The United Nations MDG Strategy

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The United Nations MDG Strategy

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Why environmentally sustainable investment has been limited ... Natural resources (eg access to tuna or water resources) key to rights, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The United Nations MDG Strategy


1
Environmentally sustainable investment to
achieve the MDGs in the Pacific UNDP June
2007
2
Environmentally sustainable investment in the
Pacific presentation overview
  • Why environmentally sustainable investment
    matters
  • Why environmentally sustainable investment has
    been limited
  • Defining an environmentally sustainable public
    investment and financing strategy
  • Value added and challenges to environment of MDG
    based needs assessment and costing
  • Environment in needs assessment and costing
    models
  • Experience so farMongolia,Bhutan,Sri Lanka
  • Lessons learned and challenges for future

3
Environmentally sustainable investment MDGs
  • MDG 1 Poverty
  • Livelihoods resource dependence of poor ie.
    Fisheries, subsistence agriculture, tourism
  • vulnerability to climate shocks and long term
    changes (Kiribati high rainfall volatility,
    Marshall Islands, Kiribati and sea level rise)
  • MDGs for health, education and gender
  • Illness from dirty indoor air
  • Lack of clean water and sanitation and
  • declining availability of water and biomass

4
Environmentally sustainable investments and
pro-poor growth in the Pacific
  • Natural resources contribute to growth?
  • Fishery provides 7 of GDP to Pacific
  • Fishing fees generate 40 of revenue in Kiribati
    and 25 of fees in Micronesia
  • Tourism dependent on natural beauty provides many
    jobs eg Palau, Marshall Islands
  • But growth must be pro-poor, sustainable not
    boom and bust
  • Impacts of climate change on growth
  • Climate change huge impacts on GDP?
  • Over 1990s, natural disasters cost Pacific over
    2.8 billion (in 2004)

5
Environmentally sustainable investments
Governance, politics, capacity
  • Natural resources (eg access to tuna or water
    resources) key to rights, conflicts, corruption,
    local service delivery but
  • Resources fixed in short term (so resource
    decline struggles over rights and access)
  • Conflict and corruption as resources located in
    remote rural areas small and large scale both
    use fixed resource, lack of visibility (eg fish)
  • Investment constrained by unclear property rights
    as resources mobile and hard to enforce
  • Over dependence on state capacity large role for
    govt as de jure owner

6
Lack of environmentally sustainable investment
  • Environment poor are increasing ie poverty
    linked to environmental factors drylands,
    coastal, disaster prone, urban slum settlements
  • But lack of private investment
  • Market failure reduce incentives to invest in
    natural capital
  • weak property rights
  • open access
  • no market price
  • High discount rate lack of concern for future
  • Governance and policy failure create
  • perverse incentives to invest in environment
  • Subsidies

7
Challenges of implementing environmentally
sustainable investment
  • Environment link to poverty/growth not well
    recognised
  • Confusing MDG 7 not easily measurable
  • Other sectors lead (cross cutting like gender eg
    agriculture, energy)
  • Weak environment institutions (lacking economic
    skills)
  • No uniform investment packages (country specific)
  • Not just service delivery, but access to
    declining natural resource base so politics
    matters
  • Trade-offs between natural capital
  • and other capital

8
Identifying investment needsEnvironment needs
assessment
  • What public investments are required to achieve
    environment outcomes for MDG 7 and the other
    MDGs?
  • Requires environmentally sustainable investments
    across all sectors
  • Requires investments in the environment

9
An environmentally sustainable public investment
and financing strategy
1. Define interventions and parameters
2. Specify targets
3. Identify costs of interventions
5. Estimate resource requirements
6. Estimate financing sources
10
MDG 7
11
Environmentally sustainable Public investment
value added of MDG need assessment/ costing
  • Integrates environment into mainstream planning
    process
  • Improves prioritisation in environmental planning
  • Focus on pro-poor environmental investments
  • Corrects balance between policy investment
  • Even policies have a cost eg land titling
  • Identifies where financial resources are key
  • Costed environmental interventions assist link to
    budget
  • Reduces over-dependence on donor funding
  • Can improve donor harmonisation on environment

12
Environment in other Needs assessment and costing
models
  • Water supply and sanitation model
  • (Drainage and Water resource management)
  • Energy model for reduced indoor air pollution and
    off- grid energy and grid distribution
  • (Energy generation carbon emissions being
    added)
  • Agriculture model for some investments
  • (Water issues and some land management covered)

13
Remaining investmentEnvironment Needs
Assessment Model
  • Environment needs from a pro-poor perspective
  • Five key intervention areas
  • Health (except indoor air, water, sanitation
    already covered)
  • Livelihoods improved (including ecosystems)
  • Vulnerability enhanced for environment
    disasters and climate change
  • Governance, institutions, capacity and systemic
    issues (not already covered)
  • Additional intervention areas

14
Improving environmental health interventions
  • Water supply and sanitation, indoor air pollution
    already covered in other models
  • Water pollution
  • Localised outdoor air pollution
  • Sound management and use of chemicals
  • Solid waste management

15
Livelihoods improved interventions
  • Some interventions already covered in agric and
    water model
  • Land, minerals and water
  • Seeds and livestock (including agrobiodiversity)
  • Fisheries and marine based resources
  • Forests and biological diversity
  • Improvements in the lives of urban slum dwellers

16
Vulnerability reduced including climate adaptation
  • Assess impacts of climate change and develop
    adaptation strategy
  • Design of infrastructure and investment to
    respond to climate impacts
  • Income support for environmentally and disaster
    vulnerable households
  • Disaster preparedness achieved

17
Governance, advocacy and systemic issues
  • Awareness, advocacy and education on
    environmental issues
  • Ensuring equitable access to wealth from natural
    resources
  • Strengthening governments ability to manage
    environment for poverty reduction
  • Empower civil society and grassroots
    organisations
  • Engage private sector in pro-poor environmental
    investments
  • Data collection and monitoring

18
Additional Intervention areas
  • Allows country to add any additional areas

19
Experience with environment needs assessment
Mongolia, Bhutan, Sri Lanka
  • Mongolia
  • Energy investments 16 of total costs
  • Water and sanitation 5
  • Environment (pollution control) 3.5
  • But environment in other sectors is limited
  • Bhutan
  • Energy 9 of total costs
  • Water and sanitation 6.2
  • Environment policy, disaster management 0.4
  • Some other sectors cover environment
  • Sri Lanka
  • Good links with other sectors
  • But too comprehensive all environment included

20
Environment needs assessment for MDGsLessons
and challenges for future
  • Grounds for optimism
  • Energy, sanitation, environment, disaster
    management included with country led
    identification
  • Capacity and software, as well as hardware
    identified
  • Environment is being picked up in some other
    sectors
  • Challenges
  • Environment in other sectors is key, so sum of
    environment investment is deceptive (Bhutan
    more sustainable than Mongolia?)
  • Some interventions controversial eg.Mongolia
    greenwall
  • All environment included no MDG focus?
  • Financing strategy still lacking
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