Shaping wetlands policy with science for effective actions to address climate change

Background:

The release of the 2013 IPCC Supplement and the 2019 Refinement of 2006 IPCC Guidelines provide new opportunities to incorporate wetlands, including peatlands and mangroves in climate change mitigation and adaptation agenda. Provided national capacity is in place, countries could adopt these methodologies for GHG inventories and actions of GHG emission reduction at national and sub national levels.

Programs and projects including USAID funded activities through its Country Missions, and USAID collaborative projects with CGIAR, including CIFOR will be featured in the live discussion through Youtube server by engaging resources persons, who will describe the achievements, opportunities, and existing challenges for the activities in Asia.

It is expected that the virtual audience will be attracted to enrich the debate on the fate of these unique ecosystems currently under serious threats due to unsustainable land development. Knowledge generated from the discussion would be useful for the stakeholders from other countries and regions.

Key points:

  • Capacity development and the role of science for effective implementation of policy for sustainable wetlands management
  • Community and ecosystem resilience in the changing world
  • From local issues to global context: a multi-level governance of wetlands
  • Global South collaboration

Find out more information here

Supported by:

    

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Lifestyle segment

While not ignoring the responsibility of governments and organizations to put in place the legislation and action needed to adapt to climate change, the third segment of Act I will focus on the steps that can be taken to change lifestyle habits and behavioral patterns. From fashion to plastic, food, architecture, health, economics and education — participants will look through a critical lens at the devastating impact that overconsumption is having not only on the planet, but on personal wellbeing. Join a live Q&A with environmental expert, author and Professor Tim Kasser to explore the link between values and materialism to discover how reconnecting to intrinsic values will help build sustainable lifestyle habits.

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Rights segment

Is it time to move fully from climate change to climate justice? This year the Global Landscapes Forum will focus the world’s attention on the fundamental importance of rights to address the current environmental crisis. Linking people to landscapes, the essential contributions made by indigenous Peoples, women, youth, local and rural communities, in achieving essential change and reaching our collective goals, highlighting the transformative role of rights and rights-based approaches in securing a more just, sustainable and prosperous future for all.

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Landscape segment

The whims of weather patterns are often used as a barometer to determine the scale of climate change, but the solutions lie firmly on the ground. Join a journey across many landscapes to learn about solutions that lie within them; from bamboo growing in Ghana to ambitious plans for landscape restoration in Australia, from seascapes to mountains, reconnections will be made virtually through relationships to the land. Lessons will be learned from people working in hands-on roles on landscape-based climate change solutions.

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Climate segment

Join this around-the-world journey to learn more about the connections between climate change challenges. Mary Robinson barely needs an introduction as the leading voice and advocate for climate justice, opens this segment with a heartfelt message touching on the stories of the people who are among the most affected by climate change. Community members from Africa, South America, India, the Small Island States and more will share their experiences, which will be woven together with voices from artists, women, leading organizations, scientists, youth and Indigenous Peoples, all working to mitigate climate change.

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Spotlight on the journey and implementation of REDD+ across the tropics

This plenary session, co-hosted by CIFOR and the UN-REDD Programme, provides an opportunity to discuss the vital role of forests in mitigating climate change through the international mechanism of REDD+, which came into existence over a decade ago.

Forests offer the most immediate and cost-effective solution to curb climate change at scale, since halting and reversing deforestation could deliver up to 30 per cent of the climate solution. Under the Paris Agreement, starting in 2020, all countries have agreed to reduce their emissions according to national targets they’ve set for themselves, known as nationally determined contributions (NDCs). REDD+ is one avenue to help them fulfill their NDCs.

The first part of this joint session will explore the trajectory of REDD+ over the past 10 years (from theory to implementation) and discuss how different stakeholders are working together now to implement REDD+ across different scales (national, subnational, local levels). It will discuss how best to enable policymakers, experts and civil society groups, including indigenous rights organizations, to scale up their actions in forest protection and restoration. This work, along with restoration of degraded ecosystems on a massive scale, is among the commitments from the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration that begins in 2021.

Launched in 2008, the UN-REDD Programme supports 65 partner countries with technical assistance, capacity-building and policy advice to help them access REDD+ financing. It is the first joint global initiative of the United Nations on climate change and builds on the convening role and technical expertise of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the United Nations Environment Programme (UN Environment). The first panel discussion in this joint session will feature the voices of some of its key partner countries in the Asia-Pacific region, including Viet Nam, Myanmar, and Malaysia. A prominent youth voice from Indonesia will open this segment with a personal testimony of the importance of forests for planet and people.

In the second part of this joint session, we will zoom in on the subnational level where, across the tropics, many provincial- and district-level governments are advancing jurisdictional approaches to REDD+ and low emissions development. A recent study by Earth Innovation Institute, CIFOR and the Governors’ Climate and Forests Task Force on jurisdictional approaches by 39 states and provinces in 12 tropical countries highlights the clear need for further private investment to support progress underway. Although the jurisdictional approach concept is increasingly being adopted by key supply chain companies (e.g., Unilever, Mars), platforms (Consumer Goods Forum/Tropical Forest Alliance), and initiatives (e.g., Cocoa and Forests Initiative), there are still barriers to private-public partnerships that must be resolved, including questions about cultivating meaningful partnerships with subnational stakeholders and operationalizing preferential sourcing and investment at jurisdictional scales. The second panel in the joint session will feature sustainability professionals, private sector representatives and researchers working to advance public-private partnerships through jurisdictional approaches in the tropics.

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Opening Plenary

  • Director General, CIFOR on behalf of the GLF Charter members, Robert Nasi
  • Mayor of Kyoto, Mr. Daisaku Kadokawa
  • Video address by Mary Robinson
  • Hiroto Mitsugi
  • Toru Hayami
  • Mie Asaoka
  • Kosuke Mizuno
  • Komal Kumar (youth representative)
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Closing Plenary with climate experts: It’s not too late

In this closing plenary session, speakers will offer their outlooks on climate actions to date and explore concrete political, economic, socio-cultural and practical actions that will help to make change become reality in different landscapes across the globe.

This will also bring a focus onto forest ecosystems, mountains and seascapes as landscapes that are both sensitive to climate change as well as part of the land based climate solution. Inspired by success stories from across the globe, it’s apparent that it is not too late for transformative change!

Delegates to this session will discuss the critical role that changing our patterns of production and consumption will play in achieving future climate-smart landscapes, including lifestyle changes that anyone can make – whether in nutrition, fashion, mobility, plastic or cutting food waste.

Further, discussions will introduce innovations and smart solutions in business, finance, policy and technology that can support life-changing transformations in different landscapes.

Finally, the session will officially launch the digital conference to be broadcast live on the Global Landscapes Forum (GLF) channel immediately after the conclusion of the GLF Kyoto conference. Subjects to be broadcast are:

  • integrated landscapes approach
  • mountains
  • oceans/seascapes, mangroves
  • lifestyle and consumption
  • youth

 

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