Transcript Habiba

Scientific and Technical Advisory Panel
(STAP)
Interlinkages between the GEF
Focal Areas:
A Report Focusing on the
needs of the GEF
*Focal Areas are: Biodiversity, Climate
change, International waters, Land
degradation, Ozone depletion,
POPs
Scientific and Technical Advisory
Panel (STAP)
• 15 members
• Diverse expertise and regional
representaion
• Provide advice to the GEF and bring
relevant scientific and technical
knowledge to the attention of the GEF
GEF
• Set up post Rio
• Funding to support the goals and objectives of
the Conventions - a catalytic institution
• Replenishment every four years
• Current: $US3billion from 2002-6
• Projects dispersed through “implementing
agencies (IAs : WB, UNDP, UNEP)
• Projects developed within focal areas and within
Operational Programs (OPs)
• Also funds enabling activities (for convention
reporting) and capacity building activities
Focal Areas
Focal Area
Climate Change
Biodiversity
Includes:
Mostly mitigation, but this year on
adaptation
Concentrates on many ecosystems
International Waters
Rivers, lakes, aquifers, coastal and
inland wetlands, Large Marine Ecos
Ozone Depletion
Reduction of Methyl Bromide
Multi-Focal (OP #12)
Integrated ecosystem management
POPs
Capacity building, non-combustion
disposal technologies
Summary of GEF Investments
(1991-2002)
Focal Area
GEF Investments ($m)
Climate Change
1407.4
Biodiversity
1485.8
International Waters
550.8
Ozone Depletion
169.9
Multi-Focal (OP #12)
210.0
POPs
20.9
Operational Programs
• 15 OPs: multiple ones in some Focal Areas
– including in Biodiversity, Climate change and
International waters
– In Biodiversity, OPs include: Sustainable forestry;
Coastal, Marine and Freshwater resources; Arid
and semi-arid lands; Mountain ecosystems,
Agrobiodiversity
• More recently multifocal areas added
– Integrated Approach to Ecosystem Management
(OP#12 - $250m)
– Sustainable Land Management (OP#15 - $500m)
Strategic priorities
• Move to these in the third replenishment
– E.g in Biodiversity
– Catalyzing Sustainability of Protected Areas
– Mainstreaming Biodiversity in Production
Landscapes and Sectors
– Capacity Building for Implementation of the
Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety
– Generation and Dissemination of Best Practices
for Addressing Current and Emerging Biodiversity
Issues
However, ..
• most of the projects are still funded in the OPs
and thus within one single Focal Areas (note IW
in many ways deals with linkages)
• Hence the need for looking at interlinkages in
the Focal Areas
Overall Performance Study 2
• “..integration of global environmental issues
into the mainstream development agenda”
Another reason for looking at interlinkages
STAP in this report would: ..
• Focus on the scientific and technical basis of the
linkages and why they need to be considered
• What general interventions could be developed that take
the interlinkages into account, are sustainable etc
• Include case studies (GEF and non-GEF funded) that
would give insights and are illustrative of what can be
(or has been) done to include interlinkages in project
design (what could have been changed in projects to
take the interlinkages into account)
• Learning by doing - adaptive management in projects
dealing with interlinkages.
Types of interventions (i.e.,
strategies and policies)
• potential synergies and tradeoffs
between the different focal area
– temporal and spatial scale (time lags,
thresholds etc)
A possible framework from current scientific understanding
Move from the circles
to the arrows
Stratospheric
ozone
depletion
Climate
Change
Biodiversity
Change
Persistent
Organic
Pollutants
Land
Degradation
Internationa
l waters
MA’s Conceptual Framework as an overall
framework
Indirect and Direct Drivers of Change
Indirect Drivers
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Demographic
Economic (e.g., globalization, trade, market, & policy framework)
Socio-political (e.g., governance, institutional, & legal framework)
Science and Technology
Cultural and religious (e.g., choices about what and how much to
consume)
Direct Drivers
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Changes in land use and land cover
Species Introductions or removals
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Technology adaptation and use
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Various FA
External inputs (e.g. fertilizer use, pest control, irrigation)
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Biodiversity, international waters
Biodiversity, IW
Harvest and resource consumption (many of the FA(
Climate change
Natural physical and biological drivers(e.g., volcanoes, evolution)
Alternative way to look
- make interlinkages more tangible
What are the some of the issues or questions the IAs have
in terms of GEF projects (consulting the IAs on this)
What are the pressing scientific and socieconomic issues
at the global level?
•
Degradation and over exploitation of our land and
water resources
•
Management of transboundary watersheds and
coastal areas given pressures from pollution,
including POPs, land run-off etc
•
Management of Invasive species
•
Management of wetlands
Global issues and focal areas
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Degradation and over exploitation of our land and
water resources
Management of transboundary watersheds and
coastal areas given pressures from pollution,
including POPs, land run-off etc
Management of Invasive species
Management of wetlands
Desing of protected areas
Need to have interventions that consider all the FA.
Biodiversity, Climate change, International waters, land
degradation, POPs, stratospheric ozone depletion
Structure of the Report
•
•
Executive summary
Rationale and Scope
– Need for interlinkages amongst the focal areas
– A short context setting of work already done
•
An overall framework
– Including Introduction to direct and indirect drivers, SPIR, MA
CFW
•
•
Types of interventions (policies, strategies)
Translation of these into potential projects (or
programmatic approaches
Overall about 50 pages
Draw on various reports already done internationally and
previously by STAP
Timetable
Dec 2003 to May 2004
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Mid Dec: Distribution of outline to IAs, GEF Sec, Conventions
Late Dec : Comments back from IAs, GEFSEC on the outline
20-22 Jan 2004: STAP member writing meeting to develop the
first draft
End Jan: Distribution to IAs, GEF Sec, Conventions for
comments
Mid Feb: Comments back on the first draft
1-4 March: Discussion and further development of the paper at a
STAP meeting
Early March-mid April: finalisation of the document;
Mid April: Briefing to the IAs, GEF Sec and Conventions
Mid April: submission to the GEF May Council meeting
Some challenges - to all
Multiple pressures or drivers,
sectoral and fragmented
approach at international and
national level
Deal with the drivers collectively
Deal with sector or ecosystem G&S collectively
Some challenges for GEF
specifically
•
Global problems, local impacts, local solutions, local
benefits - a problem when looking at the incremental
costs for GEF projects; flexibility as in adaptation and
now the land degradation
In summary
• Developing a report on dealing with
interlinkages within the GEF focal areas
• Thus GEF orientated
• Tight timeframe
• Work with the UNEP initiative
• Happy to circulate outlines to people
Contact
[email protected]