Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAdelia Alberta Jordan Modified over 9 years ago
1
Building Bridges Between Commodity Roundtables and REDD+ Connecting Farmers Needing Funding with Funds Needing Farmers Jan Maarten Dros 7 th REDD+ Platform Meeting WNF, Zeist, November 16 2011
2
About Solidaridad Founded 1960s, launched Max Havelaar 1988 Co-founded FairTrade Labeling Organization 1991 Fair trade coffee, banana’s, fashion in 1990s 2002: UTZ Certified; mainstream quality concept for coffee, tea, cocoa brands and retailers 2006: Commodity roundtables as pre-competitive sustainability platforms 140 staff globally, 12 commodities, 9 regions
3
Context: The Global Land Crisis Pressures are Mounting to Convert Tropical Forests Rising Commodity Prices May Signal a New Era of Scarcity (J. Grantham)
4
A Solution: Low-Emission Rural Development as Foundation for Broader Agenda? Lower GHG Emissions from Land Use Alleviate Rural Poverty Secure Food Supply Recognize/Protect Indigenous and Traditional Peoples’ Rights Conserve Biodiversity
5
REDD+Roundtables Restrictions on Deforestation? YES Strong Farmer Engagement? NOYES Available Funding? YESNO Social & Environmental Safeguards? YES Potential Synergies between REDD+ vs. Roundtables: First Steps
6
The Proposal: 1.Research and Analysis Potential Impact on GHG Emissions? Financial Instrument Innovation Potential for greater alignment between RTs and REDD+ 1.Link 8-10 Existing Supply Chain Projects with REDD Finance Schokland Fund Projects in REDD States (GCF) and Nations 1.Demonstration Projects 2-3 Large-Scale Bridging Projects, $10M-$50M Brazil, Indonesia, one other nation
7
Roundtables on soy, palm oil, sugar cane Voluntary multistakeholder initiatives to regulate production practices, input use and expansion Industry, producers and NGOs as (voting) members Strong buy-in multinationals (Coca Cola, FrieslandCampina, Unilever, Shell, H&M, Wal-Mart) Product standards and traceability with (third party) verification and/or transparent self assessments Mostly pre-competitive, B-to-B marketing, minimal consumer communication foreseen
8
LOWER CARBON EMISSIONS, LESS POVERTY REDD MARKETS VIRTUOUS CYCLE? UNCERTIFIED FARMERS ROUNDTABLE CERTIFICATION REDD+ COMMITMENT FARMER ENGAGEMENT JURISDICTION-WIDE REDD PROGRAMS LOW-EMISSION FARM SECTORS COMMODITY MARKETS INTERIM REDD+ FINANCE The Theory of Change:
9
LOWER CARBON EMISSIONS, LESS POVERTY REDD MARKETS VIRTUOUS CYCLE? UNCERTIFIED FARMERS ROUNDTABLE CERTIFICATION REDD+ COMMITMENT FARMER ENGAGEMENT JURISDICTION-WIDE REDD PROGRAMS LOW-EMISSION FARM SECTORS COMMODITY MARKETS INTERIM REDD+ FINANCE The Theory of Change: Glopsi-REDD+
11
Solidaridad’s role Support farmers to improve income and livelihoods through implementation of RT standards Engage with RT supply chain actors to provide or fund farmer support Market (B2B) verified/certified commodities Engage civil society and policy actors to promote sustainable trade and address laggards Identify and develop additional benefits of sustainable production for farmers (REDD+, GDI)
12
RTREDD Example: No-till Association in Brazil Payment for certified responsible soy and beef Organizational support and market linkage RTRS member brands Responsible soy REDD+ funds REDD+ funding Avoided deforestation Technical Support, monitoring and REDD+ funding Soypsi participation Verification and REDD+ funding
13
Thank you for your attention! For more information: dros@solidaridad.nl www.solidaridadnetwork.org/millenniumagreements Making markets work for the poor
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.