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Financing sustainable forest management: A comprehensive approach to resource mobilization at country level. Camilla Nordheim-Larsen Global Mechanism of the UNCCD. Nadi, Fiji, 24 July 2012. Overview. The Global Mechanism The challenge: mobilizing resources for SFM
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Financingsustainableforestmanagement: A comprehensive approach to resource mobilization at country level Camilla Nordheim-Larsen Global Mechanism of the UNCCD Nadi, Fiji, 24 July 2012
Overview • The Global Mechanism • The challenge: mobilizing resources for SFM • Financing for SFM/ SLM: integrated approach within the framework of sustainable development and poverty alleviation • Developing Integrated Financing Strategies (IFS): approach and lessons learned
TheGlobalMechanism • Financial mechanism of the UNCCD • Tasked to mobilise resources for sustainable land management (SLM) • Promoting synergistic implementation of the Rio Conventions • Supports developing countries in designing Integrated Financing Strategies (IFS) leading to multi-year investment frameworks Similar challenges in financing SFM and SLM
Increasing recognition of the multiple values and functions of forests (e.g. environmental services, NTFP) But: many of these services are not traded in markets or accounted for in national budgets, and forest owners and managers do not receive any returns for them This creates conditions for exploiting forests unsustainably Thechallenge:financingSFM Demonstrating the benefits of SFM
Thechallenge:financingSFM Adopting an integrated approach • People’s livelihood is not only dependent on forests in isolation, but on the availability of healthy soils, clean water, food production and the safeguarding of biodiversity • Sustainable forestry, land water management, climate change and biodiversity need to be addressed in an integrated manner.
Loss of land cover • Landslides • Loss of soil fertility • Deforestation • Illegal logging • Soil erosion • Agricultural encroachment • Mining • Dumping of waste • Excessive resource extraction • Urban encroachment • Increasing food & water needs • Increasing pollution • High water-use crops • Declining soil fertility & salinity • Loss of arable land • Excessive chemical use • Low farm income • Water pollution - fertiliser & pesticides; • Siltation • Decreasing water availability • Rangeland degradation • Conversion to agri lands • Invasive species
Integrated financing strategy National Development Plan, Sectoral Plans, National Action Plan, etc. External Sources of Financing Innovative Sources of Financing National Context Mainstreaming SLM Internal Sources of Financing Integrated Financing Strategy Investment Framework Socio-Economic Development and Poverty Alleviation
Financing sources, instruments and mechanisms Analysis of the financing context • Internal resources • National budget • National funds (e.g. national forest funds) • Private investments (e.g. from farmers, companies, individuals, etc.) • Local budgets (e.g. municipalities) • External resources • Bilateral/ multilateral cooperation • Non-ODA • Direct foreign investments • Remittances • NGO and foundations • Decentralised cooperation • Innovative resources • Market based instruments • Emissions trading • Payment for environmental services • Certification schemes • Investment instruments • Debt swaps • Conservation concessions • Fiscal instruments • Subsidies • Differential taxation on land use • Deforestation taxes • Climate change funds • REDD++, Green fund • Adaptation fund
Opportunities and constraints for mobilising resources for SFM Analysisofthefinancingcontext • Opportunities • Policy frameworks in place (international, regional, sub-regional, national) • Multitude of existing ‘traditional’ financing sources, instruments and mechanisms • Emerging innovative financing sources (e.g. climate change, market based mechanisms) • Constraints • SFM not national priority • Weak inter-sectoral coordination and collaboration • Inadequate legal and institutional framework • Insufficient capacities related to use of relevant financing sources and mechanisms financing
Entry points for mobilising resources for SFM Analysisofthefinancingcontext • Constraints • SFM not national priority • Weak coordination and collaboration • Inadequate legal and institutional framework • Insufficient capacities related to use of relevant financing sources and mechanisms financing • Action points • Show the contribution of forests to GDP and sustainable development (e.g. economic valuation) • Identify and analyse traditional existing sources of funding • Identify and analyse potential innovative sources • Strengthen inter-sectoral coordination at all levels • Strengthen institutional and legal frameworks • Mainstream SFM as a national priority
Investment Framework CC Resilience - Integrated Watershed Mgt. Rehabilitation of degraded agricultural lands Reduce Deforestation Biodiversity Conservation Alternative Income Generation MoA; MoE; + Land-use MoA; MoI; + research institutions MoF; MoE; + Local authorities + private inv. MoE; MoF; Land-Use + Local authorities MoT; MoF + Local Authorities National Sources External Sources bilateral (EC, GIZ, DFID); GEF and multilateral (ADB, WB & IFAD) financing; FDI; Foundations etc. External Sources Innovative Mechanisms Carbon financing, PES, conservation easements, debt-swaps; innovative taxation schemes
Ensuring sustainable and predictable financing flows requires a holistic, comprehensive approach Lack of financing not always the issue: enabling environment key for resource mobilisation Challenge to develop projects and programmes that cuts across sectors ‘First door’ of finance: domestic budgets and national investments Lessonslearned
Thank you! Camilla Nordheim-Larsen Programme Coordinator The Global Mechanism of the UNCCD www.global-mechanism.org