forest CDM Projects Author/s: Álvaro Vallejo & Bruno Locatelli Presented by: Álvaro Vallejo 39 Institution: Global Change Group, CATIE Forest 4. “The Accounting Matters”- California’s Protocols for Natural Managed Forests Day Author/s: Andrea Tuttle & Laurie Wayburn Presented by: Andrea Tuttle Institution: Pacific Forest Trust

5. Educating Forest and Tree Managers to Meet Future Challenges Author/s: Meine Van Noordwijk & Agust Temu Presented by: Meine Van Noordwijk Institution: World Agroforestry Center

6. RAFT – Recognizing the Importance of Sustainable Management of Asia’s Forest Resources Author/s: Ben Jarvis Presented by: RAFT Team Institution: The Nature Conservancy

7. The Role of Tropical Forests Ii Adaptation to Climate Change in Central America Author/s: C.J. Perez, B. Locatelli, R. Vignola & P. Imbach Presented by: Carlos J Perez Institution: Tropical Agricultural Research and Higher Education Center

8. Coastal Peatswamp Forest Value in Aceh: Carbon, Biodiversity & Tsunami Author/s: D. Ruysschaert, I. Singleton, J-F Van Belle, A. Fahmuddin & S. Rizal

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Presented by: Denis Ruysschaert Institution: Paneco Foundation

9. Carbon Earnings: A Good Deal for Landowners, but for Others? Author/s: D. White, M. Quintero, M. Rondon, S. Cajas, A. Rincon, C. Rodriguez, R.D. Estrada, M.I. Toro, M. Hurtado, J. Martinez, N. Uribe Presented by: Douglas White Institution: International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT)

10. Promoting Ecosystem Integrity, Conserving Carbon Storage Through Integrated Management of Peat Swamp Forests Author/s: K. A. Hamzah, A. R. Nik & Efransjah Presented by: Khali Aziz Hamzah Institution: Forest Research Institute, Malaysia (UNDP/GEF Funded Project)

11. Impacts, Vulnerability & Adaptation to Climate Change of Local Communities In Bukidnon, Philippines Author/s: F. B. Pulhin, R. D. Lasco & M.V.O. Espaldon 40 Presented by: Florencia B. Pulhin Institution: University of the Philippines Los Banos Forest Day 12. Assessment of Forest Cover Changes in French Guiana Using Satellite Imagery: Lessons for a Post 2012 Redd Regime Author/s: Frédéric Achard Presented by: Frédéric Achard Institution: Institute For Environment And Sustainability, joint Research Center of the European Commission

13. Biofuel Expansion in the Tropics May Increase Global Warming Author/s: H. Gibbs, M. Johnston & J. Foley Presented by: Holly Gibbs Institution: University of Wisconsin-Madison

14. PhD Research: Corporate Forests, Ideologies and Cultural Institutions Author/s: Jennifer Gabriel Presented by: Jennifer Gabriel Institution: James Cook University, Cairns (Australia)

15. Monitoring Pan-tropical Deforestation and Aboveground Biomass Using ALOS/ PALSAR Author/s: Josef M. Kellndorfer, Daniel Nepstad, Nadine Laporte, Wayne Walker, Claudia Stickler, Paul Lefebvre Presented by: Josef M. Kellndorfer, Ph.D. Institution: The Woods Hole Research Center

16. Satellite Images: An Extensive Support to Climate Change Local Issues Author/s: Louis-françois Guerre & Ghislain Gonzales

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Presented by: Louis-françois Guerre & Ghislain Gonzales Institution: Spot Image

17. Peatland Degradation is Climate Change. A Burning Issue! Author/s: Wetlands International Presented by: Marcel Silvius Institution: Wetlands International

18. Kyoto and Carbon Project - A Global Forest & Environmental Monitoring Using the ALOS PALSAR Author/s: Masanobu Shimada & Ake Rosenqvist Presented by: Masanobu Shimada Institution: Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency

19. Simply REDD? Comparing Baseline Methods for Avoided Deforestation Author/s: Michael Huettner Presented by: Michael Huettner Institution: Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry

20. A Carbon Monitoring System for Tropical Countries - Congo Case Study Author/s: N. Laporte, A. Baccini, S. Goetz, W. Walker, J. Stabach, 41 R. A. Houghton, J. Ipalaka & V. Kasulu Presented by: Nadine Laporte, Scott Goetz Forest Institution: Woods Hole Research Center Day

21. Staying on the REDD List: Forest-dependent Communities’ Adaptation to Climate Change Author/s: Robert Oberndorf, J.D. & Naomi Sleeper Presented by: Robert Oberndorf, J.D. Institution: Regional Community Forestry Training Center for Asia and the Pacific (RECOFTC)

22. Creating Market-based Tools for Verifying Carbon Sequestration with FSC Author/s: Nina Haase & Andre Defreitas Presented by: Nina Haase Institution: Forest Stewardship Council

23. Carbon Inventory Methods Handbook for Greenhouse Gas Inventory, Carbon Mitigation and Roundwood Production Projects Author/s: Ravindranath N. H. & Ostwald M. Presented by: Ravindranath N. H. & Ostwald M. Institution: Center For Ecological Sciences, Institute of Science, Earth Sciences Center, Göteborg University

24. Potential & Dynamic of Carbon Sequestration in Forests & Timber (CSWH) Author/s: Michael Köhl & Bernhard Kenter Presented by: Sebastian Rüter Institution: University of Hamburg, Center for Wood Sciences

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change 25. Forestry, Resilience & Climate Change: Three African Community Case Studies Author/s: S. Vermeulen, K. Dossou, D. Walubengo, E. Nangoma & D. Macqueen Presented by: Sonja Vermeulen Institution: International Institute for Environment and Development

26. Payments for Avoided Deforestation in Brazil: Some Emerging Initiatives Author/s: Jan Börner & Sven Wunder Presented by: Jan Börner & Sven Wunder Institution: Amazon Initiative & CIAT

27. Green Renaissance Author/s: Tanya Alwi Presented by: Jeni Pareira & Gabriel Eickhoff Institution: Borneo Tropical Rainforest Foundation (BTRF)

28. Brazil Rainforest Water Program Author/s: W. Manfrinato, M. Simoes, J. Ometto, P. Gallo, M. Bezerra & T. M. Pinto 42 Presented by: Warwick Manfrinato Institution: Plant Inteligência Ambiental Forest Day 29. Assessing Bioenergy Options Through Smallholder Agroforestry: The Case of Jatropha Curcas Author/s: H. Baur, B. Swallow, M. Van Noordwijk & V. Meadu Presented by: B. Swallow, M. Van Noordwijk & V. Meadu Institution: World Agroforestry Center (ICRAF)

30. Can Carbon Markets Save the Orangutan? Author/s: Erik Meijaard & Paul Hartman Presented by: Erik Meijaard Institution: OSCP and TNC

31. Vulnerability and Adaptation of Upland Communities to Climate Variability and Extremes in Pantabangan-carranglan Watershed, Philippines Author/s: J. M. Pulhin, R. D. Lasco, R. V. Cruz, F. Pulhin, R. J. Peras Presented by: Dr. Florencia B. Pulhin Institution: University of the Philippines, Los Baños & ICRAF Philippines

32. Risk And Responsibility in REDD Author/s: Leo Peskett Presented by: Leo Peskett Institution: Overseas Development Institute (ODI)

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change 33. Forestry, Resilience & Climate Change: Three African Community Case Studies Author/s: S. Vermeulen, K. Dossou, D. Walubengo, E. Nangoma & D. Macqueen Presented by: Sonja Vermeulen Institution: International Institute for Environment and Development

33. Community Based Swamp Forest Management in Air Hitam (Black Water) Ecosystem, South Barito Regency, Kalimantan Author/s: Damayanti Buchori Presented by: Damayanti Buchori Institution: Yayasan Kehati (Indonesian Biodiversity Foundation)

34. Avoiding Degradation and Deforestation through Ecosystem Restoration Author/s: Yoppy Hidayat Presented by: Yoppy Hidayat Institution: Burung Indonesia (Birdlife Indonesia Programme)

35. Climate Change – The Decay of the Cedar in the Atlas of Morocco Author/s: Dr Adil Said, Badraoui M., Omerani A. & Assali F. Presented by: Dr Adil Said 43 Institution: Water, Forestry And Desertification Department (DlCDPN) Forest Day 36. Climate Change And Livelihoods – Impacts and Responses in Developing Countries Author/s: Carmenza Robledo & Livia Greco Presented by: Carmenza Robledo & Tamara Levine Institution: Intercooperation

37. Mitigation Options in The Forestry Sector in A Post 2012 Agreement - From Quantifying Potential To Changing Landscapes Author/s: Carmenza Robledo & Livia Greco Presented by: Carmenza Robledo & Tamara Levine Institution: Intercooperation

38. Combating Global Warming Author/s: I. Bernstein, L. Halem, D. Yakir, I. Moshe, C. Sahar Presented by: Iris Bernstein Institution: Keren Kayemeth Leisrael (KKL)

39. Mawas - A New Model for Poverty Alleviation Based Nature Conservation Author/s: Tities Puspita Presented by: Aldrianto Priadjati & Pandu B. Wahono Institution: The Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation (BOS)

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change List of Exhibitions

No Organization Contact Name 1. CarbonFix Standard Moriz Vohrer 2. Federal Research Centre for Forestry and Forest Dr. Manja Reuter Products (BFH) – future Johann Heinrich von Thünen Institute 3. Asian Young Leaders Climate Forum (AYLCF) Christopher Palmer 4. WWF Indonesia Fitrian Adriansyah 5. Australian Community Development and Civil I Komang Budinanta 44 Society Strengthening Scheme (ACCESS) Forest 6. Global Canopy Programme (GCP) Katherine Secoy Day 7. Consultative Group on International Agriculture Laura Ivers Research (CGIAR) 8. International Tropical Timber Organization (ITTO) Steven Johnson 9. The World Conservation Union (IUCN) Stewart Maginnis 10. Tropenbos International Wendelien Ordelman 11. United Nations Forum on Forests(UNFF) and Peter Csoka Collaborative Partnership on Forests (CPF) 12. Deutsche Gesellschaft fuer Technische Heiner Von Luepke Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) 13. Down to Earth Betty Tiominar 14. Heart of Borneo Initiative (HoB) Wisnu Rusmantoro 15. Perhimpunan Pelestari Burung dan Habitatnya William Rombang (Burung Indonesia) 16. World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF) Tikah Atikah 17. Regional Community Forestry Training Center For Naomi Sleeper Asia and The Pacific (RECOFTC)

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Floor Map

45 Forest Day Guidelines: Side Events

Please take care to read the following guidelines regarding Side Events at Forest Day, to be held at Ayodya Hotel, Nusa Dua, Bali, 8 December 2007.

• Please bring the collection of all presentations, in CD-ROM format, to Forest Day organizers ahead of time. Present these to the CIFOR booth at UNFCCC venue (number tbc), between 3-7 December (10.00 – 15.00), or to the Forest Day registration booth at Ayodya Hotel, Nusa Dua, on Friday 7 December, between 17.00 – 19.00. • Please ensure that you write your name, side event room and title, as well as a contact mobile number, on your CD ROM. • Side event organizers are responsible for communicating logistical 46 arrangements and requirements to the panelists and participants for their events. Organizers or Chairs should arrange to meet with panelists ahead of Forest time and arrive at their side event room at least 15 minutes early to set up. Day • Please start and finish each session on time (each side event has been allocated 90 minutes). A facilitator or time keeper for each session should be assigned. • Side event organizers are responsible for the distribution – and disposal – of any relevant print outs, presentation materials, timetables, fliers, banners etc and to promote their own event. • Organizers should also assign a rapporteur to cover their event if desired. Feedback forms will be available and can be submitted to the Forest Day Secretariat. • Each room will be equipped with a laptop, an LCD and a flip chart with papers. Forest Day organizers will provide signs for each room, featuring the Event title and organization acronym only. • Attempts will be made to accommodate the layout needs of each side event, however Forest Day organizers reserve the right to alter meeting room set-up and arrangements without prior notice to side event organizers. • CIFOR is not responsible for arranging accreditation to UNFCCC COP 13 official events.

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Guidelines: Poster Presentations

• There will be no oral presentation of posters, however there should be a presenter to stand by the poster from 9.00am until 10.00am, and from 11.30am until 12.00 midday, in order to offer more information to interested parties. • Each presenter is responsible to print their poster. Printing should be 150cm x 90 cm, (portrait layout). • Presenters must deliver their poster to Forest Day organizers in one of two ways: i. Bring to the CIFOR booth (number tbc) inside the UNFCCC BICC, Nusa Dua, between 03-07 December (10.00 – 15.00). ii. Bring to the Forest Day registration booth at the Ayodya Hotel, Nusa Dua, on Friday 07 December, between 17.00-19.00. 47 • Forest Day organizers will be responsible for putting up the posters for display. Posters will be mounted on free-standing panels provided by the organizers. Forest • Posters must be collected by presenters - if they wish to take them away - Day from 18.30, Saturday 8 December. Any remaining posters will be disposed of.

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Guidelines: Exhibitions

The standard allocation per booth is 2m x 3m, including the following specifications: • R-8 aluminium system, plywood patision, covered with white polycon. • The organization’s acronym will be included on the fascia with vinyl cutting sticker. • 1 x 40-watt fluorescent lamp and mcb panel 2a. • 1 x reception desk (50x100x70cm) and 2 x folding chairs. • Additional equipment may be organized independently with the exhibitors ([email protected]) after liaison with CIFOR ([email protected]). • Booth organizers may begin installation on 7 December at 20:00, and are solely responsible for the installation, dismantling and disposal of any 48 redundant exhibit goods, documents, brochures, posters etc. • Dismantling will take place on Saturday 8 December, at 19:00, to make way Forest for the next exhibitors. Day Contact the Forest Day team • Side Events: Rachel Carmenta, +62(0)81317364905 • Exhibition and Poster Session: Yani Saloh, +62(0)811853462 • Financial Matters: Popi Astriani, +62(0)818466094 • Registrations and Media: Budhy Kristanty, +62(0)816637353 and Nia Sabarniati, +62(0)8161816 896 • E-mail: [email protected]

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change List of Participants

Sure Name First Name Institution Country 1. Amalia Rina AusAID Australia 2. Anne Casson Sekala Australia 3. Babon Andrea n/a Australia 4. Balding Reena Department of Agriculture Fisheries & Australia Forestry, Australian Embassy 5. Campbell Bruce CIFOR Australia 6. Cecys Kate Australian Government Department of Australia the Environment and Water Resouces 7. Davies Robin AusAID Australia 8. Defegely Rob Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd Australia 9. Dibley Arjuna Australian National University Australia 10. Fulton Deborah AusAID Australia 49 11. Gabriel Jennifer James Cook University Australia 12. Gerrard Emily Australia Forest 13. Hoath Aileen Curtin University ofTechnology Australia Day 14. Jack Tony Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd Australia 15. Jackson Mark The Carbon Pool Pty Ltd Australia 16. Kneen Cameron Australia 17. Mackey Brendan Australian National University Australia 18. Meizlish Marisa New Forests Pty Limited Australia 19. Milne Christine IUCN Australia 20. Parkinson Patricia International Development Law Organi- Australia zation (IDLO) 21. Pop Marc Global Carbon Exchange Australia 22. Sungkar Dorjee carbon conservation Australia 23. Tacconi Luca Austalian National University Australia 24. Tipping Melissa AusAID Australia 25. Williams Guy tda Environmental Consulting Australia 26. Buck Alexander IUFRO Austria 27. Heinrich Georg Austria 28. Mayer Peter IUFRO Austria 29. Al-Amin M. Institute of Forestry and Environmental Bangladesh Sciences Chittagong University Chit- tagong 4331 30. Arfeen Shamim AOSED-An Organization for Socio-Eco- Bangladesh nomic Development 31. Fouji Fouji Ecological Society of Bangladesh Bangladesh

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Sure Name First Name Institution Country 32. Mensink Marco ICFPA (International Council of Forest Belgium and Paper Associations) 33. Merckx Valérie European Commission - DG Environ- Belgium ment 34. Presas Teresa CEPI Belgium 35. Seifert-Granzin Joerg Integrated Expert CIM, FAN Bolivia Bolivia 36. Wachholtz Rolf Superintendencia Forestaj, Bolivia Bolivia 37. Adario Paulo Greenpeace Brazil 38. Boerner Jan Amazon Initiative/ CIAT Brazil 39. Braga Eduardo Amazonas State Government Brazil 40. Carvalho Claudio EMBRAPA Brazil 41. Cenamo Mariano IDESAM Brazil 42. Cornacchioni Luiz Antonio Suzano Papel e Celulose Brazil 43. Ehringhaus Christiane CIFOR Brazil 44. Klabin Israel Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd Brazil 45. Manfrinato Warwick PLANT - Inteligencia Ambiental Brazil 46. Manfrinato Warwick Plant Environmental Inteligence Brazil 47. Nobre Antonio National Institute for Research in the Brazil Amazon 48. Ometto Jean PLANT - Inteligencia Ambiental Brazil 49. Pavan Mariana IDESAM Brazil 50. Porro Roberto ICRAF/LA (AI) Brazil 50 51. Viana Virgilio Department of Environment and Sustain- Brazil able Development, Amazonas State Forest Government Day 52. Wunder Sven Amazon Initiative/ CIAT Brazil 53. Idinoba Monica CIFOR Burkina Faso 54. Kalame Fobissie CIFOR Burkina Faso 55. Nikema Mariam Giu Burkina Faso 56. Ouedrago Bernadette Del- Burkina Faso phine 57. Sawadogo Bobodo Blaise Burkina Faso 58. Sedogo Laurent Burkina Faso 59. Zongo Isidore Burkina Faso 60. Gladis Djeuteu Cameroon 61. Martin Tchienkoua IRAD Cameroon 62. Sonwa Denis J. IITA Cameroon 63. Tchienkoua Martin Institut de Recherche Agricole pour le Cameroon Dévéloppement (IRAD) 64. Berman Tzeporah ForestEthics Canada, a project of Sage Canada Centre 65. Graham Peter Natural Resources Canada Canada 66. Leblanc Etienne Radio-Canada Canada 67. Park Diane Canada 68. Rosser Tom Forest Products Association of Canada Canada 69. Sowards Wayne Shell Canada Energy, Oil Sands Canada 70. Tony Lempriere Natural Resources Canada Canada 71. Webbe Jaime Secretariat of the Convention on Biologi- Canada cal Diversity

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Sure Name First Name Institution Country 72. Alejandro Sarasti Independent Columbia 73. Ehrlich Marco Conservation International Columbia 74. Martinez Claudia Columbia 75. White Douglas The Tropical Soil Biology and Fertility Columbia Institute of CIAT (TSBF) 76. Mayet Alexis Développement Local Actions et Initia- Congo tives 77. Perez Carlos J. Tropical Agricultural Research and Costa Rica Higher Education Center -CATIE- 78. Suarez Irene The Nature Conservancy Costa Rica 79. Ehrhart Charles CARE International Denmark 80. Fauerby Thomsen Morten CARE International Denmark 81. Franks Phil CARE International Denmark 82. Iversen Peter Ministry of the Environment Denmark 83. Moestrup Søren University of Copenhagen Denmark 84. Rankenberg Jaeger Michael EC-Indonesia FLEGT Support Project Denmark 85. Alemneh Molla Volunteers Initiatives for Health and Ethiopia Education Association 86. Glover Edinam Faculty of Law, University of Helsinki, Finland Finland 87. Lounela Anu Siemenpuu Finland 88. Miettinen Otto Finland 89. Bertault Jean-Guy CIRAD France 51 Cirad Resident Regional Director for Insular Southeast Asia Forest 90. Bouyer Olivier Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry France Day 91. Gonzales Ghislain Spot Image France 92. Guerre Louis-François Spot Image France 93. Kanounnikoff Dimitri French Development Agency France 94. Loiseau Bertrand Agence Francaise de Développement France 95. Loyer Denis Agence Francaise de Développement France 96. Quincieu Eric Global Carbon Exchange France 97. Stach Vnicolas INVENTAIRE FORESTIER NATIONAL France 98. Wertz Sheila Institut du Developpement durable et France des relations internationales (Iddri) 99. Cunha Zeri Gislein Max-Planck-Institute for Biogeochemistry Germany 100. Dietz Johannes Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry Germany (MPI) 101. Dutschke Michael Biocarbon consult Germany 102. Freibauer Annette MPI Germany 103. Fuhr Lili Refentin Internationale Politik/ Depart- Germany ment Head International Politics, Hein- rich-Boll-Stiftung 104. Haase Nina Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) Germany 105. Hahn Hans-Joachim MPI Germany 106. Herold Anke Öko-Institute Germany 107. Hoffmann Frank German Ministry for Economic Coopera- Germany tion and Development, BMZ 108. Huettner Michael MPI Germany 109. Jung Martina Ecofys Germany

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Sure Name First Name Institution Country 110. Krug Joachim BFH (German Federal Research Centre Germany for Forestry and Forest Products) 111. Lehmann Anna 3C Consulting GmbH Germany 112. Liebig Lars BFH Hamburg Germany 113. Lorenz Wolfram STORMA Germany 114. Pino Delicia MPI Germany 115. Reuter Manja FRCFFP Germany 116. Roehr Ulrike genderCC - Women for Climate Justice Germany 117. Rueter Sebastian Federal Research Centre for Forestry and Germany Forest Products (FRCFFP) 118. Thies Christoph Greenpeace International Germany 119. Vohrer Moriz CarbonFix e.V. Germany 120. von Luepke Heiner GTZ Germany 121. Walter Martin Germany 122. Wolf Reinhard GTZ Germany 123. Abedi Vincent Mark Ghana COCOBOD Ghana 124. Ayensu Edward Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd Ghana 125. Blay Dominic Forestry Research Institute Of Ghana Ghana 126. Weise Stephan International Institute for Tropical Agri- Ghana culture 127. Singh Joe Conservation International Guyana 128. le Clue Sophie ADM Capital Foundation Hong Kong 52 129. Chaudhary Nitin Winrock International India 130. D’Souza Ozmond roshan Department of Political Science, Univer- India Forest sity of Hyderabad Day 131. Lourdusamy Antonysamy CEDA TRUST-TNEC India 132. Mehra Satya Prakash WWF-India India 133. Nallathambi Rajendraprasad CEDA TRUST-TNEC India 134. Ravindranath N.H Centre for Ecological Sciences India Indian Institute of Science Bangalore 135. Sivasubramaniam Alagesan Centre for Rural Education and Develop- India ment, India 136. Thomas Binu PNGSSS India 137. Munawir Center for Water and Land Resources Indonesia Management, LP3ES 138. Jafri Down to Earth Indonesia 139. Harrianto Member, Board of Trustees PERUM Indonesia PERHUTANI 140. Harianto Perum Perhutani Indonesia 141. Wardoyo Indonesia 142. Rufii Indonesia 143. Samedi WWF - Indonesia Indonesia 144. A. Lumiu Gustaaf KEHATI Indonesia 145. Abdiyani Susi Forestry Research Institute of Solo Indonesia 146. Achmad Kosasih Dian WWF - Indonesia Indonesia 147. Achyar Eris South Sumatra Forest Fire Management Indonesia Project (SSFFMP) at South Sumatra Province

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Sure Name First Name Institution Country 148. Adhar Abbas APKINDO Indonesia 149. Adhiati Maria Adriana Sri Down to Earth Indonesia 150. Affianto Agus Info Jawa Indonesia 151. Afriyanti Dian PT Wirakarya Sakti Indonesia Forestry Division of Sinar Mas Group

152. Agista Dian Burung Indonesia Indonesia 153. Agung Sardjono Mustofa Mulawarman University Indonesia 154. Agus Fahmuddin AARC/CRIFC Indonesia 155. Ali Rohman Mohamad Assisting with Gabriel Thoumi’s Erb Insti- Indonesia tute for Global Sustainability project 156. Aliadi Arif Lembaga Alam Tropika Indonesia Indonesia 157. Alwi Tanya Borneo Tropical Rainforest Foundation Indonesia 158. Andya Nugraha Andya Burung Indonesia Indonesia 159. Anggraini Rika KEHATI Indonesia 160. Ardiansyah Fitrian WWF - Indonesia Indonesia 161. Ariaini Nancy WWF Indonesia Indonesia 162. Arumsari Mutiara British Council Indonesia 163. Arunarwati Belinda World Bank Indonesia 164. Astriani Popi CIFOR Indonesia 165. B. Wahono Pandu BOS Foundation Indonesia 166. Bakhtiar Irfan Partnership Indonesia 167. Barr Chris CIFOR Indonesia 53 168. Bason Donald OCSP Indonesia Forest 169. Bayu Basuki Rangga Yayasan Akasia Indonesia Indonesia Day 170. Berliani Hasbi Partnership Indonesia 171. Brockhaus Maria CIFOR Indonesia 172. Buchholz Georg SMCP GTZ Indonesia 173. Buchori Damayanti KEHATI Indonesia 174. Budi Wahono Pandu BOS Foundation Indonesia 175. Budinata I Komang Australian Community Development Indonesia and Civil Society Strengthening Scheme (ACCESS) 176. Cahyadin Yusup Yayasan Konservasi Ekosistem Hutan Indonesia Indonesia (KEHI) 177. Cahyo Adi Nur WWF - Indonesia Indonesia 178. Cannucciari Paola EcoBali Indonesia 179. Carmenta Rachel CIFOR Indonesia 180. Clayton Lynn University of Oxford Indonesia Wildlife Conservation Research Unit and Nantu Forest Conservation Pro- gramme, Sulawesi 181. Clough Greg CIFOR Indonesia 182. Cronin Timothy CIFOR Indonesia 183. CT Riyanto Marcellus Adi Yayasan Badak Indonesia (YABI) Indonesia 184. Danang R. Sudjiwahono PT Sekishin Farina Wood Indonesia Indonesia 185. Deli Rusyda WWF Indonesia Indonesia 186. Dermawan Ahmad CIFOR Indonesia 187. Djojosoekarto Agung Partnership Indonesia

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Sure Name First Name Institution Country 188. DP Sudradjat MASYARAKAT PERHUTANAN INDONE- Indonesia SIA (MPI) 189. Edhi Fithria Yayasan Akasia Indonesia Indonesia 190. Efrizal Efrizal Adil Pekat Indonesia Foundation Indonesia 191. Eickhoff Gabriel Borneo Tropical Rainforest Foundation Indonesia 192. Eka Dinata Andree ICRAF Indonesia 193. Ekawati Purba Rasita ACCESS Indonesia 194. Exploitasia Indra MoF Indonesia Indonesia 195. Fahmuddin Agus Indonesian Soil Research Institute Indonesia 196. Finneren David P.T. Minaca Selaras Indonesia 197. Firdaus Yan Bandung Institute of Technology/ITB Indonesia 198. Fitri Efi APKINDO Indonesia 199. Fritz Christian PATT Foundation Indonesia Indonesia Representative www.plant-a-tree-today.org 200. Gea Gunung EC-Indonesia FLEGT Support Project Indonesia 201. Goehler Daniela GTZ Indonesia 202. Grant Adam Indonesia 203. Guizol Philippe CIFOR Indonesia 204. Gunarso Petrus Tropenbos International Indonesia Indonesia 205. Gunawan Irwan WWF Indonesia Indonesia 206. Hailu Michael CIFOR Indonesia 54 207. Handadari Transtoto MoF Indonesia Indonesia Forest 208. Hanif Fathi Institut Hukum Sumberdaya Alam (IHSA) Indonesia Day 209. Hardjono Ratih Indonesian Community for Democracy Indonesia 210. Harianto Kasudjono Telagamas Group Indonesia 211. Harianto Surya Telagamas Group Indonesia 212. Harkonen Juhani EC-Indonesia FLEGT Support Project Indonesia 213. Haroen Harmidy APKINDO Indonesia 214. Hartman Paul OCPS Indonesia 215. Hasibuan Rita CIFOR Indonesia 216. Hatori Hiroyuki JICA Project: Sub-sectoral Programme on Indonesia Mangrove 217. Hayati Utami Nurul Transparency International Indonesia Indonesia 218. Hayu Wibawa Down to Earth Indonesia 219. Heffern Lucille CIFOR Indonesia 220. Hendratno Noor PT Hendratna Plywood Indonesia 221. Herawati Hety CIFOR Indonesia 222. Herlianti Indriani ITB Indonesia 223. Hermawan Indrabudi MoF Indonesia Indonesia 224. Hideta Tomohiko Japan International Cooperation Agency Indonesia (JICA) 225. Himayati Laily UNDP Indonesia 226. Hutabarat Silver MoF Indonesia Indonesia 227. Imansyah M Jeri Komodo Survival Program Indonesia 228. Ing Hong Kah PT Sekishin Farina Wood Indonesia Indonesia 229. Iskandarsyah Yudi TNC Indonesia 230. Ismawati Iis ITB Indonesia

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Sure Name First Name Institution Country 231. Ismuranty Christien KEHATI Indonesia 232. Iwai Nobuo JICA Indonesia 233. Jarvis Benjamin TNC Indonesia 234. Jasmina Feri Public Indonesia 235. Joko Tri Indonesia 236. Jones Loy Rainforest Alliance, PT SmartWood Indonesia 237. Jong Ho Kim CIFOR Indonesia 238. Josef Leitmann World Bank Indonesia 239. Justianto Agus MoF Indonesia Indonesia 240. Kamsi Yuda ITB Indonesia 241. Kanninen Markku CIFOR Indonesia 242. Karyaamatmadja Basoeki MoF Indonesia Indonesia 243. Karyaatmadja Basoeki MoF Indonesia Indonesia 244. Katerere Yemi CIFOR Indonesia 245. Kemp Nev Conservation International Indonesia 246. Kieft Johan CARE International Indonesia 247. Koestowo Robianto APKINDO Indonesia 248. Kopetski Mike CIFOR Indonesia 249. Kristanty Budhy CIFOR Indonesia 250. Kristiar Budi APKINDO Indonesia 251. Kurniawan Riko Down to Earth Indonesia 252. Langford Kate ICRAF Indonesia 55 253. Leitch James PT Sekishin Farina Wood Indonesia Indonesia 254. Liswanto Darmawan FFI Indonesia Program Indonesia Forest 255. Lorenzo Eliezer P RIAU Pulp Indonesia Day 256. Lucky Dina British Council Indonesia 257. MacTavish Jinty British Council Indonesia 258. Mahajaya Krisdeni ACCESS Indonesia 259. Mamahit Markus Othniel WANADRI (Mountain and Jungle Ex- Indonesia plorer Association) 260. Mangkudisastra Chaerudin MoF Indonesia Indonesia 261. Manurung E.G. Togu MoF Indonesia Indonesia 262. Manurung Yusriani Pusat Telaah dan Informasi Regional Indonesia 263. Mariati Sri WWF Indonesia Indonesia 264. Marsiana Indra Marsiana Burung Indonesia Indonesia 265. Marthy William Burung Indonesia ( Indonesia 266. Maryati Evie WWF - Indonesia Indonesia 267. Masli Novrida UNDP Indonesia 268. Masripatin Nur MoF Indonesia Indonesia 269. McKingley Marcus Canopy International Foundation Indonesia 270. Meijaard Erik TNC-OCSP Indonesia 271. Micski Jozsef EC-Indonesia FLEGT Support Project Indonesia 272. Miyakawa Hideki JICA Indonesia 273. Moehayat Praminto Burung Indonesia Indonesia 274. Momberg Frank Fauna & Flora International Indonesia 275. Muaya Jackie KEHATI Indonesia 276. Muhtaman Dwi Aksenta Consulting Group Indonesia

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Sure Name First Name Institution Country 277. Mujahidul B. Wildan Burung Indonesia Indonesia 278. Mukti Wibowo Prabianto ASEAN Secretariat Indonesia 279. Mulyanto Iswan Budhi Raitours & Travel Bali Indonesia 280. Mulyatno Soeprapto PT Sarang Sapta Putra Indonesia 281. Mulyjanto Seopratto Indonesia 282. Murdiningrum Yustina PALMA Indonesia 283. Murdiyarso Daniel CIFOR Indonesia 284. Murjani Nita Irawati British Council Indonesia 285. Murniati Sri BOS Foundation Indonesia 286. Murniningtyas Sri MoF Indonesia Indonesia 287. Nando Tisna Fauna & Flora International Indonesia 288. Nasution Muslimin Chairman of Board of Trustees PERUM Indonesia PERHUTANI 289. Nkem Johnson CIFOR Indonesia 290. Noor Yus Wetlands International - Indonesia Indonesia Programme 291. Novi Caecilia PALMA Indonesia 292. Novi Susanti Novi GADIS Magazine-FEMINA Group Indonesia 293. Novianto Andi WWF - Indonesia Indonesia 294. Novida Rika JICA Indonesia 295. Nurhayati Irma Independent Indonesia 296. Nurhayati Elis TNC Indonesia 56 297. Palmer Christopher British Council Indonesia Forest 298. Pangestu Agus Indonesia Day 299. Paoli Gary Demeter Consulting Indonesia 300. Pareira Jeni Burung Indonesia (BirdLife Indonesia) Indonesia 301. Perez Carlos CIFOR Indonesia 302. Pfund Jean-Laurent Centre for International Forestry Re- Indonesia search (CIFOR) 303. Portevin Thibaut Delegation of the European Commission Indonesia 304. Pradhan Ujjwal The Ford Foundation Indonesia 305. Prasetyo F. Agung CIFOR Indonesia 306. Premaningtyas Shinto Indonesian Community for Democracy Indonesia 307. Priadjati Aldrianto Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation Indonesia (BOS) 308. Priadjati Aldrianto BOS Foundation Indonesia 309. Prianto Eko CIFOR Indonesia 310. Priatmodjo Deddy ITB Indonesia 311. Pribadi Ristianto Indonesia 312. Priyadi Hari CIFOR Indonesia 313. Puji Lestari Sudar- Tri Burung Indonesia Indonesia wati 314. Purnama Boen Ministry of Forestry Indonesia 315. Purnomo Herry CIFOR Indonesia 316. Purnomo Purnomo EC-Indonesia FLEGT Support Project Indonesia 317. Putera Hermayani WWFIndonesia Indonesia West Kalimantan Program 318. Rahardja Teguh Asia Forest Partnership Indonesia

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Sure Name First Name Institution Country 319. Rahayu Shinta Magister Ilmu Lingkungan Universitas Indonesia Mulawarman Samarinda Kaltim 320. Ramelan Vira OCSP Indonesia 321. Ramono Widodo Sukohadi TNC Indonesia 322. Raras Ardini Burung Indonesia Indonesia 323. Retno Wahyudy- Lutfi Agrowanawisata Cupumas Indonesia anti 324. Rosalina Upik MoF Indonesia Indonesia 325. Rufendi Dudi WWF Indonesia Indonesia 326. Runggandini C. Woro PALMA Indonesia 327. Rusmantoro Wisnu Indonesia 328. Sabarniati Nia CIFOR Indonesia 329. Saloh Yani CIFOR Indonesia 330. Saloh Sinaryatie Plan International Indonesia Indonesia 331. Santoso Heru CIFOR Indonesia 332. Santoso Sonya Dewi ICRAF Indonesia 333. Santoso Hery Java Learning Center (JAVLEC) Indonesia 334. Sapari Iman Yayorin (Yayasan Orangutan Indonesia) Indonesia 335. Sari Agus EcoSecurities, Indonesia Indonesia 336. Saryanthi Ria Burung Indonesia Indonesia 337. Sekar Arum Galuh Tropenbos International Indonesia Indonesia 338. Septiani Yani SMCP GTZ Indonesia 339. Setyanto Sigit Budhi Aksenta, Jakarta Indonesia 57 340. Seymour Frances CIFOR Indonesia Forest 341. Simorangkir Togu Yayorin Indonesia Day 342. Sinaga Anna CIFOR Indonesia 343. Singleton Ian PanEco Indonesia 344. Soehartono Toni MoF Indonesia Indonesia 345. Soeprastowo Erwin KEHATI Indonesia 346. Sofianti Intan ITB Indonesia 347. Sofiawan Ali KEHATI Indonesia 348. Stanley Scott Alexander Forest Carbon Indonesia 349. Stempel Trish Tama Rama Mahatma Ghandi School Indonesia 350. Stevens Berdy SUPHEL (solidaritas masyarakat untuk Indonesia penyelamatan hutan dan lingkungan hidup) 351. Suhardjojo Njoto APKINDO Indonesia 352. Sulaiman Sembiring EC-Indonesia FLEGT Support Project Indonesia 353. Sulistiowati Diah R. Conservation International Indonesia 354. Sulistyawati Endah ITB Indonesia 355. Sungkar Rifki Griya Asri Indonesia 356. Suryadinata Yana Independent Indonesia 357. Suryohadikusumo Djamaludin BOS Foundation Indonesia 358. Susandi Armi ITB Indonesia 359. Sutanto Agus APKINDO Indonesia 360. Swanti Elizabeth HealthyLife magazine Indonesia 361. Syaf Rudi WARSI Indonesia 362. Syarif Laode Hasanuddin University, Faculty of Law Indonesia

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Sure Name First Name Institution Country 363. Sylvia Ari Indonesia 364. Takao Gen CIFOR Indonesia 365. Tandun Lily APKINDO Indonesia 366. Tasmin Ratman EC-Indonesia FLEGT Support Project Indonesia 367. Tiominar Betty Down To Earth Indonesia 368. Tirtadihardja Sally Yayorin Indonesia 369. Tobing Imelda Indonesian Community for Democracy Indonesia 370. Tyastuti Endang STORMA Indonesia 371. Uryu Yumiko WWF Indonesia Indonesia 372. Utomo Agus Burung Indonesia Indonesia 373. Van Noordwijk Meine World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF) Indonesia 374. Watts John CIFOR Indonesia 375. Webb Campbell Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University/ Indonesia CTFS / LIPI 376. Wibowo Reski Sri Transparency International Indonesia Indonesia 377. Wicaksono Gunawan TNC Indonesia 378. Wijayaningdyah Rulita KAHUTINDO - BWI Indonesia 379. Wijayanto Hunawan APKINDO Indonesia 380. Yohanes Muliastra SEKALA Indonesia 381. Yoppy Hidayanto Burung Indonesia Indonesia 382. Yuramanti Yura LPEM FEUI Indonesia 58 383. Zuhri Musyarofah ITB Indonesia 384. Zulkarnaini azman Bupati of Nagan Raya PanEco Indonesia Forest 385. Achard Frederic Joint Research Centre, EC Italy Day 386. Braatz Susan FAO Italy 387. Holmgren Peter Food and Agriculture Organization of the Italy United Nations (FAO) 388. Killmann Wulf FAO Italy 389. Stibig Hans-Jürgen Joint Research Centre, EC Italy 390. Bernstein Iris Keren Kayemeth LeIsrael Jamaica 391. Amano Masahiro Waseda University Japan 392. Hattori Koji Japan 393. Hirata Yasumasa FFPRI Japan 394. Johnson Steven ITTO Japan 395. Ma Hwan-Ok ITTO Japan 396. Matsumoto Mitsuo FFPRI Japan 397. Minagawa Yoshitsugu Forestry Agency, Japan Japan 398. Morita Tomoyuki Japan Broadcasting Japan Corporation 399. Onda Nariaki Bogor Agriculture University Japan 400. Oshima Manami ITTO Japan 401. Sano Makoto Forestry and Forest Products Research Japan Institute (FFPRI) 402. Sawada Haruo FFPRI Japan 403. Shimada Masanobu Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency/ Japan Earth Observation Resaerch Center 404. Shono Kenichi FAO Japan 405. Steve Johnson ITTO Japan

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Sure Name First Name Institution Country 406. Tabuchi Ryuichi FFPRI Japan 407. Toma Takeshi FFPRI Japan 408. Yamamoto Koichi FFPRI Japan 409. Ze Meka Emmanuel ITTO Japan 410. Hagelberg Niklas UNEP Kenya 411. Huising Jeroen TSBF-CIAT Africa Kenya 412. Kasyoki Joyce ASB - ICRAF Kenya 413. Meadu Vanessa ASB - ICRAF Kenya 414. Minang Peter Akong ASB - ICRAF Kenya 415. Rantala Salla ICRAF Kenya 416. Swallow Brent ASB - ICRAF Kenya 417. Zomer Robert ICRAF Kenya 418. Dagbe Bledee Forestry Development Authority, Repub- Liberia lic of Liberia, west Africa 419. Peal Alexander Conservation International - Liberia Liberia 420. Vohiri Anyaa Fauna & Flora International Liberia 421. Holmes Christopher Wildlife Conservation Soiciety Madagascar 422. Radiharsoa Monique MINENFEV/GIC/PGDRN/ESSA Forêts Madagascar 423. Rapanoel Onesime AIM - Association Intercooperation- Madagascar Madagascar 424. Abdul Karim Ahmad Faizel R.N.E. Consortium Sdn. Bhd. Malaysia 425. Galante Michael V. Global Forestry Services Malaysia 426. Hamzah Khali Aziz Forest Research Institute Malaysia Malaysia 59 427. Othman Shahwahid Rainforest Academy, University Putra Malaysia Forest Malaysia Day 428. Rubis June Malaysian Nature Society Malaysia 429. Bayoko Abdoulaye Mali 430. Dembele Boubacar Sidiki Mali 431. Diarra Birama Mali 432. Hon. Minister of Mali Environment 433. Konate Mama Mali 434. Toure Bakary Mali 435. Munoz Carlos INE Mexico Mexico 436. ADIL SAID Water, Forestery and Desertification Morocco department 437. Banskota Kamal International Centre for Integrated Moun- Nepal tain Development 438. Dahal Ngamindra Raj National Trust for Nature Conservation Nepal 439. Jha Pabitra Natural and Organizational Resource Nepal Management Services (NORMS) 440. Karky Bhaskar Singh International Centre for Integrated Moun- Nepal tain Development 441. de Boer Yvo Netherlands 442. G A Boot Reinier Tropenbos International Netherlands 443. Kaat Alex Wetlands International Netherlands 444. Madgwick Jane Wetlands International Netherlands 445. McCall Mike Geo-information for Sustainable Forest Netherlands Management, ITC

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Sure Name First Name Institution Country 446. Rabbinge Rudy Consultative Group on International Netherlands Agriculture Research 447. Skutsch Margaret University of Twente Netherlands 448. Streck Charlotte Climate Focus Netherlands 449. Tol Susanna Wetlands International Netherlands 450. Trines Eveline Country Manager of PNG location K: Netherlands TGAL 451. Van Laake Patrick Geo-information for Sustainable Forest Netherlands Management, ITC 452. Van Sluijs Peter IUCN NL Netherlands 453. Frost Peter CIFOR New Zealand 454. Rosoman Grant Greenpeace International New Zealand 455. Ayeni Andrew I. Federal Ministry of Environment Nigeria 456. Balogun Dare L. Well Nigeria Limited Nigeria 457. Boluju Babafemi Well Nigeria Limited Nigeria 458. Egbowon Abayomi Moses Bels-Miral.Nig.ltd. Nigeria 459. Onikoyi Jamiu Well Nigeria Limited Nigeria 460. Onukwube Kene Chudi Nigerian Conservation Foundation Nigeria 461. Uyigue Etiosa Community Research And Development Nigeria Centre (Credc) 462. Hofsvang Ellen Rainforest Foundation Norway Norway 463. Lovold Lars Rainforest Foundation Norway Norway 60 464. Ragnhildstveit Hege Rainforest Foundation Norway Norway 465. Reyes Eduardo Panama Forest 466. Barandiaran Miguel Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Peru Day Extensión Agraria 467. Aggangan Romulo PCARRD Philippines 468. Lasco Rodel ICRAF - TroFCCA Philippines 469. Manila Merlinda Department of Environment & Natural Philippines Resources, CALABARZON Region 470. Pulhin Florencia B. University of the Philippines Los Banos Philippines 471. Sanchez Patricia CIFOR Philippines 472. Tauli-Corpuz Victoria Tebtebba Foundation Philippines 473. Wassmann Reiner International Rice Research Institute Philippines 474. Conrad Kevin Coalition for Rainforest Nations PNG 475. Embalo Antonio Masianday Foundation And Senegal Enviroment Watch - West Africa 476. Gomes Mamadou Masianday Foundation Senegal 477. Walker Simon Macquarie Capital Advisers Singapore 478. Ackhurst Albert Baartman-Biko Environmental and Forest South Africa Research Institute 479. Knowles Tony Genesis Analytics South Africa 480. Leo-Smith Kevin Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd South Africa 481. Downing Thomas Stockholm Environ. Institute Sweden 482. Mattsson Eskil Göteborg University, Sweden Sweden 483. Ostwald Madelene Göteborg University, Sweden Sweden 484. Palm Matilda Göteborg University, Sweden Sweden 485. Bishop Joshua IUCN Switzerland 486. Buckle Elise IUCN Switzerland

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Sure Name First Name Institution Country 487. Griffiths James World Business Council for Sustainable Switzerland Development (WBCSD) 488. Huberman David IUCN Switzerland 489. Kittl Beate Journalist Switzerland 490. Levine Tamara Intercooperation Switzerland 491. Maginnis Stewart IUCN Switzerland 492. Poynton Scott Tropical Forest Trust Switzerland 493. Robledo Carmenza Intercooperation Switzerland 494. Rogers Francois IUCN Switzerland 495. Ruysschaert Denis PanEco Switzerland 496. Saxon Earl IUCN Switzerland 497. Sell Joachim Factor Consulting and Management AG Switzerland 498. Chi Yi-Chun Environmental Quality Protection Foun- Taiwan dation (EQPF) 499. Hsiao Ya-Chin EQPF Taiwan 500. Hsieh Ying-Shih EQPF Taiwan 501. Lee Ho-Ching EQPF Taiwan 502. Lin Ya-Hui EQPF Taiwan 503. Liou Ming-Lone EQPF Taiwan 504. Liu Chung-Ming EQPF Taiwan 505. Yeh Shin-Cheng EQPF Taiwan 506. Yeh Ya-Han EQPF Taiwan 507. Meshack Charles Tanzania Forest Conservation Group Tanzania 61 508. Akwei Adotei CARE International Thailand Forest 509. Malla Yam RECOFTC Thailand Day 510. Oberndorf Robert RECOFTC Thailand 511. Sleeper Naomi RECOFTC Thailand 512. Bernstein Alan Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd UK 513. Best James Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd UK 514. Bettelheim Eric Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd UK 515. Boglino Giovanni Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd UK 516. Boyd Emily Oxford University UK 517. Bumpus Adam Oxford University UK 518. Chancel Sarah Fauna & Flora International UK 519. Chidley Liz Down to Earth UK 520. Christie Stuart Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd UK 521. Colchester Marcus Forest Peoples Programme UK 522. del Valle Christian BNP Paribas UK 523. Grigg Annelisa Fauna & Flora International UK 524. Guillaume Francois Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd UK 525. Hanbury-Tenison Robin Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd UK 526. Hardingham Amy Global Canopy Programme UK 527. Harvey Celia A. Conservation International UK 528. Henders Sabine EcoSecurities UK 529. Henman Jenny Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd UK 530. Janetos Greg Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd UK 531. Jarrah Raja CARE International UK 532. Liverman Diana Oxford University UK

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Sure Name First Name Institution Country 533. Lovell Heather Oxford University UK 534. Malhi Yadvinder Oxford University UK 535. Mann Philip Oxford University UK 536. Mardas Niki Global Canopy Programme UK 537. Mitchell Andrew Global Canopy Programme UK 538. Morel Alexandra Oxford University UK 539. Mortimer Lucy Traditional Financial Services UK 540. Myers Norman Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd UK 541. Neeff Till EcoSecurities Ltd UK 542. Paul Chambers Defra UK 543. pearse david Osmia Partners LLP UK 544. pearse rebecca Osmia Partners LLP UK 545. Peskett Leo Overseas Development Institute UK 546. Prance Ghillean Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd UK 547. Redmond Ian UNEP - GRASP UK 548. Reed James UK 549. Renton Righelato Birdlife International and World Land UK Trust 550. Ridgeway Rupert PROJECT BARITO ULU UK 551. Ripley Steven Global Canopy Programme UK 552. Rose Mark Fauna & Flora International UK 62 553. Sabherwal Renu Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd UK 554. Schroeder Heike Oxford University UK Forest 555. Scriven Joel Oxford University UK Day 556. Secoy Katherine Global Canopy Programme UK 557. Swingland Ian Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd UK 558. Talbot Avis Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd UK 559. Trivedi Mandar Global Canopy Programme UK 560. wintour jodie Osmia Partners LLP UK 561. Zhao Jimin Oxford University UK 562. Vallejo Alexandra Environmental Change Institute, Oxford United King- University dom 563. M. Kelindorfer Josef The Woods Hole Research Center United States of America 564. Adam Tomasek WWF USA 565. Andelman Sandy Conservation International USA 566. Andes Patricia Conservation International USA 567. Andrasko Ken World Bank, Carbon Finance Unit, USA Washington DC USA 568. Aroneanu Philip Sustain US USA 569. Badiozamani Ghazal UNFF USA 570. Bailey Charles R. Ford Foundation USA 571. Ballard Ernesta USA 572. Beinecke Frances Natural Resources Defense Council USA 573. Blockhus Jill TNC USA 574. Blumberg Louis TNC USA 575. Boltz Fred Conservation International USA 576. Bosquet Benoit World Bank USA

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Sure Name First Name Institution Country 577. Boucher Douglas Union of Concerned Scientists USA 578. Bozmoski Alexander Georgetown University USA 579. Bracer Carina Tropical America Katoomba Group USA 580. Bradley Rob WRI USA 581. Brown Sandra Winrock International USA 582. Bushell Natalie WRI USA 583. Campbell Jeffrey The Ford Foundation USA 584. Carlson Kimberly Yale University USA 585. Casey-Lefkowitz Susan Natural Resources Defense Council USA 586. Cashore Ben Yale University USA 587. Castro Gonzalo Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd USA 588. Cohen Thomas Conservation International USA 589. Conway Sarah Starling Resources and Conservation and USA Community Investment Forum (CCIF) 590. Coren Michael Veridian USA 591. Csoka Peter UNFF USA 592. Daviet Florence World Resources Insitute (WRI) USA 593. DeFries Ruth University of Maryland USA 594. Douglas Fiona CGIAR USA 595. Durbin Joanna Climate, Community & Biodiversity USA Alliance 596. Durst Patrick Food and Agriculture Organization of the USA United Nations 63 597. Gascon Claude Conservation International USA Forest 598. Gerhard Dieterle The World Bank USA Day 599. Gibbs Holly University of Wisconsin-Madison USA 600. Goetz Scott The Woods Hole Research Center USA 601. Hale Rhea American Forest & Paper Association USA 602. Hamilton Katherine Ecosystem Marketplace USA 603. Handy Lisa Conservation International USA 604. Haskins Jeffrey Burness Communications USA 605. Hayward Jeffrey Rainforest Alliance USA 606. Herzog Timothy WRI USA 607. Hill Gregory Institute for Culture and Ecology USA 608. Horowitz Jeff Avoided Deforestation Partners USA 609. Horowitz Jeffrey Avoided Deforestation Partners USA 610. Hovani Alexander TNC USA 611. Ivers Laura CGIAR USA 612. Janson-Smith Toby Conservation International USA 613. Jonathan Pershing WRI USA 614. Juhn Daniel Conservation International USA 615. Kanegis Robin Aura American Friends Service Committee USA 616. Kelly Cathleen TNC USA 617. Klunich Kimberly US Environmental Protection Agency USA 618. Kornexl Werner World Bank USA 619. Langrand Olivier Conservation International USA 620. Laporte Nadine The Woods Hole Research Center USA 621. Layke Jennifer WRI USA

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Sure Name First Name Institution Country 622. Ledwith Laura Conservation International USA 623. Leslie James Yale University USA 624. Libenson Sue International Boreal Conservation USA Campaign 625. Maher Marshall Conservation International USA 626. Marsh Duncan TNC USA 627. Maxson Justin Mountain Asssociation for Community USA Economic Development 628. McKingley Luqman Canopy International Foundation USA 629. McKingley Sahlan Canopy International Foundation USA 630. McKingley Mahrus Canopy International Foundation USA 631. McMahon Hilary WRI USA 632. Miller Natasha Conservation International USA 633. Miner Reid NCASI USA 634. Mittermeier Russell Conservation International USA 635. Morgan Brihannala Rainforest Action Network USA 636. Nakagawa Melanie Natural Resources Defense Council USA 637. Niles John-O Carbon Conservation USA 638. O’Sullivan Robert Climate Focus USA 639. Rasambainarivo Haja Conservation International USA 640. Rebelo Camille Veridian USA 641. Riesenfeld Andrew USA 64 642. Riggs Peter Forum on Democracy & Trade, Rockefel- USA Forest ler Brothers Fund Day 643. Robertson Troy Veridian USA 644. Ruffo Susan TNC USA 645. Scherr Jacob Natural Resources Defense Council USA 646. Shoch David TNC USA 647. Sierra Katherine World Bank USA 648. Smithey Sandra Charles Stewart Mott Foundation USA 649. Smithey Patrick USAID USA 650. Stolle Fred WRI USA 651. Stone Susan Conservation International USA 652. Stuewe Michael WWF USA 653. Theriot Christopher Univerisity of Michigan USA 654. Thoumi Gabriel Erb Institute for Global Sustainable Enter- USA prise at the University of Michigan 655. Tsai Anthony Veridian USA 656. Tuttle Andrea Pacific Forest Trust USA 657. Vitale Ben Conservation International USA 658. Zerbock Olaf Conservation International USA 659. Zwick Steve EcoSystem Marketplace USA 660. Jourdain Charlotte Imperial College London Uzbekistan 661. Sutcliffe Graham British Council - Regional Coordinator Vietnam 662. Al-Ariki Abdulkadir Al-Ajyaal for Sustainable Projects (ASP) Yemen 663. Gilbert Bilangaliza Aeb-action Agro Eco Biodiversite Zaire 664. Phanzu Janvier Zaire

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Sure Name First Name Institution Country 665. Bachtiar Bachrianto South Sulawesi Coalition for Forest n/a Implementation 666. Blaser Juergen Center for International Forestry Re- n/a search - BOT 667. Brent Sohngen n/a 668. C. Murray Brian n/a 669. Chomitz Ken World Bank n/a 670. Chreighton Ken WWF n/a 671. DePass Michelle Ford Foundation n/a 672. Fehse Jan n/a 673. Fischlin Andreas n/a 674. Fonseca Gustavo GEF n/a 675. Frumhoff Peter n/a 676. Haeusler Thomas GAF-AG n/a 677. Haji Othman Mohd Shahwahid Global Canopy Programme, Oxford n/a 678. Helme Ned Center for Clean Air Policy n/a 679. Hosier Richard GEF n/a 680. Insley Chris Karamea n/a 681. Laventis George n/a 682. Maynard Bill Global Forestry Services (M) Sdn Bhd n/a 683. McCauley David Asian Development Bank n/a 684. McNeill Charles UNDP n/a 685. Miles Lera UNEP - WCMC n/a 65 686. Minnemeyer Susan World Resources Institute n/a Forest 687. Movius Diana Center for Clean Air Policy n/a Day 688. Nepstad Daniel Woods Hole Research Center n/a 689. Niamir-Fuller Maryam UNEP-DGEF n/a 690. Odelman Wendelien Tropenbos International (TBI) n/a 691. Pedroni Lucio Center for International Forestry Research n/a 692. Ruhweza Alice n/a 693. Schlamadinger Bernhard TerraCarbon LLC n/a 694. Silvius Marcel Wetlands International n/a 695. Sokona Youba OSS n/a 696. Steininger Marc n/a 697. Stewart Christopher Proforest n/a 698. Thiaw Ibrahim UNEP - GRASP n/a 699. Vermeulen Sonja International Institute for Environment n/a and Development 700. Walsh Michael Chicago Climate Exchange n/a 701. Webb Cam n/a 702. Weiner Earl Sustainable Forestry Management Ltd n/a

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change Special Thanks

To everybody who has worked so hard to make Forest Day happen:

Task Force Rachel Carmenta Greg Clough Michael Hailu Markku Kanninen Daniel Murdiyarso Yani Saloh Frances Seymour

Organizing Committee 66 Popi Astriani Tim Cronin Forest Budhy Kristanty Day Eko Prianto Nia Sabarniati

Other Contributors Rita Hasibuan Sylvia Kartika Ketty Kustiyawati Widya Prajanthi Yahya Sampurna Gideon Suharyanto Rizka Taranita Lucya Yamin Edwin Yulianto

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Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change CO2 Forest Day Programme Book Shaping the Global Agenda for Forests and Climate Change

Co-hosted by CIFOR and CPF partners: ProgrammeForest Day Book

UNFCCC COP 13 Parallel Event 13 COP UNFCCC UNFCCC COP 13 Parallel Event UNCCD Nusa Dua, Bali, 8 December 2007

with additional financial contributions from:

Printed on recycled paper