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Is the window of opportunity for REDD+ closing?
  COP-18, Doha, Qatar (EU Pavilion): 29 November 2012, 18:00-20:00

Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions for
the Forests and Other Land Uses of Indonesia:
   Complementarity of Policy Instruments,
      Funding Streams and Motivation
Meine van Noordwijk


                                  Co-authors:
                                  Fahmuddin Agus, Sonya
                                    Dewi & Herry Purnomo
Hope / Hype / Crash / Reality?
Expected                                                  Path-dependence?
effect
positive



neutral


negative

0. Igno-     I. Initial excitement,    II. Reality     III. Real negotiations can start to
rance of     supported by positive     checks,         define a net positive outcome of
issues and   feedback reinforcement,   disappoint-     unavoidable tradeoffs (‘loose less’ –
po-tential   effective ‘public re-     ment,           ‘loose less’, or ‘win’-‘win’?), or to
solution     lations’, grading into    confusion,      abandon the framing and seek a new
             ‘hype’                    ‘crash’         solution (repeating the cycle?)


Figure 1. Stages in typical ‘issue cycle’ of environmental policy
Regulate and/or reward
Σ people * influence * concern

                                                                           Who will monitor
                                                  Who’ll have to pay?      compliance?             Litigation
    Political prominence




                                           What will it cost?                          Implement &
                                                                                         monitor
                                           What can be done to stop,
                                           mitigate, undo or adapt?                                  Evaluate, re-
                                                                                                     assess
                                                      How much and where?
                                      Who’s to blame?
                                 Is it a          Cause-effect
                                 problem?         mechanisms

                                 Scoping    Stakeholder      Negotiation   Implemen-     Re-eva-
                                               analysis       response     tation        luation

                                                          Stage of the issue cycle
                                                                                          Tomich et al., 2004
The REDD future
seemed bright in 2007
Nov 2007 – ahead of Bali COP:

            Five challenges:
         1.Scope,definitions
     2.Peat outside ‘forest’
           3.Rights, legality
4.Interlinkage and leakage
    5.Fairness & efficiency
Fairness: the real
                  conservation cost
C-stocks                                Market Efficiency: the most
t/ha                                           real impact



                                       Depend on
                                       definition
             Emission
            outside the
           REDD scheme

                                                          Sink outside A/R
                                                          CDM scheme
       Forest
       Conservation Production   Conversion


                 Time
I. Awareness            II. Readiness               III. Implementation at scale
                                                    UNFCCC negotiations of rules of the game
                                             Core




                                                                                                                                             ER-performance based finance, with
                                                                                                                                              some international ER additionality
                                                                                                              reduce C footrpitns in trade
                                                                               Self-regulatoory response to
                                           identity       Self-articulated




                                     ns
                                         We care…              NAMA




                                  sio
   Knowledge,                           Environmental




                                 e ci
                               td
   awareness                            quality, health



                             en
                           rn m
                         ve       Branding as basis for
                                     market share
                       go

                                                                        EET
                            Our exports are threatened…
                      ng


                                                     Ecological & social
                             Global trade and investment
                    i
                 riv




                                       relations         safeguards
               dd




  Rent-                REDD rents compete with forest rents                   REDD+
                 mi




 seeking                   Economic growth with acceptable
              yra




  elites                        distributional effects
            lp
          na
       tio




                  Food sufficiency as prerequisite for political
     va




                  stability in cities and supportive electorates
      ti
   Mo




           Territorial integrity and security of the state, international
               independence, domestic bounded local autonomy
1. Scope & definitions
                                     conservation
                                       protection            ‘deforestation’
                natural forest        production




                                                          Agroforestry
                                         ve
                                  te nsi
                             ex           integrated,
              Tree plan-              multifunctional
                tations      landscape: crops, trees,
      Agriculture




                          inte     meadows and forest
      Forestry




                              nsiv
                                  e           patches              ‘loss of forest
               intensive
                                                                     functions’
               agriculture

          Segregate                                 Integrate
                                                    functions
Current legal, institutional Current reality
& educational paradigm
Signs of deforestation?



       ….are included under forest, as are
        areas normally forming part of the
         forest area which are temporarily
            unstocked as a result of human
        intervention such as harvesting or
    natural causes but which are expected
                        to revert to forest;
                 [FCCC/CP/2001/13/Add.1]
Forest definition based                Forest definition based
 on X% canopy cover                    on institutions & intent


               Non-forest without trees

        Trees              Forest        Forest
       outside            with trees     without
        forest                            trees
                                               Clearfelling/ re-
                                             plant is accep-ted
  Including e.g.                             as forest; no time-
 agroforests, oil                             limit on ‘replant’
 palm plantation
If we cannot define it,
   we cannot save it:
forest definitions and
        REDD
  Forest definitions are ambiguous
 so often forest loss is not officially
 counted as deforestation. As well,
        ground-level implications of
          REDD+ will depend on the
 operational definition. Application
     of AFOLU accounting rules can
           bypass the need for clear
    definitions, reduce leakage and
            promote multifunctional
         landscapes in an equitable,
         efficient and effective way
Stakeholder:
1. Undisturbed natural forest                       Rainforest foundation
2. Undisturbed + sust. logged natural forest          Conservation agency
3. Closed canopy undisturbed + logged forest
4A. as 3 + agroforest                                  Forest ecologist
4B. as 3 + timber plantations                          Ministry of Forestry
4C. as 3 + agroforest + timber plant’s + estate crops UNFCCC definition
4D as 4C + shrub                                        Modis data
http://www.as
REDD_ALERT synthesis and re-analysis of 5 carbon-pool data for Jambi
RED = Reducing emissions from (gross)
deforestation: only changes from ‘forest’
to ‘non-forest’ land cover types are
included, and details very much depend
on the operational definition of ‘forest’
RED = Reducing emissions from (gross)
deforestation: only changes from ‘forest’
to ‘non-forest’ land cover types are
included, and details very much depend
on the operational definition of ‘forest’

REDD = idem, + (forest) degradation, or
the shifts to lower C-stock densities
within the forest; details very much
depend on the operational definition of
‘forest’
RED = Reducing emissions from (gross)       REDD+ = idem, + restocking within and
deforestation: only changes from ‘forest’   towards ‘forest’ ; in some versions RED+
to ‘non-forest’ land cover types are        will also include peatlands, regardless of
included, and details very much depend      their forest status ; details still depend on
on the operational definition of ‘forest’   the operational definition of ‘forest’

REDD = idem, + (forest) degradation, or
the shifts to lower C-stock densities
within the forest; details very much
depend on the operational definition of
‘forest’
RED = Reducing emissions from (gross)       REDD+ = idem, + restocking within and
deforestation: only changes from ‘forest’   towards ‘forest’ ; in some versions RED+ will
to ‘non-forest’ land cover types are        also include peatlands, regardless of their
included, and details very much depend      forest status ; details still depend on the
on the operational definition of ‘forest’   operational definition of ‘forest’
                                            REDD++ = REALU = idem, + all transitions in land
REDD = idem, + (forest) degradation, or
                                            cover that affect C storage, whether peatland
the shifts to lower C-stock densities
                                            or mineral soil, trees-outside-forest,
within the forest; details very much
                                            agroforest, plantations or natural forest. It
depend on the operational definition of
                                            does not depend on the operational definition
‘forest’
                                            of ‘forest’
“Forest transition”
                                             as spatial pattern.
                                            ‘chronosequence’?




  Spatial analysis: classification of 450 districts in Indonesia
according to 7 tree cover transition stages (Dewi et al., in prep.)
                                                               20
1. Scope & definitions
                                 conservation
                                  protection                    ‘deforestation’
                natural forest   production




                                                             Agroforestry
This issue can be/has been resolved by nesting REDD+
                          e nsi
                                ve
                     e xt            integrated,
within a broader land-basedmultifunctional
                                   NAMA (REALU) framework
          Tree plan-
in Indonesia’s national & regional GHG reduction plans
            tations  landscape: crops, trees,
      Agriculture




                           inte     meadows     and forest
      Forestry




                               nsiv
                                   e              patches             ‘loss of forest
                intensive
                                                                        functions’
                agriculture

          Segregate                                Integrate
                                                   functions
Current legal, institutional Current reality
& educational paradigm
2. Rights & legality
• In 2012 the Indonesian constitutional court ruled in
  a case initiated by local governments in Central Kali-
  mantan province, that the ambiguity that the 1999
  Forestry Law 41 had created in allowing either
  ‘designation’ or ‘gazettement’ to be the basis for
  inclusion of land areas in the permanent forest es-
  tate in its article 1(3), should be resolved by relying
  on ‘gazettement’ only. Only 14.2 Mha (10.9%) out
  of the 130.7 Mha of Kawasan Hutan (68.4% of Indo-
  nesia’s land) has to date been gazetted in
  complian-ce with the law => legal vacuum around
  all govern-ment rules and permits for >50% of
http://ww
2. Rights & legality
• In 2012 the Indonesian constitutional court ruled in
  a case initiated by local governments in Central Kali-
  mantan province, that the ambiguity that the 1999
  Forestry Law 41 had created in allowing either
 This issue can be/has been partially resolved by nesting
  REDD+ within orbroader land-based NAMA (REALU)
  ‘designation’ a ‘gazettement’ to be the basis for
  inclusion of in Indonesia’s the permanent forest es-
    framework land areas in national & regional GHG
  tate in its article 1(3),regencies/provinces as major
   reduction plans, with should be resolved by relying
actors; at national scale new efforts have only just started
  on ‘gazettement’ only. Only 14.2 Mha (10.9%) out
  of the 130.7 Mha of Kawasan Hutan (68.4% of Indo-
  nesia’s land) has to date been gazetted in
  complian-ce with the law => legal vacuum around
  all govern-ment rules and permits for >50% of
3. Interlinkage &change
    Drivers of tree cover
                          leakage
 Low intensity swiddening                            Economic
        maintains forest  Fallow =>              opportunity of oil
  Logging & mining        agroforest               palm, rubber,
concessions harvest              Swiddening
                                                   coffee attracts
large trees & create             intensifies,
                                                large- & small-scale
      road access                 fire cycle
                                                      planters
   Post-logging                      starts
   institutional                                        Industrial
  vacuum allows                                           timber
       settlers                                        plantations
  Over-capacity of
     wood-based
      industry =>                 Forest tenure reform          Van
      demand for                  creates incentives for     Noordwijk
                                                               et al.,
   ‘illegal logging’                   tree planting           2011
Forest and tree cover transitions: a unifying concept
 1 Choice
       of Y-axis
                              6




Core


  2                3                    4                   5
Temporal            Spatial        Institutional X-linkage of
 pattern,          pattern,        challenge at   actions in
                                  turning point landscape
Tree cover transition




Widening: area planted < area cleared       Contracting: area planted > cleared
In the 1990’s loss of
                          natural cover increased
                          the amount of ‘low C-
                          stock’/low economic
                          value land; tree (crop)
                          planting was 28% of the
                          loss of natural forest
                          area


After 2000 planting of
tree (crop)s equals 90%
of concurrent loss of
natural forest; the
amount of low C-
stock/low economic
value land decreases
National        Agrarian and              Current ABCD interaction drives
government        forest laws,              ‘business as usual’ development
                  development                  and emission trajectories
   Local          policies
government                                       Conces-
                                                                 Business plans
                                                 sionairs
                                                                 and expecta-
                                                                 tions on land
                                                  Labour
                                                                 tenure
                                                   force
                    Local elites
 Local norms
 and rules on
                    Local com-
 land tenure                                     Migrant
                     munities                                    Migrant norms
                                                 pioneers
 Alternate ABCD interactions with Free
                                                                 and expecta-
and Prior Informed Consent are needed                            tions on land
                                                 Migrant
     for High-C-Stock Development                                tenure
               pathways
                                                followers
                                         Galudra et al., submitted
Tradeoff at land use system level                         Opportunity cost at landcape scale




                                                             opportunity cost, $/t CO2e,
                             Slope indicates                                               Emission reduction poten-
                             emissions per
     Carbon stock, tC/Ha
                                                                                           tial for given C price
                             gain in $/ha         I                                                                     II

                                                                                                                    e.g. ADSB
                                               e.g. ASB-II                                                          reports
                                                                                              Cumulative emissions
                                               reports of                                                           2007/8
                                               1990’s
                           NPV, $/Ha
Four levels of analyzing opportunity costs Dynamic land use scenario model
Agents with                                                                                     C stock
variation in                                                                                    (increasing)
resource
base, moti-                                                                                                            III
vation, live-
lihood stra-                       IV                        Rural income                                 Rural income
tegies.                                                      (declining)                                     (increasing)
interacting
with rules                                                                                           C stock     e.g. FALLOW
& policies
             Agent-based land use change model                                                      (decreasing) scenarios
3. Interlinkage &change
     Drivers of tree cover
                           leakage
  Low intensity swiddening                            Economic
         maintains forest  Fallow =>              opportunity of oil
   Logging & mining        agroforest               palm, rubber,
 concessions harvest              Swiddening
                                                    coffee attracts
                                  intensifies,
This issue&can be/has been resolved by nestingsmall-scale
 large trees create                              large- & REDD+
       road access                 fire cycle
within a broader land-based NAMA (REALU) planters       framework
                                      starts
    Post-logging national & regional GHG reduction plans
in Indonesia’s
    institutional                                        Industrial
   vacuum allows                                           timber
        settlers                                        plantations
   Over-capacity of
      wood-based
       industry =>                 Forest tenure reform          Van
       demand for                  creates incentives for     Noordwijk
                                                                et al.,
    ‘illegal logging’                   tree planting           2011
4. Peat outside ‘forest’



                   Huge percentage of
                   emissions from LUC are
                   associated with
                   low economic benefit
                   Opportunity costs vary
                   from place to place

              ADSB 2007 results for Indonesia
4. Peat outside ‘forest’
    De facto REDD pilot projects have included peatland
    issues regardless of international scope and
    definitions; in Durban peatland restoration was
    recognized as potential CDM activity
This issue can be/has been resolved by nesting REDD+
within a broader land-based NAMA (REALU) framework
in Indonesia’s national & regional GHG reduction plans
5. Fairness & efficiency



        Value chain
Fairness argument:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B11kASPfYxY
Expected to be on-line by August 15




 Payments for environmental services      They can interfere with or comple-        PES concepts
 (PES), or non-provisioning ecosystem     ment social norms and rights-based        need to adapt.
  services, target alignment of micro-    approach-es at generic (land use plan-    Multiple para-
economic incentives for land users with   ning) and in-dividual (tenure, use        digms have
  meso- and macro-economic societal       rights) levels, and with macro-econo-     emerged within
   costs and benefits of their choices    mic policies influencing the drivers to   the broad PES
     across stakeholders and scales       which individual agents respond.          domain.
   Forms of “co-investment in stewardship” alongside rights are the preferred entry point
Providers,
Beneficiaries,
‘Sellers’
‘Buyers’




            Intermediary, Broker



                                   MvN Fig3A
Providers,                   Beneficiaries,
‘Sellers’                        ‘Buyers’
‘Co-investors’                 ‘Co-
investors’




           Intermediary, Broker




                                              MvN Fig3B
Fairness/Transparency Efficiency/Clarity

                                                          International rules,
                                                          fund/market
               International border




                              payment
               relations




                                            value chain
                                                          Nested baselines, certi-
                                                          fied emission reduction
                                                                                     Legend:
    Subnational sectors/areas  private sector
                                                                                               Respect, Image,
                              Investment/
               Trust/threat




                                                                                               Knowledge

                                            CREDD
                                                          Additionality ~ baseline
                                                          Leakage/displacement                 Free and Prior
                                                                                               Informed Consent
       Local sectors/areas  private sector                                                    of sovereign
                                                                                               decision makers
                                                          Monitoring C stocks &
                                                          project cycle aspects                Finance: invest-
                                                                                               ment, payment
              Local sectors/areas:
           communities, households                                                             Certified Emission
   Sustainable livelihood Reducing direct drivers                                              Reduction
            support         of emissions
I. Awareness             II. Readiness                III. Implementation at scale
                                                      UNFCCC negotiations of rules of the game
                                               Core




                                                                                                                                               ER-performance based finance, with
                                                                                                                                                some international ER additionality
                                                                                                                reduce C footrpitns in trade
                                                                                 Self-regulatoory response to
                                             identity       Self-articulated




                                       ns
                                           We care…              NAMA




                                   si o
   Knowledge,                             Environmental




                                    eci
                                  td
   awareness                              quality, health



                                en
                            rn m
                          ve       Branding as basis for
                                      market share
                       go

                                                                          EET
                            Our exports are threatened…
                   ing


                                                     Ecological & social
                             Global trade and investment
                riv




                                       relations         safeguards
                  dd




  Rent-                REDD rents compete with forest rents                     REDD+
                mi




 seeking                  Economic growth with acceptable
            y ra




  elites                       distributional effects
          lp
        nao




                 Food sufficiency as prerequisite for political
       ati




                 stability in cities and supportive electorates
    tiv
  Mo




           Territorial integrity and security of the state, international
               independence, domestic bounded local autonomy
Nov 2007 – ahead of Bali COP:


    Issue 1,2 & 4 can              Five challenges:
 be/has been resolved           1.Scope,definitions
   by nesting REDD+         2.Peat outside ‘forest’
 within a broader land-
                                  3.Rights, legality
based NAMA (REALU)
 framework in Indone-  4.Interlinkage and leakage
sia’s national & regional 5.Fairness & efficiency
  GHG reduction plans Issue 3 & 5 have progressed in
                    recognition, moving beyond denial
                     and defensiveness, but there is a
                         considerable way to go
Tony La Vina – this morning at IETA/ASB/IISD event

  “The stronger emission reduction commitments
needed to make REDD work through private sector
 involvement in regulated markets is not going to
       come from this COP, not until 2015”

“I’ve personally shifted attention and hope to a more
     integrated approach that combines REDD+,
       agriculture and all land-based activities”
Is the window of opportunity for REDD+ closing?
  COP-18, Doha, Qatar (EU Pavilion): 29 November 2012, 18:00-20:00

  Reducing
  Emissions
     from
Deforestation
      and                                                 Vietnam

 Degradation
                          Southern
   through                Cameroon            Jambi,
                                              Indonesia
 Alternative          Ucayali,
                      Peru
  Landuses                Macaulay Land Use Research Institute, UK
 Embracing                Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium
                          Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands
Rainforests of            Georg August University of Göttingen, Germany
                          ICRAF, IITA, CIAT, CIFOR, ASB-partners in
 the Tropics              Indonesia, Vietnam, Cameroon, Peru

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Indonesia NAMA success story

  • 1. Is the window of opportunity for REDD+ closing? COP-18, Doha, Qatar (EU Pavilion): 29 November 2012, 18:00-20:00 Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions for the Forests and Other Land Uses of Indonesia: Complementarity of Policy Instruments, Funding Streams and Motivation Meine van Noordwijk Co-authors: Fahmuddin Agus, Sonya Dewi & Herry Purnomo
  • 2. Hope / Hype / Crash / Reality? Expected Path-dependence? effect positive neutral negative 0. Igno- I. Initial excitement, II. Reality III. Real negotiations can start to rance of supported by positive checks, define a net positive outcome of issues and feedback reinforcement, disappoint- unavoidable tradeoffs (‘loose less’ – po-tential effective ‘public re- ment, ‘loose less’, or ‘win’-‘win’?), or to solution lations’, grading into confusion, abandon the framing and seek a new ‘hype’ ‘crash’ solution (repeating the cycle?) Figure 1. Stages in typical ‘issue cycle’ of environmental policy
  • 3. Regulate and/or reward Σ people * influence * concern Who will monitor Who’ll have to pay? compliance? Litigation Political prominence What will it cost? Implement & monitor What can be done to stop, mitigate, undo or adapt? Evaluate, re- assess How much and where? Who’s to blame? Is it a Cause-effect problem? mechanisms Scoping Stakeholder Negotiation Implemen- Re-eva- analysis response tation luation Stage of the issue cycle Tomich et al., 2004
  • 4. The REDD future seemed bright in 2007
  • 5. Nov 2007 – ahead of Bali COP: Five challenges: 1.Scope,definitions 2.Peat outside ‘forest’ 3.Rights, legality 4.Interlinkage and leakage 5.Fairness & efficiency
  • 6. Fairness: the real conservation cost C-stocks Market Efficiency: the most t/ha real impact Depend on definition Emission outside the REDD scheme Sink outside A/R CDM scheme Forest Conservation Production Conversion  Time
  • 7. I. Awareness II. Readiness III. Implementation at scale UNFCCC negotiations of rules of the game Core ER-performance based finance, with some international ER additionality reduce C footrpitns in trade Self-regulatoory response to identity Self-articulated ns We care… NAMA sio Knowledge, Environmental e ci td awareness quality, health en rn m ve Branding as basis for market share go EET Our exports are threatened… ng Ecological & social Global trade and investment i riv relations safeguards dd Rent- REDD rents compete with forest rents REDD+ mi seeking Economic growth with acceptable yra elites distributional effects lp na tio Food sufficiency as prerequisite for political va stability in cities and supportive electorates ti Mo Territorial integrity and security of the state, international independence, domestic bounded local autonomy
  • 8. 1. Scope & definitions conservation protection ‘deforestation’ natural forest production Agroforestry ve te nsi ex integrated, Tree plan- multifunctional tations landscape: crops, trees, Agriculture inte meadows and forest Forestry nsiv e patches ‘loss of forest intensive functions’ agriculture Segregate Integrate functions Current legal, institutional Current reality & educational paradigm
  • 9. Signs of deforestation? ….are included under forest, as are areas normally forming part of the forest area which are temporarily unstocked as a result of human intervention such as harvesting or natural causes but which are expected to revert to forest; [FCCC/CP/2001/13/Add.1]
  • 10. Forest definition based Forest definition based on X% canopy cover on institutions & intent Non-forest without trees Trees Forest Forest outside with trees without forest trees Clearfelling/ re- plant is accep-ted Including e.g. as forest; no time- agroforests, oil limit on ‘replant’ palm plantation
  • 11. If we cannot define it, we cannot save it: forest definitions and REDD Forest definitions are ambiguous so often forest loss is not officially counted as deforestation. As well, ground-level implications of REDD+ will depend on the operational definition. Application of AFOLU accounting rules can bypass the need for clear definitions, reduce leakage and promote multifunctional landscapes in an equitable, efficient and effective way
  • 12. Stakeholder: 1. Undisturbed natural forest Rainforest foundation 2. Undisturbed + sust. logged natural forest Conservation agency 3. Closed canopy undisturbed + logged forest 4A. as 3 + agroforest Forest ecologist 4B. as 3 + timber plantations Ministry of Forestry 4C. as 3 + agroforest + timber plant’s + estate crops UNFCCC definition 4D as 4C + shrub Modis data
  • 14. REDD_ALERT synthesis and re-analysis of 5 carbon-pool data for Jambi
  • 15. RED = Reducing emissions from (gross) deforestation: only changes from ‘forest’ to ‘non-forest’ land cover types are included, and details very much depend on the operational definition of ‘forest’
  • 16. RED = Reducing emissions from (gross) deforestation: only changes from ‘forest’ to ‘non-forest’ land cover types are included, and details very much depend on the operational definition of ‘forest’ REDD = idem, + (forest) degradation, or the shifts to lower C-stock densities within the forest; details very much depend on the operational definition of ‘forest’
  • 17. RED = Reducing emissions from (gross) REDD+ = idem, + restocking within and deforestation: only changes from ‘forest’ towards ‘forest’ ; in some versions RED+ to ‘non-forest’ land cover types are will also include peatlands, regardless of included, and details very much depend their forest status ; details still depend on on the operational definition of ‘forest’ the operational definition of ‘forest’ REDD = idem, + (forest) degradation, or the shifts to lower C-stock densities within the forest; details very much depend on the operational definition of ‘forest’
  • 18. RED = Reducing emissions from (gross) REDD+ = idem, + restocking within and deforestation: only changes from ‘forest’ towards ‘forest’ ; in some versions RED+ will to ‘non-forest’ land cover types are also include peatlands, regardless of their included, and details very much depend forest status ; details still depend on the on the operational definition of ‘forest’ operational definition of ‘forest’ REDD++ = REALU = idem, + all transitions in land REDD = idem, + (forest) degradation, or cover that affect C storage, whether peatland the shifts to lower C-stock densities or mineral soil, trees-outside-forest, within the forest; details very much agroforest, plantations or natural forest. It depend on the operational definition of does not depend on the operational definition ‘forest’ of ‘forest’
  • 19.
  • 20. “Forest transition” as spatial pattern. ‘chronosequence’? Spatial analysis: classification of 450 districts in Indonesia according to 7 tree cover transition stages (Dewi et al., in prep.) 20
  • 21. 1. Scope & definitions conservation protection ‘deforestation’ natural forest production Agroforestry This issue can be/has been resolved by nesting REDD+ e nsi ve e xt integrated, within a broader land-basedmultifunctional NAMA (REALU) framework Tree plan- in Indonesia’s national & regional GHG reduction plans tations landscape: crops, trees, Agriculture inte meadows and forest Forestry nsiv e patches ‘loss of forest intensive functions’ agriculture Segregate Integrate functions Current legal, institutional Current reality & educational paradigm
  • 22. 2. Rights & legality • In 2012 the Indonesian constitutional court ruled in a case initiated by local governments in Central Kali- mantan province, that the ambiguity that the 1999 Forestry Law 41 had created in allowing either ‘designation’ or ‘gazettement’ to be the basis for inclusion of land areas in the permanent forest es- tate in its article 1(3), should be resolved by relying on ‘gazettement’ only. Only 14.2 Mha (10.9%) out of the 130.7 Mha of Kawasan Hutan (68.4% of Indo- nesia’s land) has to date been gazetted in complian-ce with the law => legal vacuum around all govern-ment rules and permits for >50% of
  • 23.
  • 25. 2. Rights & legality • In 2012 the Indonesian constitutional court ruled in a case initiated by local governments in Central Kali- mantan province, that the ambiguity that the 1999 Forestry Law 41 had created in allowing either This issue can be/has been partially resolved by nesting REDD+ within orbroader land-based NAMA (REALU) ‘designation’ a ‘gazettement’ to be the basis for inclusion of in Indonesia’s the permanent forest es- framework land areas in national & regional GHG tate in its article 1(3),regencies/provinces as major reduction plans, with should be resolved by relying actors; at national scale new efforts have only just started on ‘gazettement’ only. Only 14.2 Mha (10.9%) out of the 130.7 Mha of Kawasan Hutan (68.4% of Indo- nesia’s land) has to date been gazetted in complian-ce with the law => legal vacuum around all govern-ment rules and permits for >50% of
  • 26. 3. Interlinkage &change Drivers of tree cover leakage Low intensity swiddening Economic maintains forest Fallow => opportunity of oil Logging & mining agroforest palm, rubber, concessions harvest Swiddening coffee attracts large trees & create intensifies, large- & small-scale road access fire cycle planters Post-logging starts institutional Industrial vacuum allows timber settlers plantations Over-capacity of wood-based industry => Forest tenure reform Van demand for creates incentives for Noordwijk et al., ‘illegal logging’ tree planting 2011
  • 27. Forest and tree cover transitions: a unifying concept 1 Choice of Y-axis 6 Core 2 3 4 5 Temporal Spatial Institutional X-linkage of pattern, pattern, challenge at actions in turning point landscape
  • 28. Tree cover transition Widening: area planted < area cleared Contracting: area planted > cleared
  • 29. In the 1990’s loss of natural cover increased the amount of ‘low C- stock’/low economic value land; tree (crop) planting was 28% of the loss of natural forest area After 2000 planting of tree (crop)s equals 90% of concurrent loss of natural forest; the amount of low C- stock/low economic value land decreases
  • 30. National Agrarian and Current ABCD interaction drives government forest laws, ‘business as usual’ development development and emission trajectories Local policies government Conces- Business plans sionairs and expecta- tions on land Labour tenure force Local elites Local norms and rules on Local com- land tenure Migrant munities Migrant norms pioneers Alternate ABCD interactions with Free and expecta- and Prior Informed Consent are needed tions on land Migrant for High-C-Stock Development tenure pathways followers Galudra et al., submitted
  • 31. Tradeoff at land use system level Opportunity cost at landcape scale opportunity cost, $/t CO2e, Slope indicates Emission reduction poten- emissions per Carbon stock, tC/Ha tial for given C price gain in $/ha I II e.g. ADSB e.g. ASB-II reports  Cumulative emissions reports of 2007/8 1990’s NPV, $/Ha Four levels of analyzing opportunity costs Dynamic land use scenario model Agents with C stock variation in (increasing) resource base, moti- III vation, live- lihood stra- IV Rural income  Rural income tegies. (declining) (increasing) interacting with rules C stock e.g. FALLOW & policies Agent-based land use change model (decreasing) scenarios
  • 32. 3. Interlinkage &change Drivers of tree cover leakage Low intensity swiddening Economic maintains forest Fallow => opportunity of oil Logging & mining agroforest palm, rubber, concessions harvest Swiddening coffee attracts intensifies, This issue&can be/has been resolved by nestingsmall-scale large trees create large- & REDD+ road access fire cycle within a broader land-based NAMA (REALU) planters framework starts Post-logging national & regional GHG reduction plans in Indonesia’s institutional Industrial vacuum allows timber settlers plantations Over-capacity of wood-based industry => Forest tenure reform Van demand for creates incentives for Noordwijk et al., ‘illegal logging’ tree planting 2011
  • 33. 4. Peat outside ‘forest’ Huge percentage of emissions from LUC are associated with low economic benefit Opportunity costs vary from place to place ADSB 2007 results for Indonesia
  • 34.
  • 35. 4. Peat outside ‘forest’ De facto REDD pilot projects have included peatland issues regardless of international scope and definitions; in Durban peatland restoration was recognized as potential CDM activity This issue can be/has been resolved by nesting REDD+ within a broader land-based NAMA (REALU) framework in Indonesia’s national & regional GHG reduction plans
  • 36. 5. Fairness & efficiency Value chain
  • 39. Expected to be on-line by August 15 Payments for environmental services They can interfere with or comple- PES concepts (PES), or non-provisioning ecosystem ment social norms and rights-based need to adapt. services, target alignment of micro- approach-es at generic (land use plan- Multiple para- economic incentives for land users with ning) and in-dividual (tenure, use digms have meso- and macro-economic societal rights) levels, and with macro-econo- emerged within costs and benefits of their choices mic policies influencing the drivers to the broad PES across stakeholders and scales which individual agents respond. domain. Forms of “co-investment in stewardship” alongside rights are the preferred entry point
  • 41. Providers, Beneficiaries, ‘Sellers’ ‘Buyers’ ‘Co-investors’ ‘Co- investors’ Intermediary, Broker MvN Fig3B
  • 42. Fairness/Transparency Efficiency/Clarity International rules, fund/market International border payment relations value chain Nested baselines, certi- fied emission reduction Legend: Subnational sectors/areas  private sector Respect, Image, Investment/ Trust/threat Knowledge CREDD Additionality ~ baseline Leakage/displacement Free and Prior Informed Consent Local sectors/areas  private sector of sovereign decision makers Monitoring C stocks & project cycle aspects Finance: invest- ment, payment Local sectors/areas: communities, households Certified Emission Sustainable livelihood Reducing direct drivers Reduction support of emissions
  • 43. I. Awareness II. Readiness III. Implementation at scale UNFCCC negotiations of rules of the game Core ER-performance based finance, with some international ER additionality reduce C footrpitns in trade Self-regulatoory response to identity Self-articulated ns We care… NAMA si o Knowledge, Environmental eci td awareness quality, health en rn m ve Branding as basis for market share go EET Our exports are threatened… ing Ecological & social Global trade and investment riv relations safeguards dd Rent- REDD rents compete with forest rents REDD+ mi seeking Economic growth with acceptable y ra elites distributional effects lp nao Food sufficiency as prerequisite for political ati stability in cities and supportive electorates tiv Mo Territorial integrity and security of the state, international independence, domestic bounded local autonomy
  • 44. Nov 2007 – ahead of Bali COP: Issue 1,2 & 4 can Five challenges: be/has been resolved 1.Scope,definitions by nesting REDD+ 2.Peat outside ‘forest’ within a broader land- 3.Rights, legality based NAMA (REALU) framework in Indone- 4.Interlinkage and leakage sia’s national & regional 5.Fairness & efficiency GHG reduction plans Issue 3 & 5 have progressed in recognition, moving beyond denial and defensiveness, but there is a considerable way to go
  • 45. Tony La Vina – this morning at IETA/ASB/IISD event “The stronger emission reduction commitments needed to make REDD work through private sector involvement in regulated markets is not going to come from this COP, not until 2015” “I’ve personally shifted attention and hope to a more integrated approach that combines REDD+, agriculture and all land-based activities”
  • 46. Is the window of opportunity for REDD+ closing? COP-18, Doha, Qatar (EU Pavilion): 29 November 2012, 18:00-20:00 Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Vietnam Degradation Southern through Cameroon Jambi, Indonesia Alternative Ucayali, Peru Landuses Macaulay Land Use Research Institute, UK Embracing Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands Rainforests of Georg August University of Göttingen, Germany ICRAF, IITA, CIAT, CIFOR, ASB-partners in the Tropics Indonesia, Vietnam, Cameroon, Peru