Archive for the ‘Environment’ Category

Silva Tree Princess Project Carbon Offset Validation

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

The Princess Project Panama is a reforestation project using the fast growing tree species Paulownia Elongata. Although it is a commercial timber plantation, the project is also being developed as a Carbon offset project by Silva Tree Panama. Following many months of development, the Princess Project is finally ready to be validated under the Voluntary Carbon Standard, the first stage of achieving certification. The official VCS auditor that has been selected for the task is the Rainforest Alliance. The Rainforest Alliance is an international non-profit organization accredited by the American National Standards Institute to ISO 14065:2007 (the international standard for greenhouse gas validation and verification bodies). An experienced Voluntary Carbon Standard (VCS) auditor will perform a number of checks on the project to ensure its design meets the VCS.

Once the Princess Project validation has been completed, the monitoring plan for Carbon sequestration will commence and the Carbon project will undergo verification to ensure the correct amount of Carbon has been absorbed by the Paulownia trees. The Rainforest Alliance will most likely be selected to perform this stage of VCS certification as well.

The Princess Project Panama continues to be sold as an investment opportunity by Silva Tree and its network of agents.

2010 Is International Biodiversity Year

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

The United Nations have chosen 2010 to be the International Year of Biodiversity.

Biodiversity is the variety of lifeforms on the Earth, from Amoeba to Palm Trees, to Elephants.  Biodiversity is essential for sustaining the natural living systems that provide us with food, fuel, health, wealth, etc.

Panama is located in a maximum biodiversity region, specifically in one of the six identified biodiversity hotspots.  Its altitudinal variation and tropical climate conditions allow it to support a variety of ecosystems.  According to the WWF classification system, Panama is home to 8 of the 200 known eco-regions of the world.

Despite its size, Panama has 21 times more plant species per square kilometer than Brasil, the largest number of vertebrates in Central America and the Caribbean,  3.5% of the world’s flowering plants, 10% of all bird species on the planet, and 15. 5% of the known species of mammal on the planet.

Maintaining biodiversity in hotspots such as Panama is essential to the future survival of many species.  The Princess Project provides food, shelter and migration pathways to a variety of animals, including Armadillos and Spider Monkeys.  Many animals and plants still exist in little islands of rainforest within the project area.  By protecting these areas as well as replanting massive areas of forest, these species will be able to spread into larger areas once more.  By replacing the forests that once stood, and protecting those that survived, we will bring back a great variety of animals and plants to their former homes, and because of the Princess Project’s size, we know our efforts will make a difference.

The main UN site can be found here: http://www.cbd.int/2010/welcome/ with more details about the objectives for this year.

The UK has a specific site hosted by The Natural History Museum http://www.biodiversityislife.net/?q=home.

Paulownia for Biomass

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

Every six hours, our planet receives as much energy from the sun as the world consumes in a year.  If we could just collect it, all of our energy problems would be over.  When we think of utilising the sun’s energy for our own power needs, we think of solar panels or the ever-growing solar parks.  In fact, this is not the only way to harness the power of the sun, and neither is it the most efficient.  Why would we build machines to capture the sun’s energy when plants already do it naturally?

Plants absorb the sun’s energy by photosynthesis and convert it into biological material, or biomass. We can use this biomass for our own energy needs by extracting it from plants and burning it to produce electricity.  Research is also being conducted into dissolving it to produce Ethanol.  Biomass traditionally comes in three forms; pellets, chips and Briquettes, depending on its final use.  It is green, clean, sustainable and environmental.  Even if it is burned for electricity production, biomass can only release the amount of CO2 that the plant it came from originally absorbed, so it is in fact Carbon neutral.

Silva Tree have been researching biofuel production, particularly biomass produced from Paulownia.  Most biomass projects are based on smaller crops such as grasses or bushes because trees grow too slowly to produce biomass efficiently, but Paulownia could change all that.  It is one of the fastest growing trees in the world, and as such amasses a great deal of biomass in a short time.  This makes it a very good candidate for biomass production and, because it grows upwards, it requires less land than a shorter crop.

A major concern with bio-fuel production has been the use of agricultural land which could otherwise be used to grow food.  Many have argued that land which could be used for food should not be used for fuel production just because it is more lucrative, as this could cause a major global food shortage.  Unlike many other biofuel crops, however, Paulownia grows in degraded land and does not require the high quality agricultural land which is traditionally used for the production of food.  On the contrary, it actually reclaims poor quality land and can be intercropped with almost anything, so one can actually grow food on previously unproductive land.

We believe that Paulownia could make a big difference to the renewable energy sector and it will be the basis of our next project, to be launched very soon.