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Session 3: Ensuring REDD+ Complements Restoration, Poverty Alleviation and Adaptation Jeffrey Hatcher RRI Dialogue on Forests, Governance and Climate Change.

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Presentation on theme: "Session 3: Ensuring REDD+ Complements Restoration, Poverty Alleviation and Adaptation Jeffrey Hatcher RRI Dialogue on Forests, Governance and Climate Change."— Presentation transcript:

1 Session 3: Ensuring REDD+ Complements Restoration, Poverty Alleviation and Adaptation Jeffrey Hatcher RRI Dialogue on Forests, Governance and Climate Change February 8, 2011 London

2 Outline Premise Implications of moving from RED to REDD+ Forests, people and: – Poverty Alleviation – Food Security – Adaptation Conditions for success Questions

3 Premise We face multiple crises (food insecurity, climate, energy, poverty, fragile political systems, continued disenfranchisement of women and minority groups) and we have limited time and money; all contributing to vulnerability to make effective progress on any one of them; we need to prepare for a very uncertain future. We need to invest on underlying, cross-cutting initiatives that help address multiple crises – that strengthen rural society and build resilience

4 Implications of REDD+ REDD+ has the potential to be a cross-cutting answer Within the Cancun Agreement REDD+ includes: enhancement and conservation of stocks and sustainable management of forests. Therefore a much larger geographic and therefore demographic scope is implicated – 1.5 billion hectares of degraded forest land = how many people? – 17% target for conservation areas REDD+ must therefore complement a host of goals and not just carbon, including: – Poverty alleviation – Food security – Adaptation

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6 Forest Poverty and Livelihoods Forests are home to many of the world’s poor and marginalized Livelihoods and food security are the concerns of the poor – not carbon; Poverty is more than a lack of money Enormous potential to empower and enhance livelihoods exists

7 Food security Food security: millions already rely on the forest for food In a climate of volatile food prices, declining yields and changing climates: forests provide a safety net (wild plants and foods) Forests and trees provide biodiversity, fertilizers, and protection and enhancement of watersheds The “+” opens the door to agroforestry and thinking about the role of agriculture in achieving climate goals

8 Adaptation Adaptation of forests and forestry: making forests more resilient – Active, diverse management of landscapes can increase resilience Insect infestation in Canada Forest fires in Russia – If forests are not resilient communities will bear the burden. But communities also offer a solution, diverse production systems will allow for more stability Adaptation using forests: making people more resilient – Trees will reduce fragility of soil systems: controlling erosion, landslides – Adaptation through mitigation

9 Emerging complementarities One example, programs to restore degraded lands can increase sequestration capacities, and – Provide livelihood options for the rural poor and sources of food – Help adapt: Reduce vulnerability: landslides – Reduce water shortages; increase drought resistance; increase resistance to heavy waterfall – Restored forests can provide a source of energy But the conditions must be right: Lessons from countries that have reversed from Forest Losing Countries to Forest Adding countries (Gregersen and Bailey, forthcoming) – Major policy shifts: Large scale restoration with government support/attitude change – Tenure and governance reforms – Economic development We need to invest on underlying, cross-cutting initiatives that help address multiple crises – that strengthen rural society and build resilience

10 Can REDD+ contribute to solving the interconnected crises? “To reach scale, increase conservation and chances for resilience to climate, economic, political shocks – need to recognize the rights and unleash the entrepreneurial energies of the 1 billion forest poor” Recognition of the management capacities of forest communities Adapting requires having a firm leg to stand on: tenure rights provide a base for: – Long term incentives to maintain and enhance environment – Rights to move Appreciation of the forest as a source of food security

11 Questions Will REDD+ programs be able to deliver on the complementarities? Where are the possibilities for alleviating poverty in REDD+? Can we hang our forest adaptation hopes on REDD+?


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