More information on Plantar


Background on the project
The Plantar project in Minas Gerais, Brazil is the first carbon sink project seeking credit through the Kyoto Protocol's Clean Development Mechanism. It involves planting 23,100 ha of Eucalyptus plantations to produce wood for charcoal, which will then be used in pig iron production instead of coal. In addition to this so-called fuel-switching component, the project also claims carbon sequestration credits for the trees planted. According to the project documents, these carbon sequestration credits are required to make the remainder of the project economically viable, turning the project essentially into a carbon sinks project. The project is developed under the auspices of the World Bank's Prototype Carbon Fund (PCF). The PCF has a number of government and corporate investors who get a pro rata share of the credits from PCF projects. If approved as CDM project, Plantar will reap millions of dollars for bogus carbon credits, and industrialised countries will be allowed to meet their Kyoto reduction target using unsustainable plantations and climatically worthless credits.

A closer look reveals that the Plantar project is neither clean nor will it contribute to sustainable development: Plantar seeks credit for carbon sequestered in industrial monoculture tree plantations. This is despite the numerous negative impacts associated with industrial tree plantations like Plantar's (see WRM report on Plantar's FSC certified tree plantations http://www.wrm.org.uy/countries/Brazil/fsc.html), and also despite the fact that the Validator of the project, DNV, has said that it cannot currently ensure carbon will be sequestered permanently and thus cannot ensure that there will be a long-term benefit to the climate. If these credits will result in no benefit to the climate they have no value.

Click here for a letter from over 50 Brazilian NGOs, civil society movements, churches and unions urging PCF investors not to buy credits from the Plantar project. http://www.fern.org/pubs/ngostats/Plantport.htm (Portugese version, original); http://www.fern.org/pubs/ngostats/Planteng.htm (English version)

Click here to read about the recent correspondence between Brazilian groups and the PFC.
Second Brazilian NGO letter
Third Brazilian NGO letter
PCF Note on the PCF Plantar Project
Fourth Brazilian NGO letter

Click here for a letter informing PCF investors about the credit-unworthiness of the Plantar project.

Read the SinksWatch / CDM Watch Briefing 'How Plantar sinks the World Bank's rhetoric'

Read the CDM Watch briefing paper on the Plantar project: http://www.cdmwatch.org/plantar.html

Read the WRM report on problems arising from the FSC certification of already existing Plantar plantations. http://www.wrm.org.uy/countries/Brazil/fsc.html

Click here for SinksWatch's submission to the Forest Stewardship Council documenting a long list of gaps and omissions in the awarding of the FSC certificate to Plantar.

Watch the Carbon Trade Watch Photo Essay Where the Trees are a Desert.

The project design document, validation report and other documentation relevant to the registration of Plantar as a CDM project can be downloaded from the PCF website. http://prototypecarbonfund.org/router.cfm?Page=DocLib&Dtype=1

For further reading, consult the Plantar section on the Publications page of this site.

Submission to FSC details shortcomings of Plantar certification SinksWatch submits detailed documentation of gaps and omissions in the awarding of the Forest Stewardship Council certificate for well-managed plantations to Plantar and urges FSC to repeal certificate if audit confirms shortcomings. These shortcomings are further substantiated by an initial report of Silva Ecosystem Consultants into the issuance of the FSc certificate.

PCF investors:
British Petroleum - Amoco
Chubu Electric Power Co.
Chugoku Electric Power Co.
Deutsche Bank
Electrabel
Fortum
Gaz de France
Government of Canada
Government of Finland
Government of Norway
Government of Sweden
Government of the Netherlands
Japan Bank for International Cooperation
Kyushu Electric Power Co.
Mitsubishi Corp.
Mitsui
Norsk Hydro
RaboBank
RWE
Shikoku Electric Power Co.
Statoil
Tohoku Electric Power Co.
Tokyo Electric Power Co.