Barriers to inclusive sustainable finance in a landscape context

Agriculture, forestry and other land uses are central to the implementation of the sustainable development goals (SDGs). They may also contribute up to 20% of emission reductions needed to achieve the Paris mitigation target. Notably, nearly 60% of food production is produced by smallholders (<20 ha) who are undoubtedly the most vulnerable to climate change. The CGIAR Research Program on Forests, Trees and Agroforestry (FTA), together with Tropenbos International have organized a series of events aiming to enrich our discussion on barriers to inclusive sustainable finance and we reach the most vulnerable and marginalized.

After a set of interviews conducted at the beginning of 2019, a Digital Summit was organized, then followed by an e-dialogue to enrich an ongoing study via on-line discussion (the current state of the study is summarized in this white paper). Finally the discussion went live on Saturday, 30 November 2019 at the GLF Luxembourg in the prestigious European Convention Center. The outstanding panel discussions brought together many voices and different perspectives from the various stakeholders in landscape finance.

Rounding off the consultation phase of our study we will talk to three practitioners in the field of inclusive finance through an open-access Digital Summit. These are people who have been dealing with financial barriers from the receiver point of view: women groups in Ghana, indigenous people in Peru and people designing payment for ecosystem services in Kenya.

Join this open-access Digital Summit to follow the discussions and share you own experiences in dealing with barriers to finance your sustainable land use practices. You will be able to follow the event live and also pose questions via a chat box – don’t miss this opportunity!

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Measuring the Impact of Investments on Biodiversity

 

Bending the curve on our current biodiversity crisis is key to sustainable land use and a healthy planet. In doing so, the private sector will play a crucial role and it must invest on biodiversity. Measuring impact from those investments requires that there are agreed upon methodologies and terminology to familiarize the financial sector with biodiversity in support of higher commitment to action.

This Digital Summit will follow up on and discuss the outcomes of the upcoming GLF Luxembourg on 30th November. This conference on Sustainable Finance will tackle key questions such as, “How should positive impacts on biodiversity be defined? Can reducing negative impacts on biodiversity be considered as a positive impact? How should financial institutions’ s report on these impacts and how to reach a ‘net-positive-gain’? Furthermore, what baseline should be used to measure impact, a pristine situation or a situation which operates within the planetary boundaries?”

To broaden this conversation, experts on the field will share insights on how to Measure the Impact of Investments on Biodiversity and will use this Digital Summit to open the debate to a broader audience informing the way ahead.

 

Up for discussion will be the next steps ahead:

  • How to deal with certification in impact investment?
  • Who monitors biodiversity in landscape projects?
  • What are business case examples that could be provided to financials?
  • What for the investment period does landscape restoration require?

Speakers:

  • Caroline van Leenders, Process Manager Greening the Financial System at the Ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality of the Netherlands
  • Wijnand Broer, Partner at CREM
  • David Alvarez, Executive Director at Ecoacsa Reserva de Biodiversidad
  • Anna Krotova,Manager – Standards at GRI
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Land Tenure Reform in Africa and its Implication to Landscape Restoration on the Continent

In the last two decades, land reform has been carried out in many African countries. This GLF Digital Summit focuses on the impact of these policies on land tenure and resource management, and their perception by local residents in both rural and urban settings. From case studies from Rwanda, Ethiopia and Ghana, what factors are working on landscape change under land reform process will be discussed with special reference to landscape restoration.

Moderator:

  • Takanori Oishi
    Lecturer, African Studies Center, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies

Speakers:

  • Shinichi Takeuchi
    Director, African Studies Center, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies
  • Teshome Emana
    Visiting Professor, African Studies Center – TUFS / Head and Assistant Professor, Department of Social Anthropology, Addis Ababa University
  • Kojo Amanor
    Visiting Professor, African Studies Center – TUFS / Professor, Institute of African Studies, University of Ghana

Commentator:

  • Denis Sonwa
    Senior Researcher, CIFOR, Cameroon
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Toward a national forest landscape restoration strategy for Cameroon

This conversation will be conducted in French.

Forests cover 46% of Cameroon’s national territory, which hosts such diverse ecosystems that it is nicknamed “Africa in Miniature”. But Cameroon has also experienced substantial deforestation and land degradation, with causes ranging from fuel wood and charcoal extraction to infrastructure development, which has negatively impacted local livelihoods, the national economy and ecosystem services. In response, Cameroon has committed to restoring 12 million hectares of degraded lands by 2030 through the African Forest Landscape Restoration Initiative (AFR 100). To achieve this goal, the Ministries of Environment and Forestry have accelerated their efforts to develop a national forest land restoration strategy by the end of 2019.

Join us in this Digital Summit to better understand how national-level policies to restore the critical and diverse landscapes of the Congo Basin are made. By taking part, you’ll learn about what Cameroon is doing to ensure that the strategy considers national requirements, accommodates existing restoration projects, and is guided by best practices based on experience from around the globe.

Speakers:

  • Moderator: Denis Sonwa, Senior scientist at CIFOR
  • Ph.D. Bring Christophe, Head of the Studies Projects and Cooperation Division for the Ministry of Environment, Nature Protection and Sustainable Development (Cameroon)
  • Mikhail Mvongo Nkenne, Executive in the Cooperation and Programming Division for the Ministry of the Forest and Wildlife. (Cameroon).
  • Leonel M Tadong, Chief of Service, Follow-up and Control of the Department of Regional and Border Area Development at the Ministry of Economy, Planning and Regional Development (Cameroon)
  • Malin Elsen, Program supporter for the implementation of the rural development strategy and environmental forest component (ProPFE) of the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ)

Vers une stratégie nationale de restauration des paysages forestiers au Cameroun

Date : 16 octobre 2019

Heure : 10h – 11h heure de Yaoundé (utilisez cet outil pour convertir votre fuseau horaire en heure locale)

Les forêts couvrent 46 % du territoire national du Cameroun, un pays qui abrite des écosystèmes si divers qu’il est souvent appellé « l’Afrique en miniature ». Cependant, le Cameroun a également connu une déforestation et une dégradation des sols importantes, allant de la récolte du bois énergie au développement des infrastructures ; ce qui a eu un impact négatif sur les moyens de subsistance locaux, l’économie nationale et les services écosystémiques. En réponse, dans le cadre de l’Initiative pour la restauration des paysages forestiers en Afrique (AFR 100), le Cameroun s’est engagé à restaurer 12 millions d’hectares de terres dégradées d’ici 2030. Pour atteindre cet objectif, les ministères de l’Environnement et des Forêts ont redoublé d’efforts pour élaborer une stratégie nationale de restauration des terres forestières d’ici la fin de 2019.

Participez à ce séminaire en ligne pour mieux comprendre comment sont élaborées les politiques nationales visant à restaurer les paysages critiques et diversifiés du bassin du Congo. En participant, vous apprendrez ce que le Cameroun fait pour faire en sorte que la stratégie tienne compte des exigences nationales, s’adapte aux projets de restauration existants et s’appuie sur les meilleures pratiques fondées sur l’expérience acquise dans le monde entier.

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Bouncing back better after large forest fires

How can you bounce back better after a large forest fire?

Forest fires are part of the evolution of ecosystems, but they also cause severe disasters including loss of life, damage to homes and economic losses every year. As climate change effects such as long periods of drought become worse, forested areas become susceptible to more frequent and increasingly bigger forest fires.

It is a wicked and complex topic which involves many puzzle pieces. In this GLF Digital Summit, we will focus on post-fire recovery as a specific, crucial puzzle piece in the disaster management cycle. We will listen to stories from California, South Africa and Portugal to get familiar with the full swing of options to recover from forest fires which informs how you mitigate, prevent and respond to future events. In particular, we will pay attention to community-based approaches, landscape planning as well as entrepreneurial solutions to the problem.

After a general introduction by a moderator, each speaker shortly shares the context of their forest fire situation, their current approaches and a statement for the discussion that follows.

Speakers:

  • Moderator: Dr. François-Nicolas Robinne, Canadian Partnership for Wildland Fire Science, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada.
  • Vandria Borari is from the Borari indigenous people from Brazilian Amazon and she is the first indigenous lawyer from her region, committed to protect and preserve the Amazon and the rights and cultural heritage of it’s traditional inhabitants. In this webinar, she will reflect on the three forest fire stories from an indigenous peoples perspective. Besides being an indigenous lawyers, Vandria is also a volunteer firefighter together with other indigenous men and women.
  • Dr. Akli Benali shares his insights from a research & multi-stakeholder project in Alvares in central Portugal. In this talk, three important interventions are highlighted to lower the frequency of fires, provide safe conditions for communities and stimulate a local economy.
  • Misha Teasdale from Greenpop will share experiences of responding to the big fires that happened across the garden route (80 000 hectares over the last two years burnt), with community-driven restoration, art, permaculture design, natural building and other workshops in this space.
  • Matthew Trumm is the project leader of the Camp Fire Restoration Project in Paradise, California. In 2018, devastating forest fires – apparently started by power lines – killed  over 80 people and destroying almost 14,000 homes in California. The recovery process will take years, but the work has already started. This tragedy is being turned into an opportunity through the work of the Camp Fire Restoration Project.
  • Otto Beukes is a Landscape Innovator at Living Lands, an organisation that facilitates collaborations and knowledge sharing in landscapes of South Africa since 2009.
  • This Digital Summit is hosted by the GLF in collaboration with Commonland as part of the ENABLE consortium.
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Going for the Gold Standard: Reflections on developing principles to respect rights

Join us for this digital summit to learn why GLF is working with Indigenous Peoples and local communities to Go for the Gold – to ensure rights are respected and our planet is restored. Educate yourself about what it takes to become a champion for rights.

Why the Gold Standard?
Indigenous Peoples and local communities are unparalleled environmental stewards: their lands hold 80 percent of the world’s biodiversity and sequester nearly 300 billion metric tons of carbon. But we are not doing enough to recognize and respect the rights of these groups, especially for the rights of women, which are foundational to their ability to protect nature, to their safety, and their well-being.
Though there are many social and environmental safeguards to protect, existing schemes still lack a common set of globally recognized principles, defined and developed with rights holders.
Organizations including GLF, IPMG, RRI and FPP have come together to address this gap by developing a best practice “Guiding Principles to Rights-Based approaches to sustainable landscapes.”

Why join in on this digital summit:
Join us for this digital summit to learn about where the Gold Standard has been and where it’s going.

By taking part, you’ll hear about lessons panelists learned during the early stages of the Gold Standard concept development and consultations with rights holders in Latin America, Asia, and Africa. You’ll also learn about resources the Gold Standard’s developing organizations may provide for its successful adoption: to build the capacities of duty bearers to fulfill their responsibilities to people and the planet.
The development of the Gold Standard has been centered around regional consultation where rights holders shape the guiding principles. These principles will inform national and international policies and landscape-level interventions. The consultations are on-going, and the principles are expected to be launched publicly at the end of 2019.

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Large scale restoration of agroecosystems – Opportunities and Challenges of participatory monitoring.

Restoration practices must be designed in environmentally, socially and economically efficient ways in order to enhance long term farmer adoption. Putting together farmers’ experiences and scientific knowledge through participatory monitoring can help to find the most feasible solutions to develop resilient agroecosystems. However, involving multiple stakeholders in research can be challenging and requires careful design of collaborative monitoring adapted to the local context.

In this Digital Summit, three cases of participatory montoring used to foster agroecosystem restoration will be shared. The case studies present differing methods that have been used in research in three ecosystems: African thickets and forests, Mediterranean drylands in Spain, and the subtropical Atlantic rainforest in Brazil. After considering the strengths and lessons learnt from these case studies, we will facilitate a discussion about plausible strategies, benefits, challenges and limitations of participatory monitoring to facilitate knowledge exchange, foster the restoration of agroecosystems, and promote science with impact.

Speakers:

  • Moderator: Dr. Joris de Vente, Spanish National Research Council (CEBAS-CSIC)
  • MSc Raquel Luján Soto, Spanish National Research Council (CEBAS-CSIC) & Institute of Sociology and Peasant Studies (ISEC) – University of Cordoba.
  • Mr. Piet Krueger, Farmer participating in Living Lands restoration initiative (South Africa).
  • Dr Lindsay Stringer, University of Leeds
  • MSc Heitor Mancini Teixeira, WUR (NL) and University of Viçosa (Brasil)

This Digital Summit is hosted by GLF and initiated by J. de Vente and R. Lujan Soto from the Spanish National Research Council as a partner in the ENABLE consortium and supported by a research grant from Fundación la Caixa.

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From river to coast – Collaboration to restore coastal and rural areas

Participatory approaches to map and model system dynamics can help to create mutual understanding of appropriate collective action for ecosystem restoration initiatives. But in contexts with active resource or value system conflicts, this can be a challenging task.

Join us for this Digital Summit, which will address the potential benefits, limitations and challenges of participatory modelling as a methodology to co-create scenarios promoting coastal-rural synergies.

In particular, three examples of ongoing projects in Spain, India and Portugal will be presented: 1) the Mar Menor coastal lagoon and its contributing catchment area, as part of the COASTAL project; 2) the Ria de Aveiro coastal lagoon and Lower Vouga River Natura2000 sites; and 3) A project with farmers about groundwater management in India.

Already have thoughts or questions for our speakers? Registered participants will be asked to submit their questions in advance!

Speakers:

  • Moderator: Joris de Vente, Spanish National Research Council (CEBAS-CSIC, Spain)
  • Javier Martínez-López, Spanish National Research Council (CEBAS-CSIC)
  • Alexey Voinov, Centre on Persuasive Systems for Wise Adaptive Living (PERSWADE, Australia)
  • Óscar Esparza Alaminos, WWF (Spain)
  • Ana Lillebø, University Aveiro (Portugal)
  • Heliana Teixeira, University Aveiro (Portugal)
  • Nagesh Kolagani, Centurion University (India)

 

This Digital Summit is hosted by GLF and initiated by J. de Vente and J. Martínez López from the Spanish National Research Council as partner in the  ENABLE consortium and COASTAL project.

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