Title: GEF
1The GEF Experience with POPs and Sound Chemicals
Management
Caribbean WS on SAICM and related instruments,
Barbados, 10-13 Mar 2009
2Structure of this presentation
- Background to the GEF and project approval
process - Overview of programs related to chemicals POPs
- Synergies and sound chemicals management
- GEF-5
3- Background to the GEF and project approval
process
4ABOUT THE GEF
- Worlds largest funder of projects in developing
countries to protect the global environment while
supporting sustainable development - Established in 1991 before Rio as a network
organization - 177 member countries
- 10 GEF Agencies UNDP, UNEP, World Bank, FAO,
UNIDO, International Fund for Agriculture
Development ( IFAD), African Development Bank
(AfDB), Asian Development Bank (ADB) European
Bank for Reconstruction and Development,
Inter-American Development Bank.
5ABOUT THE GEF
- Secretariat
- Independent Evaluation Office
- Scientific and Technical Advisory Panel (STAP)
- Assembly (Every 4 years) overall policies and
evaluation - Council (Twice per year) 32 members(18
representing recipient countries, 14 representing
donor countries) responsible for approving
operational policies and programs - Financial mechanism for Conventions on
Biodiversity, Climate Change, Desertification,
and Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs).
6GEF Governance Framework
Strategic Guidance
Operations
Action
STAP
- GEF Agencies
- UNDP
- UNEP
- World Bank
- ADB
- AFDB
- EBRD
- IDB
- FAO
- IFAD
- UNIDO
GEF Assembly Countries Political FPs
Projects Countries Operational FPs, Convention
FPs, other govt agencies, civil society
GEF Council Countries Council Members/
Constituencies
GEF Secretariat
Conventions Countries Convention FPs
Evaluation Office
7GEF-4 Reforms Simplified Project Approval
Process
- Main Features
- Consolidation of steps in project cycle
- Reduction in documentation requirements
- See an example of a recently approved project
(Project Identification Form) to judge in
practice what the minimum level of documentation
now required is
8- Overview of programs related to chemicals POPs
9Chemicals Management Across the GEF focal areas
- Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs)
- Ozone layer depletion (ODS)
- International Waters (PTS and other LBS)
- Cross-cutting strategy for Sound Chemicals
Management (SCM) - Collaboration with International Waters (IW),
Land Degradation (LD), Biodiversity (BD), and
Climate Change (CC) focal areas
10POPs Programming
- 2001-2006 (GEF-3) ?218m (co-financing 153m)
- GEF-4 allocation 300m
- As of October 2008, cumulative allocation since
adoption of the SC of 360m leveraging 440m
co-financing - Since 2001 WB share 29, followed by UNDP,
UNIDO, UNEP, FAO
11POPs Key Issues
- Limited ability to deal with POPs in developing
countries due to lack of basic chemicals
management capacities - 135 countries prepared a National Implementation
Plan (NIP), assessing and prioritizing POPs
issues now ready for NIP implementation - GEF-4 shift towards NIP implementation
- GEF-5? towards a more integrated life-cycle-based
approach?
12POPs Strategic Objective
- Long-term Protect human health and the
environment by assisting countries to reduce and
eliminate production, use and releases of POPs,
and consequentially contribute generally to
capacity development for the sound management of
chemicals - Mid-term assist eligible countries to implement
their obligations under the SC
13POPs GEF-4 Expected Impacts
- Strengthening countries POPs and general
chemicals management capacity - Environmentally sound disposal of obsolete
pesticides hazardous to human health and the
environment - Halt to PCB-caused local and global environment
contamination through their phase out and disposal
14POPs GEF-4 Expected Impacts
- Decreased risk of POPs-caused adverse health
effects among communities living in close
proximity to POPs waste disposed of or contained - Establishment of the future SC implementation
basis through demonstrations of innovative
alternative products, best practices, and
environmentally sound POPs generation, use or
release processes
15POPs GEF-4 Strategic Program 1
-
- Strengthening Capacity for NIP Development
and Implementation - Resources 40
- e.g. following NIP priorities strengthening
of regulatory framework - Outcome Countries have capacity to implement
measures to meet obligations under the SC thus
improving their general capacity to achieve the
sound management of chemicals
16POPs GEF-4 Strategic Program 2
- Partnering in Investments for NIP
Implementation - Resources 45
- e.g. based on NIP priorities phase-out and
disposal of PCBs / non-POPs alternative products
and practices / destruction of pesticides wastes - Outcome Sustainably reduced production, use
and release of POPs ? reduced environmental and
health risks from POPs
17POPs GEF-4 Strategic Program 3
- Partnering for Demonstration of Feasible,
Innovative Technologies and Best Practices for
POPs Reduction and Substitution - Resources 15
- e.g. identification of alternative products
or practices to DDT, or POPs termiticides /
demonstration of destruction technologies /
demonstration of BAT-BEP/ targeted research - Outcome Effective alternative products,
practices or techniques that avoid POPs
production/use/release demonstrated / in
particular DDT
18Example of POPs Projects
- Destruction and prevention of future stocks of
obsolete pesticides, for example in Eritrea and
Vietnam plans for the Caribbean region - General POPs projects (incl. e.g., regulation,
pesticides, PCBs) with QSP co-financing, incl.
Honduras, Nicaragua - Phase-out and destruction of PCBs in electrical
equipment in a number of countries, incl. Brazil,
Kyrgyzstan - Development of strategies, and pilot
demonstrations in specific sectors, to reduce
releases of dioxins - Project to support development of PRTRs for POPs
reporting and information dissemination in 13
countries, with QSP co-financing - Demonstration of alternatives to DDT to fight
malaria carrying mosquitoes, including Central
America, Pacific SIDS.
19- Synergies and
- sound chemicals management
20Promoting synergies in implementing the POPs
Convention
- WHY?
- Fragmentation / development effectiveness.
- Risk for Governments to take partially informed /
wrong decisions. - Missed opportunities.
- Recognition that SC does not come in a desert
Both GEF NIP guidelines and initial 2002 GEF POPs
program explicitly refer to need to seek
synergies and coordination with related chemicals
conventions / agreements - Support to development of National Profile as a
basis for POPs NIP.
21SCM Across Focal Areas
- Goal Contribute to Agenda 21 implementation and
JPOI through activities that promote SMC and
bring Global Environment Benefits to the focal
areas, to protect human health and the
environment - Mid-term promote sound management of chemicals
practices in all relevant aspects of GEF programs
and to contribute to the overall objective of
the Strategic Approach to International Chemicals
Management
22SCM Across Focal Areas Strategic Programs
- Sound chemicals management practices integrated
in BD, CC, IW, and LD focal area projects - GEF interventions to support POPs elimination,
ODS phase-out, and PTS management, are
sustainable because build upon and strengthen
general capacity of recipient countries for sound
chemicals management
23GEF-5
- Strategy revision process launched with outside
experts from China, Denmark, Uruguay, U.S., SC
and Multilateral Fund, STAP. - Replenishment process underway first meeting
March 17-18 2009. Will run through 2009 with view
to be completed early 2010 for smooth transition
to GEF-5 in July 2010. - Opportunity to comment on GEF-5 strategies and
other replenishment documents through your
Council member. Documents are publicly available
at www.TheGEF.org - POPs and Chemicals
- Need for significant resources to implement SC
provisions, incl BAT/BEP. SC needs assessment
provides multi-billion figures. - Tap potential synergies with climate mitigation
cluster in particular. - Support activities strengthening chemicals
management in other focal areas and joint
projects, in particular with International
Waters. - Proposal for an integrated life-cycle approach
that would allow to respond to related agreements
in a synergetic manner.
24Summary
- Transparent and shared governance
- GEF-4 reforms facilitating access
- Use Stockholm Convention to advance national
structures for chemicals management - GEF-5 is being decided make your voice heard!
25THANK YOU!
- Contact Information
- Lgranier_at_theGEF.org
- ISow_at_theGEF.org
- Agency contacts at HQ, regional, or country
office - Know your national focal points!
- http//www.thegef.org/interior.aspx?id212