Title: The United Nations MDG Strategy
1Environmentally sustainable investment to
achieve the MDGs in the Pacific UNDP June
2007
2Environmentally 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
3Environmentally 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
4Environmentally 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)
5Environmentally 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
6Lack 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
-
7Challenges 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
8Identifying 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
9An 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
10MDG 7
11Environmentally 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
12Environment 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)
-
13Remaining 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
14Improving 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
15Livelihoods 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
16Vulnerability 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
17Governance, 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
18Additional Intervention areas
- Allows country to add any additional areas
19Experience 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
20Environment 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