Title: Presentation to U.S. AID REDD Roundtable REDD Programs
1Presentation to U.S. AID REDD RoundtableREDD
Programs Benefits SharingNovember 6, 2008Ben
VitaleManaging DirectorConservation Community
Carbon Fund
2- REDD Programs Benefits Sharing
- CIs Experiences and REDD Support to Date
- National Readiness and Project-level Actions
- Benefits Sharing Madagascar Cambodia
- Key Take Away Messages
3CIs Carbon Project Experience
- Largest portfolio of high biodiversity
forest-carbon projects - gt 25 carbon projects in development in 14
countries - Producing gt 90 million tCO2 over 30 years
- CI and partners can also tap into a much larger
project pipeline of the Global Conservation Fund
and Conservation Stewards portfolios
CI and partners launched largest portfolio of
projects
4- 7 Years of Carbon Project Experience
- Delivers Highest Biodiversity and Community
Outcomes - 1st CDM Approved Small-scale Forest Methodology
- 7th CDM Approved Forest Methodology
- 1st Climate, Community and Biodiversity (CCB)
Certification - 1st methodology for reducing emissions from
deforestation and degradation with the World Bank - 15M in funding provided by diverse partners
5Capacity Building and Community Engagement Take
Time
- Strengthening local enabling conditions takes
24-36 months particularly working with
governments, communities, and indigenous people. - Forest carbon project designs require
stakeholder engagement well beyond other carbon
project asset classes. This is especially unique
to forest-carbon projects. - Globally, limited funding is available for these
activities
6National Readiness and Project-level Actions
- Provided advisory services to government agencies
on REDD since 2003 including 7 World Bank FCPF
RPINs (Madagascar, Liberia, Guyana, Suriname,
etc.) - Technical support on innovative methodologies
nationally and with infrastructure links to REDD
(e.g. IDB road improvement planning in Guyana) - Complete wall-to-wall deforestation monitoring
and training (e.g. Madagascar, Bolivia, Liberia,
etc.) - Establishment of demonstration activities and
financing vehicles (e.g. protected areas, trust
funds, voluntary carbon market)
7Madagascar 36 defor reduction 00-05
1. Makira Forest Carbon Project (2002) Forest
Conservation 400,000 ha Carbon benefit Up to 9
Mt CO2
Next step National level
2. Mantadia-Zahamena (2004) Forest Conservation
420,000 ha Reforestation 3,000 ha Livelihoods
2,000 ha Carbon benefit 10 Mt CO2
3. Fandriana-Vondrozo (2008) Forest
Conservation app. 240,000 ha Reforestation
approx. 2,000 ha Carbon benefit 10 Mt CO2
8MadagascarExample Benefits Sharing
- Project start-up costs over 1M subsidized by
donors - Project costs are front-loaded so early benefits
sharing is lower - 50 was based on prior forest-based revenue
sharing and requires more analysis based on
management and opportunity costs - Allocations of national incentives to projects
requires analysis because needs and costs are
highly variable across regions
9Cambodia Conservation Incentive Agreement
10Incentive AgreementsChumnoab, Cambodia
- 73 families need to slash burn 40 hectares/year
- Hunting (Pangolins, Sun bears, tigers, etc)
- By-catch of Siamese crocodiles (pop. 200)
- Communities desire
- rice production areas/increased food security
- teachers who stay in school full scholarly years
- income or economic opportunities
11Incentive AgreementsChumnoab, Cambodia
- Results 20K hectares of forest protected (scale
to 100K ha) - 10 of the global crocodile population hatched in
year 1 - Community engaged in conservation activities
- Increased rice production 4x
- Teachers in schools year round, buffalos and
tools for agriculture were supplied - Agreement requires 100-150K per year to protect
the forest
12Key Take Away Messages
- Dedicated funding for capacity at both the
national and local levels for forestry projects
must come earlier - Scaling-up projects that include REDD area
designations, incentive agreements, and financing
instruments (e.g. trust funds) are required for
equitable distribution of benefits - National REDD Readiness frameworks must include
provisions for distribution of incentives based
on varied biodiversity and socio-economic
conditions - Market and non-market incentives must be high
enough to cover community incentives/opportunity
costs, management and monitoring costs, and
transaction costs