PART II / CHAPTER 4 BIO-CULTURAL COMMUNITY PROTOCOLS AND REDD Many ILCs have expressed concern regarding the FCPF, citing approach to consultation and upholds support for important previous negative experiences with World Bank-initiated forest international legal frameworks and norms, including UNDRIP, 7 development programs. The first major protest occurred ILO Convention 169, CBD Article 8j, the Millennium Declaration, outside the side event at COP 13 at which the Facility was and the UN Charter itself. launched, and it continues to attract criticism from ILCs. Further protests have emerged in response to various pilot projects UN-REDD’s objectives are very similar to those of the FCPF, that have been initiated, each with the underlying message, and the two programmes are now working to harmonize 8 “No Rights, No REDD”. document templates and operational guidance in order to 10 facilitate countries’ participation in both programs. However, In September 2008, the FAO, UNEP and UNDP launched “UN- several substantive differences exist. One of the key distinctions REDD,” a programme designed to “support countries to develop is that whereas UN-REDD upholds the principle of free, prior capacity to reduce emissions from deforestation and forest and informed consent as stated in the UNDRIP, the FCPF only degradation and to implement a future REDD mechanism in requires free, prior and informed consultation, which is a lesser 9 a post-2012 climate regime.” UN-REDD also coordinates the procedural requirement for proponents of REDD-related numerous international agencies that are relevant to these policies and projects. objectives. In June 2009, UN-REDD released the programme’s “Operational Guidance on the Engagement of Indigenous Early reports emerging from REDD countries indicate that the Peoples and Other Forest Dependent Communities,” which is participation of civil society and ILC organizations has been meant to inform the design, implementation, monitoring, constrained by national governments’ lack of willingness to and evaluation of UN-REDD activities at the global and national include them in discussions and national REDD programmes. levels. This document advocates a human rights-based 3. REDD: Potential and Pitfalls 12 3.1 Ensured Funding but Questionable Integrity provide up to US$30 billion per annum, an unprecedented level of funding, considering the total spent annually on international forest assistance has been about US$750 Forest-dependent communities are among the most politically 13 million in recent years. and economically marginalized in their respective countries, which makes them extremely vulnerable to industrial natural The anticipated magnitude of this funding has the potential 11 resource extraction and other pressures that degrade forests. to engender as many obstacles as opportunities. It will There is a desperate need for development funding in these undoubtedly attract a range of interested parties, including communities and high hopes have been pegged on REDD to free-market entrepreneurs who want to profit from the deliver such benefits. A significant reason for the focus on mechanism without due consideration for the environmental REDD is the impressive sums of money it may generate for or social benefits it is intended to generate. 14 forest-related activities. According to UN-REDD, it may 7. Statement on the Announcement of the World Bank Forest Carbon Partnership Facility made by Victoria Tauli-Corpuz, Chair, UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, Bali, Indonesia, 11 December 2007: http://www.tebtebba.org/index.php?option=com_docman&task=doc_download&gid=264&Itemid=27. 8. See for example: REDD: Reaping Profits from Evictions, Land Grabs, Deforestation and Destruction of Biodiversity. Indigenous Environmental Network, 2009. Available at: http://www.ienearth.org/REDD/index.html. Accessed September 28, 2009. 9. See UN-REDD website: http://www.un-redd.org/UNREDDProgramme/tabid/583/language/en-US/Default.aspx 10. Activities include harmonizing the FCPF Readiness Plan and UN- REDD Joint National Program Document; developing a joint Roster of Experts; combined missions in REDD countries. 11. PROFOR. 2008. Poverty and Forests Linkages: A Synthesis and Six Case Studies. World Bank Program on Forests, Washington, D.C. 12. See UN-REDD website: http://www.un-redd.org/AboutREDD/tabid/582/language/en-US/Default.aspx. Accessed 5 September 2009. 1 3 . Rice, R., Sugal, C., Ratay, S., da Fonseca, G. 2001. Sustainable Forest Management: A Review of Conventional Wisdom. Center for Applied Biodiversity Science, Conservation International. 1 4 . Creagh, S. 2009. Forest-CO2 Scheme Will Draw Organised Crime: Interpol. Thompson Reuters, 1 June 2009. Available at: http://planetark.org/wen/53152. Accessed 2 June 2009. 46

Select target paragraph3