https://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=http://www.fao.org/3/a-i5032e.pdf&ved=0ahUKEwjh6qmb9JrKAhWGShQKHTO_DrcQFggdMAA&usg=AFQjCNH9lDMmfISHSlbjcDvAsf4FJlgkoQ&sig2=ldLg2bko12OUITAQwtLTCw

Executive summary
The international community has set ambitious goals for forest and
landscape restoration (FLR), including reaching land degradation neutrality
by 2030 (Target 15.3 of the Sustainable Development Goals), restoring 150
million hectares by 2020 in the framework of the Bonn Challenge, and
restoring 350 million hectares by 2030 under the New York Declaration on
Forests. The technical feasibility of meeting these targets has been
proved. However, implementation faces a number of barriers. In addition to
unclear tenure rights, lack of implementation capacity and continued
incentives for unsustainable land uses, one of the chief barriers is
insufficient awareness of financing opportunities and investors’ lack of
understanding of FLR.
Between USD 36 billion and USD 49 billion are required every year to
achieve agreed FLR targets, a limited amount in comparison to climate
finance (USD 350 billion to USD 640 billion annually). Where can this money
be found? There are many sources for raising these funds, among them:
development cooperation resources, climate finance, non-governmental
organizations (NGOs), State budgets, environmental funds, crowdfunding and
the private sector. With governments facing more and more funding shortages
and development cooperation having limited growth margins, long-term
financing solutions may increasingly rely on the private sector and on
instruments enabling self-sustained financing such as environmental funds.
Private-sector investors – businesses and individuals – are the key to
long-term FLR finance, whether as social investors in the framework of
corporate social responsibility or as impact investors looking for a mix of
social and financial returns. More than ten private equity impact funds
(already operational or in design) seek to invest in landscape restoration
projects. They are small relative to the needed budget (generally limited
to USD 100 million), but even so it is a challenge to find bankable
projects. This challenge is what makes traditional investors (pension
funds, commercial banks) reluctant to invest in FLR even though they have
available capital and interested potential clients.
Beyond addressing the communication and awareness gap between investors and
FLR project promoters and implementers, many barriers are to be overcome in
order to make the FLR project pipeline attractive. FLR values should be
recognized, value chains need to be developed and aligned to a landscape
vision, local champions have to be trained and local communities enabled,
positive
externalities and market opportunities (e.g. carbon) have to be harnessed,
and investment risks must be covered.
Building the enabling environment that makes a landscape “ready for
investment” in FLR is critical. For this, governments, NGOs and development
cooperation institutions have an important role to play in developing
capacities of landscape stakeholders (e.g. local decision-makers, NGOs,
small farmers, cooperatives), clarifying costs and benefits of FLR
investments, establishing marketplaces for FLR and developing risk coverage
mechanisms. This initial “readiness phase” can be covered through different
forms of investment from development agencies, NGOs and private equity
impact funds that have their own technical assistance facilities. Landscape
insurance pioneers such as the Latin American Development Bank (CAF) and
the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) have
demonstrated the design of partial risk guarantee mechanisms for FLR.
Proactive States have developed integrated financing strategies and
mechanisms blending different capital sources (national, international,
public, private) to invest in FLR in both the readiness and implementation
phases. National forest or environmental funds are appropriate for
addressing the multiple objectives of FLR, as shown by examples from Costa
Rica and Rwanda. FLR finance also shows potential for innovation, as
demonstrated by the emergence of non-traditional funding mechanisms such as
crowdfunding, based on citizen participation FLR can offer substantial
internal rates of return (7 to 79 percent, according to The Economics of
Ecosystems and Biodiversity [TEEB]), which is a strong indication of the
urgency to intensify pragmatic actions towards sustainable finance for FLR.
Compiling the business case and supporting the creation of adapted
marketplaces could start a snowball effect of investor interest in
restoration.
Who can do what?
• Governments can integrate FLR into their budget planning at the national
and subnational levels, as is done in Canada and the United States of
America. They can support the design of environmental funds, such as
national forest funds that channel resources for FLR. They can “green”
their investment funds, such as sovereign wealth funds and pension funds,
to avoid investing in sectors and activities that harm forests and
landscapes.
• Climate finance operators (e.g. the Green Climate Fund and the Adaptation
Fund) should acknowledge FLR’s joint role in mitigation and adaptation and
allocate resources accordingly.
• International development cooperation agencies could adapt their
financing instruments to FLR. Since their financing mechanisms address
multiple sectors, they should be able to blend their resources for
intersectoral landscape restoration projects.
• NGOs (international, national and local) could intensify their
collaboration to finance and implement more field restoration projects.
• Private companies can further allocate funds to FLR through corporate
social responsibility (CSR) initiatives, insetting and impact marketing
approaches. They can integrate FLR in operational funds so as to mainstream
it in business operations and value chains as part of a long-term business
strategy. Greening of supply chains through deforestation-free procurement
will also be vital.
• Private equity impact funds involved in FLR can communicate on their
successful investment cases to attract traditional investors to large-scale
FLR projects. In general, FLR stakeholders should support these private
impact funds because they are at present the only classical investors
willing to invest in FLR at scale. Success in engaging them will be
critical to the whole FLR finance sphere.
• Traditional and institutional investors should continue innovating for
FLR even at a small scale while the FLR project pipeline is developing.
Restoration bonds may be part of the solution when large-scale projects
enter the pipeline.
• Citizens – individuals and communities – can create, foster and support
FLR initiatives such as crowdfunding platforms and green bank cards. As
consumers, citizens have a responsibility to purchase goods and services
from sustainably managed and restored landscapes.
Alliances and partnerships that bring all these stakeholders together may
offer strong opportunities for implementing FLR at scale. Efforts such as
Initiative 20×20 in Latin America and the Great Green Wall for the Sahara
and the Sahel Initiative are beginning to demonstrate successes in
upscaling FLR efforts that could inspire other regions of the world.
A number of innovative approaches show promise, such as the public–private
partnership model of the Land Degradation Neutrality Fund, being developed
by the Global Mechanism of the UNCCD; and The Landscape Fund, being
developed under the leadership of the Center for International Forestry
Research (CIFOR), which plans to issue restoration bonds following the
model of green bonds.
In a nutshell, many opportunities exist to mobilize funds for FLR.
Continuous dialogue among all FLR stakeholders, including investors of all
types and FLR project promoters and implementers,
must be maintained so that all can benefit from the full range of win–win
opportunities that FLR offers.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to