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Climate change will affect the basic elements of life for people around the world – access to water, food production, health, and the environment. Hundreds of millions of people could suffer hunger, water shortages and coastal flooding as the world warms.
Using the results from formal economic models, the Stern Review estimates that if we don’t act, the overall costs and risks of climate change will be equivalent to losing at least 5% of global GDP each year, now and forever. If a wider range of risks and impacts is taken into account, the estimates of damage could rise to 20% of GDP or more.
In contrast, the costs of action – reducing greenhouse gas emissions to avoid the worst impacts of climate change – can be limited to around 1% of global GDP each year.
The costs of stabilising the climate are significant but manageable; delay would be dangerous and much more costly. A range of options exists to cut emissions; strong, deliberate policy action is required to motivate their take-up.
Emissions can be cut through increased energy efficiency, changes in demand, and through adoption of clean power, heat and transport technologies. Cuts in non-energy emissions, such as those resulting from deforestation and from agricultural and industrial processes, are also essential.
‘The Stern Review’ Sir Nicholas Stern
Climate Change and Carbon Credits: The millennium’s global dilemma of global warming/climate change is probably the world’s most urgent problem as evidenced in the above recent Stern Review. Emission reduction targets set under the Kyoto Protocol have resulted in a multi billion dollar carbon trading market.
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Year
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M/Tons P/h
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Price P/T
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1000 Hectares
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1
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164
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€ 3,207
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€ 3,206,561
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2
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658
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€ 12,826
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€ 12,826,242
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3
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2,631
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€ 51,305
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€ 51,304,968
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4
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10,524
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€ 205,220
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€ 205,219,872
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KYOTO PROTOCOL
Bamboo ranks as one of the most suitable plants available to earn carbon credits. Its capacity to sequester carbon dioxide (the most harmful atmospheric substance) is well documented and internationally recognized. Depending on planting density it can store in excess of 40 tons CO2 per hectare and unlike timber it releases very little carbon into the atmosphere when harvested.
Bamboo as a carbon-credit earning entity offers substantial future financial and other benefits to participating countries and growers although at present Africa and its adjacent islands are still prevented from global trading in carbon credits (only Clean Development Mechanism projects are allowed at present). It is however envisaged that Africa will - in the not too distant future – be allowed to participate in global carbon-credit trading.
Bamboo as a Carbon Sink
Bamboo is a critical element in the balance of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. It helps reduce the carbon dioxide gases blamed for global warming. According to the American Bamboo Society, some bamboos in the wild, even sequesters up to 17 metric tons of carbon dioxide from the air per hectare, which makes it an extremely efficient replenisher of fresh air. It is the fastest growing canopy for the re-greening of degraded areas and generates up to 35% more oxygen than equivalent stand of trees.
Too much carbon in the atmosphere causes global warming and the greenhouse effect. Although one cubic meter of mature bamboo sequesters less carbon dioxide than one meter of pinewood, it grows exceptionally quickly and requires a relatively small amount of land. One pine tree requires ten square meters of land to grow. One square meter of land can accommodate up to 64 bamboos culms - see The Crop.
Bamboo sequesters
The accepted method for calculating the sequesters rate of Bamboo is as follows:
The collective weight of Rhizome, Culm, Branches Leaf and Leaf fall is 132 Kgs.(In the Species that we are growing)
Example: an average grove of Ph. Bambusoidae in Kyoto, Japan, has a carbon sequestration of approximately 3,700-4000 lbs per hectare. Bamboo has approximately the same percentage of carbon as a conifer forest. In 1996 a Japanese cement manufacturer has invested in a 36 hectare, Vietnam bamboo forest, as a carbon credit investment. (It must be understood that their plantations are in the wild and have a culm density of 250 to 400 culms per hectare, unlike ours at 1344 per hectare).
Our projections of substantially denser planting and re-cropping would suggest a higher sequestration. Also, unlike conifers, bamboo harvesting does not release the carbon from the below ground parts of the plant (as it does after conifer felling). Thus the net comparative carbon sequestration over time is higher.
According to the latest information from the Brussels Bio Fuels Conference held on the 6th to 9th March 2007:
500-600 Litres of bio-diesel is worth 1 CO2 /t.
Also 650-800 liters of bio-ethanol is worth 1 CO2 /t.
(85.000x15= €1.275.000 per year at current CO2 forward pricing/annually)
Please refer to the below chart:
WHY BAMBOO
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Bamboo and its related industries already provide, food and housing to over 2.2 billion people worldwide and even generates a substantial income to just as many.
Governments such as India, China and Burma with 19,800,000 hectares of bamboo reserves collectively, have begun to focus attention on the economic factors of bamboo production.
The worldwide use of paper, made of trees, increases at a fast pace. This cannot continue so it becomes time
to explore the alternatives like Giant Bamboo.
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The Facts |
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A viable replacement for wood. Bamboo is one of the strongest building materials. Bamboo's tensile strength is 28,000 per square inch versus 21,000 for steel.
A renewable resource for agro forestry products. Bamboo is a high-yield renewable natural resource: ply bamboo is now being used for wall panelling, floor tiles; bamboo pulp, for paper making, briquettes for fuel, raw material for housing construction, and rebar for reinforced concrete beams.
Bamboo is proven to be a critical element in the balance of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
Bamboos are excellent for rejuvenating degraded lands and protecting against soil erosion. Plantation establishment requires minimal capital investment and builds upon the inherent plant-cultivation skills of local farmers and foresters.
Bamboos can be harvested annually and non-destructively.
Bamboos may easily be intercropped with shallow-rooted crops whilst in the developing stage. As well as the culms, all other parts of the bamboo plant can be used in rural livelihoods - shoots for food, leaves for fodder, and many other cottage industries Unlike any hardwood or softwood forests, bamboo forests are not as susceptible to the threat of fires.
Bamboo shoots provide nutrition for millions of people worldwide.
Bamboos grow more rapidly than trees and start to yield within three to four years of planting.
One can see Giant Bamboo grow - 30 metres in 120 days. Achieves maximum density in 240 days.
Brazil was once referred to as "The Sleeping Giant" of South America. No other country has so many resources, population, and potential for growth. However, the deforestation of the Amazon rainforest is at the point of becoming an environmental disaster.
The sustainable use of existing bamboo stands, education, and the creation of a national policy is one way to combat the growing trend of deforestation and social inequaliy in Brazil ...
We are a non-profit 501(c)3 charitable institution which aims to promote sustainable development in Brazil and combat social inequality through the process of planting, promoting, and educating about BAMBOO.
Thank you for your visit.
from http://www.bamboocentral.org/whybamboo.html
WHY BAMBOO? ... HERE'S WHY ...
DEFORESTATION and increased CO2 emissions threaten the earth's biodiversity and the very air we breathe...
Perhaps the environmental crisis' at hand have not yet touched your life, but the time is shortly to come. Recent NASA reports of a 60% loss of ozone over the arctic provide an explanation for increased severity in the worlds weather patterns which has only begun to affect us whether directly or indirectly. The social, political and economic implications are difficult to imagine as our ozone layer continues to thin, forests disappear and desertization is occurring at an alarming rate.
BAMBOO HAS AN IMPORTANT ROLE TO PLAY...
The earth desperately needs the attention and action of us all or our children's children will surely not have a world fit to live in. There is no one solution but amazingly, the simple bamboo plant can make a dramatic positive impact in many areas. It is our goal to inform and raise awareness about "Bamboo, People and the Environment" and provide the tools and information to then respond in one's own way in their own world. Every action counts, every person counts...
ENDURING THROUGH TIME...
Thomas Edison successfully used a carbonized bamboo filament in his experiment with the first light bulb. This light bulb still burns today in the Smithsonian Museum in Washington DC. He also used a bamboo as rebar for the reinforcement of his swimming pool. To this day, the pool has never leaked. An unrivaled utility, (One resource book lists over 5,000 uses including paper, scaffolding, diesel fuel, airplane "skins", desalination filters, aphrodisiacs, musical instruments, medicine, food and was Alexander Graham Bell's first phonograph needle
SURVIVING THROUGH HARDSHIP...
Amidst death and destruction, bamboo survived the Hiroshima atomic blast closer to ground zero than any other living thing and provided the first re-greening in Hiroshima after the blast in 1945.
GROWING WITH STRENGTH AND SPEED...
With a tensile strength superior to mild steel (withstands up to 52,000 Pounds of pressure psi) and a weight-to-strength ratio surpassing that of graphite, bamboo is the strongest growing woody plant on earth with one of the widest ranging habitats of more than 1500 species thriving in diverse terrain from sea level to 12,000 feet on every continent but the poles. It also grows the fastest: clocked shooting skyward at 2 inches an hour. Some species grow one and a half meters a day.
BAMBOO PROTECTS THE ENVIRONMENT AND THE AIR WE BREATHE...
Bamboo is the fastest growing canopy for the regreening of degraded lands, and its stands release 35% more oxygen than equivalent stands of trees. Some bamboo even sequester up to 12 tons of carbon dioxide from the air per hectare. Bamboo can also lower light intensity and protects against ultraviolet rays. Traditional belief holds that being in a bamboo grove - the favorite dwelling place of Buddha - restores calmness to emotions and stimulates creativity.
Carbon Sequestration Information
Net production and carbon cycling in a bamboo Phyllostachys pubescens stand.
AU: Isagi-Y; Kawahara-T; Kamo-K; Ito-H
AD: Kansai Research Center, Forestry and Forest Products Research
Institute, Momoyama, Fushimi, Kyoto 612, Japan.
SO: Plant-Ecology. 1997, 130: 1, 41-52; 48 ref.
PY: 1997
LA: English
AB: Phyllostachys pubescens is one of the largest bamboo species with a leptomorphic (a type of rhizomatous system with solitary culms scattered rather evenly) root system in the world. The species originates in China and has been naturalized in neighbouring countries. It was introduced in 1746 into Japan because of the economic value of the young sprouts and culm woods. It escaped from he planted areas and expanded by invading the native vegetation. In rder to clarify the basic ecological characteristics of the species, arbon fixation and cycling were determined in a stand of Phyllostachys pubescens in Kyoto Prefecture. The standing culm density and average DBH (diameter at breast height) in 1991 were 7100 a-1 and 11.3 cm, respectively. The above-ground biomass was 116.5 t a-1 for culms, 15.5 t ha-1 for branches, 5.9 t ha-1 for leaves and 37.9 t ha-1 in total. The total above-ground biomass is one of the argest among the world's bamboo communities. The biomass of rhizomes nd fine roots was 16.7 t ha-1 and 27.9 t ha-1, respectively. Annual
soil respiration was 52.3 t CO2 ha-1, the highest among those determined in Japan. The gross annual production was high, at 32.8 t C ha-1, and allocation of annual gross production to the root system was also high at 11 t C ha-1 - 34% of gross production, and 46% of the fluxes out of the leaves. This pattern of allocation results in a net annual above-ground production of 18.1 t ha-1, which is within the average range of productivity of forests under similar climatic conditions. The correspondence of the allocation pattern of the pecies with its successful range expansion is discussed. E: asexual-reproduction; biological-production; biomass-production;carbon-cycle; bamboos-; nutrients-; distribution-; carbon-;
photosynthesis-; stand-characteristics; biomass-; cycling-
AN: 950608033
TI: Carbon stock and cycling in a bamboo Phyllostachys bambusoides stand.
AU: Isagi-Y
AD: Laboratory of Silviculture, Kansai Research Center, Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute, Kyoto 612, Japan.
SO: Ecological-Research. 1994, 9: 1, 47-55; 42 ref.
PY: 1994
LA: English
AB: Gross production and carbon cycling in a Phyllostachys bambusoides stand in Kyoto Prefecture, central Japan, were
determined, and then a compartment model showing the carbon stock and cycling within the ecosystem was developed. Aboveground carbon stock was 52.3 t/ha, increasing at an annual rate of 3.6 t/ha. Belowground carbon stock was 20.8 t/ha in the root system and 92.0 t/ha in the soil. Aboveground annual net C production was 11.2 t/ha. Belowground annual net C production was crudely estimated at 4.5 t/ha. Gross annual production was estimated at 41.8 t/ha by summing the amount of outflow to the environment and the increment in biomass. Leaves consumed 13.7 t C/ha per year by respiration; the rest (41.8 - 13.7 = 28.1 t C/ha per year) was surplus production of leaves and flowed into the other compartments. Annual amounts of construction and maintenance respiration of aboveground compartments were 3.4 and 18.5 t/ha, respectively. The annual amount of soil respiration was 11.2 t/ha. Soil respiration levels of 4.3 and 3.1 t C/ha per year were estimated for the flow of root respiration and root detritus. The proportion of net to gross production was 37%, which fell within the range of young and mature forests. A shorter life span of culms, compared to tree trunks, resulted in smaller biomass accumulation ratio (biomass/net production) in the ecosystem, of 4.66. DE: bamboos-; respiration-; biomass-; carbon-; models-; carbon- cycle; biomass-production; simulation-; cycling- To find out the latest information on global warming, click here
EROSION CONTROL ...
A peerless erosion control agent,. it's net like root system create an effective mechanism for watershed protection, stitching the soil together along fragile riverbanks, deforested areas, and in places prone to earthquakes and mud slides. Because of their wide-spreading root system, uniquely shaped leaves, and dense litter on the forest floor, the sum of stem flow rate and canopy intercept of bamboo is 25% which means that bamboo greatly reduces rain run off, preventing massive soil erosion and keeping up to twice as much water in the watershed. Bamboo is a pioneering plant and can be grown in soil
damaged by overgrazing and poor agricultural techniques. Unlike with most trees proper harvesting does not kill the amboo plant so topsoil is held in place.
SAVING RAINFORESTS ...
Bamboo is one of the strongest building materials. Bamboo's tensile strength is 28,000 pounds per square inch versus 23,000 pounds per square inch for steel. In the tropics it is possible to plant and 'grow your own home;. in Costa Rica, 1000 houses of bamboo are built annually with material coming only from a 60 hectare bamboo plantation. If an equivalent project used timber, it would require 500 hectares of our diminishing tropical rainforests. Using bamboo to replace timber saves the rainforests. With a 10-30% annual increase in biomass versus 2 to 5% for trees, bamboo creates greater yields of raw material for use. One clump can produce 200 poles in the three to five years. Bamboo generates a crop every year.
A RENEWABLE RESOURCE ...
Bamboo is a high-yield renewable resource: "Ply boo" is now being used for wall paneling and floor tiles; bamboo pulp for paper-making;briquettes for fuel, raw material for housing construction; and rebar for reinforced concrete beams. There are 1500 species of bamboo on the earth. This diversity makes bamboo adaptable to many environments. It can be harvested in 3-5 years versus 10-20 years for most softwoods. Bamboo tolerates extremes of precipitation, from 30-250 inches of
annual rainfall.
HOUSING ...
Bamboo related industries already provide income, food, and housing to over 2.2 billion people worldwide. There is a 3-5 year return on investment for a new bamboo plantation versus 8-10 years for rattan. The governments of India and China, with 15 million hectares of bamboo reserves collectively, are poised to focus attention on the economic factors of bamboo and its protection. In Limon, Costa Rica, only bamboo houses from the national Bamboo Project stood after their violent earthquake in 1992. Flexible and lightweight, bamboo enables structures to "dance" in earthquakes. Go to the "Comparative Strength of Bamboo or Grow Your Own House page. Just Available ! Simon Velez's new book "Grow Your Own House" Click HERE to order.
FOOD ...
Bamboo shoots provide nutrition for millions of people worldwide. In Japan, the antioxidant properties of pulverized bamboo skin can prevent bacterial growth, and it is used as a natural food preservative. Bamboo :litter: make fodder for animas and food for fish. Taiwan alone consumes 80,000 tons of bamboo shoots annually, constituting a $50 million industry. `Bamboo leaves are normally utilized as fodder during scarcity. Young bamboo leaves and twigs are a favorite meal for elephants and the Panda. D. strictus leaves have (on dry matter basis) crude protein,15.09; crude fiber,23.15; ether extract 1.43; ash 18.03;phosphorus-170 and calcium -1550 mg/100g respectively. Their digestible crude protein and total digestible nutrient contents are 93.34 and 48.9% respectively. The leaves of B.arundinacea have crude protein 18.64;crude fiber, 24.1; ether extract 4.1; N- free extract 41.4; ash-11.75%;phosphorus-170 mg and calcium 56mg/100g respectively. The digestible crude protein and total digestible nutrient contents are 13.5 and 46.5% respectively. The protein contained methionine and lysine. Copper and zinc are also found. The nutrient contents differed significantly in samples collected from high altitudes. For B.vulgaris the figures are crude protein,10.1;crude fiber 21.7;ether extract, 2.5 and ash, 21.3%; phosphorus-86,iron-13.4,vitamin B1,0.1;vitamin B2- 2.54, and carotene 12.3 mg/100g respectively. The meal is used as a supplement to vitamin A deficient diets for chicks ' For further details contact either the Bamboo Information Center in India -at KFRI -Tropical species, or The Bamboo Information Center in China-at CAF,Beijing - Temperate species.
AN ANCIENT MEDICINE ...
Bamboo has for centuries been used in Ayurvedic medicine and Chinese herbal medicine . Tabasheer, the powdered, hardened secretion from bamboo is used internally to treat asthma, coughs and can be used as an aphrodisiac. In China, ingredients from the root of the black bamboo help treat kidney disease. Roots and leaves have also been used to treat venereal disease and cancer. Sap is said to reduce fever, and ash will cure prickly heat. A village in Indonesia reports that the water form within the culm is used to treat broken bones effectively and that the tabasheer is used to promote fertility in their cows. Current research points to bamboo's potential in a number of medicinal uses.
A LANDSCAPE DESIGN ELEMENT & WASTE WATER SYSTEM ...
Bamboo is an exquisite component of landscape design. For the human environment bamboo provides shade, wind break, acoustical barriers, and aesthetic beauty. "The Bamboo Forest is an ecological wastewater utilization system that
essentially grows away, waste, producing a marketable crop in the process. Comprised of a subsurface evaporation-transpiration bed planted with bamboo and other rapid-growing, non-invasive plants, the system is engineered to provide an aerobic rhizosphere (the home of living organisms in the root system), in which damaging polluting components are transformed into plant nutrients" Go to the Discover magazine article on Bamboo used to treat waste water!
INTEGRALLY INVOLVED IN CULTURE AND THE ARTS ...
Bamboo is a mystical plant: a symbol of strength, flexibility,tenacity, and endurance. Throughout Asia, bamboo has for centuries been integral to religious ceremonies, art, music, and daily life. It can be found in the paper, the brush, and the inspiration for poems and paintings. Some of the earliest historical records form the 2nd century B.C. were written on green bamboo strips. As evidenced by all of the above qualities, bamboo rightfully deserves its nickname, "the miracle plant." The EBF in Indonesia and Holland and the IBF in Hawaii strive to promote the use of bamboo and educate others about the greatly misunderstood and underutilized benefits of using and preserving this plant. One of the main ways in which we hope to accomplish this is through our educational and agro forestry programs worldwide, our consultant services and by your continued participation and support.
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