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Climate change adaptation of coffee production in space and time
Authors:Peter Läderach  Julian Ramirez–Villegas  Carlos Navarro-Racines  Carlos Zelaya  Armando Martinez–Valle  Andy Jarvis
Institution:1.North Australian Indigenous Land & Sea Management Alliance, Darwin Centre for Bushfires Research, RIEL,Charles Darwin University,Darwin,Australia;2.Traditional Knowledge Initiative,United Nations University - Institute of Advanced Studies,Darwin,Australia;3.One World Consulting,Swakopsmund,Namibia;4.Inhambane,Mozambique;5.Dpto. de Estudios Ambientales,Universidad Simón Bolívar,Caracas,Venezuela;6.Centro de Investigaciones en Geografía Ambiental,UNAM,Morelia Campus,Mexico;7.Centro de Estudios de Transformación Social (CETSCC),Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas (IVIC),Caracas,Venezuela;8.Centro de Estudios del Desarrollo (CENDES),Universidad Central de Venezuela,Caracas,Venezuela
Abstract:Savannas constitute the most fire-prone vegetation type on earth and are a significant source of greenhouse gas emissions. Most savanna fires are lit by people for a variety of livelihood applications. ‘Savanna burning’ is an accountable activity under the Kyoto Protocol, but only Australia, as a developed economy, accounts for emissions from this source in its national accounts. Over the past decade considerable effort has been given to developing savanna burning projects in northern Australia, combining customary indigenous (Aboriginal) approaches to landscape-scale fire management with development of scientifically robust emissions accounting methodologies. Formal acceptance by the Australian Government of that methodology, and its inclusion in Australia’s developing emissions trading scheme, paves the way for Aboriginal people to commercially benefit from savanna burning projects. The paper first describes this Australian experience, and then explores options for implementing community-based savanna burning emissions reduction projects in other continental savanna settings, specifically in Namibia and Venezuela. These latter examples illustrate that savanna fire management approaches potentially have broader application for contributing to livelihood opportunities in other fire-prone savanna regions.
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