Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byBrady Thorley Modified over 9 years ago
1
1 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme Briefing to the ACP Group of States July 19, 2012, ACP Secretariat, Brussels Duncan Brack, dbrack@dbrack.org.uk Consultant to the ACP GCCA Programme (LTS-Baastel-CAMCO)
2
1. REDD+ concept 2. Three multilateral initiatives in detail: a) Forest Carbon Partnership Facility (FCPF) b) Forest Investment Programme (FIP) c) UN-REDD 3. Three initiatives more briefly: a) Congo Basin Forest Fund (CBFF) b) Australia’s International Forest Carbon Initiative c) Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) 4. REDD+ funding in practice 5. The future 2 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
3
Deforestation ~17% global emissions Relatively cheap to reduce (in theory) Not included in Kyoto – too difficult Aim of seeing developing countries adopt targets meant had forests to be included Bali Roadmap, 2007; Copenhagen Accord, 2009 Needs new treaty, so not imminent But funding for ‘readiness’ activities available 3 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
4
Basic idea: add value to standing forests Development RED – REDD – REDD+ Reducing emissions from deforestation Reducing emissions from forest degradation Forest conservation Sustainable management of forests Enhancement of forest carbon stocks 4 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
5
Reference levels Leakage Permanence Safeguards Governance Measuring, reporting and verifying (MRV) Finance 5 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
6
Step-wise approach, codified 2010: Phase 1: ‘development of national strategies or action plans, policies and measures, and capacity- building’ (‘REDD readiness’) Phase 2: implementation of strategy, including further capacity-building, testing MRV, payments for ‘results-based demonstration activities’ Phase 3: fully implemented programme with a pay-for-performance system 6 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
7
Preparation of national strategies to reduce emissions Designing and implementing national forest carbon accounting, including baselines and reference emissions levels and MRV systems Developing benefit-sharing mechanisms Developing safeguards and grievance mechanisms to protect the interests of forest communities, indigenous people, biodiversity, etc. 7 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
8
World Bank’s Forest Carbon Partnership Facility (FCPF): Readiness Fund and Carbon Fund World Bank’s Forest Investment Programme (FIP) UN-REDD Programme (FAO, UNDP, UNEP) Congo Basin Forest Fund (CBFF) Amazon Fund Indonesia Climate Change Trust Fund Global Environment Facility Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) of the Kyoto Protocol 8 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
9
Australia’s International Forest Carbon Initiative Norway’s International Climate and Forest Initiative (also main donor to Amazon Fund, UN-REDD) Other donor funds not only REDD+, including Germany’s International Climate Initiative and UK’s International Climate Fund 9 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
10
InitiativePledgedDepositedApprovedDisbursed FCPF (RF) 229.6 27.29.1 FCPF (CF) 204.5179.31.440.2 FIP 64445951.03.2 UN-REDD 150.8118.2108.190.9 Congo Basin Forest Fund 165 75.012.1 Amazon Fund 1032.257.5141.642.5 Indonesia CCTF 18.68.96.35.5 Total 2444.71217.5410.6163.5 Total % pledged 10049.816.86.7 See Table 3 in paper (page 12–13) for developing country participation in initiatives 10 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
11
All sources of REDD+ finance together, 2008 – November 2011: $446 million approved, $252 million disbursed (13% total climate finance) Eliasch Review recommendations: ‘REDD readiness’ – $4 billion over five years for forty forest nations ($20m / country / year) $17–33 billion a year by 2030 for fully fledged REDD+ mechanism achieving a 50% reduction in deforestation 11 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
12
RegionApprovedDisbursed Asia9488 – major recipient: Indonesia4240 Latin America17873 – major recipient: Brazil / Amazon Fund14349 Sub-Saharan Africa11947 – major recipient: DRC6616 12 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
13
REDD+ Partnership established 2010 Voluntary REDD+ Database June 2012: 40 countries reported 652 ‘arrangements’ Total funding 2006–16: $5.74 billion (reported by funders) or $2.72 billion (reported by recipients) Forest Trends project will track REDD+ funds FCPF and UN-REDD collaborate, e.g. over funding application templates – but still follow different processes in many cases 13 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
14
World Bank programme, operational 2008 Readiness Fund – capacity-building Carbon Fund – pilot performance-based payments 37 developing countries 11 candidate countries Participants Committee main decision- making body 14 donors, 14 REDD+ countries, observers 14 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
15
Eligibility: IBRD/IDA member in tropics/sub-tropics Significant forest area / carbon stock High relevance of forests in economy High current/project deforestation Funding: $229.6m pledged/deposited $27.2m approved (11.8%) $9.1m disbursed (4.0%) 15 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
16
R-PIN submitted to Participants Committee Example, Ghana: Submitted October 2007, approved July 2008 25-page document Background information on forestry, deforestation, current policies Potential further programmes: forest governance, land tenure and land use regulations, building institutional capacity for REDD+ Other relevant cross-sectoral policies: poverty reduction, agriculture Stakeholder consultation processes Challenges to implementation Potential monitoring and implementation systems Plan and tentative budget ($4.82 million) 16 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
17
April 2012 26 prepared 19 submitted 5 received grants (DRC, Ghana, Indonesia, Nepal, RoC) Formulation grant of $200,000 Clear plan, budget, schedule 17 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
18
Ghana: Started work May 2009 Draft R-PP September 2009 Final R-PP submitted January 2010 Approved subject to revision March 2010 Final revised R-PP submitted December 2010 Formulation grant disbursed November 2010 18 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
19
128-page document Roadmap for readiness activities Readiness phase 2009–11, implementation 2011–12, country ‘ready’ thereafter Budget: $7.334 million FCPF: $3.6 million (max) Government: $1.7 million Other donors 19 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
20
Component 1: Organise and Consult 1a. National Readiness Management Arrangements 1b. Stakeholder Consultation and Participation Component 2: Prepare the REDD Strategy 2a. Assessment of Land Use, Forestry Policy and Governance 2b. REDD Strategy Options 2c. Arrangement for REDD Implementation 2d. Social and Environmental Impacts Component 3: Develop a Reference Scenario Component 4: Design a Monitoring System Component 5: Schedule and Budget Component 6: Design a Program Monitoring and Evaluation 20 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
21
Move country to Phase 2 of REDD+: Activities are tested within a transparent framework, social and environmental risks mitigated Should cover all REDD+ activities (not just FCPF) Endorsement of R-Package necessary for participation in FCPF Carbon Fund Content still under development 21 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
22
Operational May 2011 Payments for verified emission reductions – i.e. part of REDD+ phase 2 Funding: $204.5m pledged $179.3m deposited $1.44m approved (0.7%) $0.2m disbursed (0.1%) Aims to leverage private finance – though difficult in absence of global carbon market 22 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
23
About five participants qualify initially, based on: Potential for sustainable emissions reductions Scale of implementation Consistency with compliance standards Potential to generate learning value Benefit-sharing mechanisms, broad community support Transparent stakeholder consultations $30m – $40m / country over five years Still under development 23 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
24
One of World Bank’s Climate Investment Funds (CIFs), operational July 2009 Aim: financing to developing countries for readiness reforms and public and private investments; much larger sums than FCPF Funding: $644m pledged $459m deposited $51m approved (7.9%) $3.2m disbursed (0.5%) Will close on new UNFCCC financial architecture 24 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
25
FIP Sub-Committee main decision-making body: 6 donor countries 6 eligible recipient countries Observers Eight pilot countries: Brazil, Burkina Faso, DRC, Ghana, Indonesia, Lao PDR, Mexico, Peru Three potential further pilots: Philippines, Mozambique, Nepal 25 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
26
45 expressions of interest; selection based on: Programme potential to contribute and adhere to FIP objectives and principles Country preparedness and ability to undertake REDD initiatives Existing pilot programme distribution across regions and biomes, ensuring that pilot programmes generate lessons on scaling up activities Investment plans approved by FIP Sub- Committee – 5 approved to date, aim for end 2012 for remaining 26 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
27
DRC: addressing deforestation and degradation in the Kinshasa supply area ($36.9 million, December 2012) Mexico: strengthening financial inclusion of ejidos and communities through technical assistance and capacity-building for low-carbon strategies in forest landscapes ($2.9 million, July 2012) Lao PDR: smallholder forestry project ($3.0 million, September 2012) 27 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
28
Some countries not keen on World Bank FAO / UNDP / UNEP initiative, operational 2008 42 partner countries 16 of them with national programmes Funding: $150.8m pledged $118.2m deposited $108.1m approved (71.7%) $90.9m disbursed (60.3%) 28 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
29
Programme Policy Board main decision- making body 3 full members from donor countries 3 full and 6 alternate from programme countries NGOs, indigenous peoples, UN agencies Global programme – common approaches, analyses, methodologies, tools, data, best practices (all countries can access) National programmes 29 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
30
Aim to achieve outcomes: Develop and implement MRV and monitoring systems Credible, inclusive national governance systems developed Systems for management of REDD+ funding strengthened Indigenous peoples, local communities, civil society organisations and other stakeholders participate effectively Multiple benefits of forests promoted and realised REDD+ strategies and related investments catalyse shifts to a green economy Knowledge is developed, managed, analysed and shared 30 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
31
Must be UN-REDD partner country Regional balance of investment Prioritise according to: Contribution of UN-REDD to national readiness process Effective engagement of UN agencies at country level REDD+ potential of the country (forest cover, annual rate of change, potential importance of forests to poor) Also must display commitment to UN-REDD principles: Human-rights based approach to development Engagement of indigenous peoples Social and environmental principles and criteria Consistency with REDD+ safeguards Etc. 31 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
32
Component 1: Organise and Consult 1a. National Readiness Management Arrangements 1b. Information Sharing and Early Dialogue with Key Stakeholder Groups 1c. Consultation and Participation Process Component 2: Prepare the REDD-plus Strategy 2a. Assessment of Land Use, Land Use Change Drivers, Forest Law, Policy and Governance 2b. REDD-plus Strategy Options 2c. REDD-plus Implementation Framework 2d. Social and Environmental Impacts during Readiness Preparation and REDD-plus Implementation 32 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
33
Component 3: Develop a National Forest Reference Emission Level and/or a Forest Reference Level Component 4: Design Systems for National Forest Monitoring and Information on Safeguards 4a. National Forest Monitoring System 4b. Designing an Information System for Multiple Benefits, Other Impacts, Governance, and Safeguards Component 5: Schedule and Budget Component 6: Design a Program Monitoring and Evaluation Framework 33 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
34
Ecuador: $4m for 2011–13. Expected outcomes include: Design and implementation of: National Forest Monitoring System; consultation process; policies, instruments, operational framework for implementation; ensuring multiple environmental and social benefits; benefit-sharing system. Viet Nam: $4.4 m for 2009–12. Expected outcomes include: improved institutional, technical, management capacity; incorporation of economic incentives; approaches to reduce regional displacement of emissions. Zambia: $4.5m for 2011–13. Expected outcomes include: Capacity strengthened; stakeholder support established; national governance framework and institutional capacities strengthened; REDD+ strategies identified; MRV capacity strengthened; assessment of reference emission level and reference level. 34 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
35
Established 2008 COMIFAC member countries: Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, DRC, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Sao Tome & Principe Funding: $165m pledged / deposited (UK and Norway) $75.0m approved (45.5%) $12.1m disbursed (7.3%) 35 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
36
Key thematic areas for grants: Forest management and sustainable practice Livelihoods and economic development Monitoring, assessment and verification Benefits from carbon markets and payment for ecosystem services Capacity-building in REDD; monitoring, assessment and verification; SFM Wide range of applicants 36 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
37
Alternatives to mangrove destruction for women's livelihoods in Central Africa (Cameroon; $0.38m) Civil society and government capacity-building within the REDD framework (DRC, $4.26m) Improving beekeeping and reforestation around the Bagandou forest, CAR ($0.35m). Promoting community land tenure rights in the Congo Basin (Cameroon, CAR, Gabon, RoC, DRC, $0.73m) Quantifying carbon stocks and emissions in the forests of Cameroon and RoC ($1.74m) Reconciling the needs of the logging industry with those of forest-dependent people (Cameroon, Gabon, DRC, $2.19m) 37 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
38
Established 2007 Projects mainly based in Asia-Pacific, especially Indonesia, PNG Funding: $216.2m pledged $185.5m approved (85.8%) $31.7m disbursed (14.7%) 38 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
39
Kalimantan Forests and Climate Partnership ($43m) – focus on 120,000ha of degraded and forested peatland in Central Kalimantan. Sumatra Forest Carbon Partnership (($27.6m) – similar to the Kalimantan Partnership, on different forest type (mineral soils) Papua New Guinea–Australia Forest Carbon Partnership ($3m initial) – support for government policy development on REDD+. Roadmap for Access to International Carbon Markets – assisting Indonesia to develop prerequisites for participation in future international carbon markets Partnership with the Clinton Climate Initiative on carbon monitoring – providing forest carbon data to developing countries (including Guyana, Tanzania, Kenya and Cambodia) 39 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
40
Kyoto Protocol flexibility mechanism Enables Annex I countries to earn credits by investing in emission reduction projects in developing countries Forestry projects limited to afforestation or reforestation Credits time-limited <1% of CDM projects 40 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
41
Chile: Restoration of Degraded Lands of Small and Medium Farmers through Afforestation and Reforestation China: Facilitating Reforestation for Guangxi Watershed Management in Pearl River Basin India: Improving Rural Livelihoods Nicaragua: Precious Woods Uganda: Nile Basin Reforestation Most operating through BioCarbon Fund Future depends on UNFCCC developments 41 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
42
Role and structure of multilaterals UN-REDD quicker to disburse funds, more flexible FCPF better at standards, governance, safeguards; Carbon Fund valuable in long term Still confusion over different bodies, selection criteria Coordination, overlaps, gaps Lack of coordination serious but improving Common approaches, e.g. on safeguards, MRV, admin processes (but still different processes on safeguards) 42 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
43
Finance Very low disbursement rate (UN-REDD best – often has on-the-ground capacity) When are countries ‘ready’? No clear definition But early estimates far too optimistic Safeguards and governance Streamlining process controversial Governance initiatives (e.g. FLEGT) important 43 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
44
Stakeholder engagement Good participation at international level More difficult at national level Knowledge transfer Too much information available; difficult to identify reliable and up-to-date Private sector Generally not engaged; FIP may help Too uncertain for international carbon markets 44 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
45
National ownership Initially often seen as imposed from outside; less problematic now, but still often limited buy-in UN-REDD agencies benefit from on-the-ground capacity; but can sometimes take over process Misperceptions and uncertainty In early days, often unrealistic expectations Link to livelihoods not well understood Uncertainty over long-term future 45 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
46
‘REDD is moving ahead, but at a slower pace and in a different form than we expected when it was launched at Bali in 2007.’ Early expectations of global framework under new climate treaty, substantial performance- based funding Now most REDD+ funding from development aid budgets Readiness activities slow and expensive 46 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
47
Funding will continue to be made available; will retain payments-for-results focus Disbursement will speed up, but donors more likely to use bilateral arrangements Readiness activities are slow – and should be Forest governance initiatives important Interest will grow in root causes of deforestation 47 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
48
‘The litany of problems encountered by the first generation of REDD+ initiatives can make for discouraging reading. But despite adverse changes in the broader context, and hard lessons learned from early experience, the potential of REDD+ continues to capture the imagination and attract continuing investment at all levels … REDD+ as a worthy objective is still very much alive.’ 48 Intra-ACP GCCA Programme
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.