Difference between revisions of "BioCarbon Fund Initiative for Sustainable Forest Landscapes (ISFL)"

 
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|NAZCA Initiative=No
 
|NAZCA Initiative=No
 
|Website address=http://www.biocarbonfund-isfl.org/
 
|Website address=http://www.biocarbonfund-isfl.org/
|Starting year=2004
+
|Starting year=2013
|Secretariat=World Bank (Carbon Finance Unit) - Dan Radack (Fund Manager); dradack@worldbankgroup.org
+
|End year=2030
|Organisational structure=The Initiative’s efforts and activities are focused at the country level. Contributors will have the flexibility to support any of the country programs being developed under the Initiative. A decision-making body will be established for each country program for contributor governments and the World Bank to progress programming efficiently on the ground. Not all contributors need to participate in all the country programs; however, only those contributors who have contributed to a country program will be part of the decision-making process for that program. 
+
|Secretariat=World Bank (Global Climate Change Fund Management Unit) - Roy Parizat (Fund Manager); rparizat@worldbank.org
 
+
|Organisational structure=The BioCarbon Fund ISFL is a multilateral facility, supported by donor governments and managed by the World Bank.
At the Initiative-level, contributors work together on the selection of country programs and exchanging lessons between them.
+
|Geographical coverage=Global,Asia and the Pacific,Latin America and The Caribbean,Africa
 
+
|Name of lead organisation=World Bank
At the level of the country programs, country-specific advisory bodies composed of leading experts from government, civil society and the private sector with a range of relevant knowledge may provide technical input into the program design and development of a specific country program, and work with recipient government to catalyze the implementation of programs.
+
|Geographical coverage=Global,North America,Asia and the Pacific,Latin America and The Caribbean,Africa,Western Europe,Eastern Europe,
+
|Type of initiative=Implementation,
+
|Primary function=Fundraising / Financing
+
|Secondary functions=Technical operational implementation (e.g. construction or improvement of physical facilities),
+
 
|Type of lead organisation=International organisation
 
|Type of lead organisation=International organisation
 
|Location/Nationality of lead organisation=United States of America
 
|Location/Nationality of lead organisation=United States of America
Line 21: Line 16:
 
|LPAA Theme Forestry=Yes
 
|LPAA Theme Forestry=Yes
 
|LPAA Theme Business=No
 
|LPAA Theme Business=No
|LPAA Theme Financial institutions=Yes
+
|LPAA Theme Financial institutions=No
 
|LPAA Theme Buildings=No
 
|LPAA Theme Buildings=No
 
|LPAA Theme Industry=No
 
|LPAA Theme Industry=No
Line 32: Line 27:
 
|LPAA Theme Energy efficiency=No
 
|LPAA Theme Energy efficiency=No
 
|LPAA Theme Renewable energy=No
 
|LPAA Theme Renewable energy=No
|LPAA Theme Supply chain emission reductions=No
+
|LPAA Theme Supply chain emission reductions=Yes
 
|LPAA Theme Adaptation=Yes
 
|LPAA Theme Adaptation=Yes
 
|LPAA Theme Other=No
 
|LPAA Theme Other=No
|LPAA Theme Resilience=No
+
|LPAA Theme Resilience=Yes
 
|LPAA Theme Innovation=No
 
|LPAA Theme Innovation=No
 
|LPAA Theme Energy Access and Efficiency=No
 
|LPAA Theme Energy Access and Efficiency=No
 
|LPAA Theme Private Finance=No
 
|LPAA Theme Private Finance=No
|Description=The BioCarbon Fund is a public-private sector initiative mobilizing financing to help develop projects that sequester or conserve carbon in forest and agro-ecosystems. It was the first carbon fund established in the world to focus on land use.
+
|Description=The BioCarbon Fund Initiative for Sustainable Forest Landscapes (ISFL) is a multilateral facility that promotes and rewards reduced greenhouse gas emissions and increased sequestration through better land management, including REDD+ (Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation), climate smart agriculture, and smarter land use planning and policies. The ISFL will pilot programs and interventions at a jurisdictional scale in order to test approaches and share lessons learned broadly.
  
The BioCarbon Fund has three tranches. Tranches 1 and 2 projects have invested in environmental restoration, afforestation, reforestation, sustainable agriculture, and project-level REDD+. Tranche 1 and 2’s innovative work was made possible through the technical support funded by the BioCFplus program.  The technical assistance portion of the Fund supports project development and implementation with capacity building and training. The program further supports the pioneering role of the BioCarbon Fund by developing methodologies and tools for carbon accounting, promoting policy dialogue and by disseminating lessons learned.
 
  
On behalf of its investors, the BioCarbon Fund Tranches 1 and 2 pay for land-based carbon emission reductions from projects implemented on forested or agricultural lands in developing countries. The investors can choose to use these purchases against obligations for emission reductions under the Kyoto Protocol or for other regulated or voluntary greenhouse gas emission reduction regimes, and investors have the option to retire the emission reduction credits altogether, thereby funding these projects without purchasing any carbon credits. The payment made for the emission reductions in turn benefits the project stakeholders as per benefit-sharing arrangements agreed with each individual project.
+
The BioCarbon Fund Initiative for Sustainable Forest Landscapes was established in 2013. The Initiative is supported by Germany, the Kingdom of Norway, Switzerland, the United Kingdom (Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy and Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs), and the United States. It has $355 million in fund capital and supports programs in Colombia, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Mexico, and Zambia.
 +
|Goals=The ISFL aims to catalyze the development of a low-carbon rural economy in each of its program areas that will simultaneously result in livelihood opportunities for communities and an overall reduction in emissions from the land.
  
Tranche 3 along with a portion of the BioCFplus is referred to as the Initiative for Sustainable Forest Landscapes (ISFL) and aims to promote reduced greenhouse gas emissions from the land sector, from deforestation and forest degradation in developing countries (REDD+) and from sustainable agriculture, as well as smarter land-use planning, policies and practices. The initiative will deploy results-based finance to incentivize changes at the landscape level.
 
|Goals=The BioCarbon Fund aims to incentivize better land management, mitigate climate change and help communities adapt by providing revenues through the carbon markets or other forms of results-based payments.
 
  
The BioCarbon Fund ISFL is committed to working at the scale of the jurisdictional landscape. National or jurisdictional governments consider the trade-offs and synergies between different land-uses that may compete in a jurisdiction — such as agriculture, energy, and forest protection and successfully identify integrated solutions that serve multiple objectives. Adopting a landscape approach means implementing a development strategy that is climate smart, equitable, productive and profitable at scale and strives for environmental, social, and economic impact.  
+
The ISFL will achieve its objective of greenhouse gas emission reductions, while also addressing poverty and unsustainable land use, through four key design elements.
  
In addition, the Initiative is designed to work alongside a wide range of private actors, from multi-national corporations to large national actors and emerging small and medium enterprises and smallholders, incentivizing them to accelerate “forest-proof” sourcing of commodities and redirecting market forces toward more sustainable and equitable land management practices.
+
'''Working at Scale'''
|Activities=Over the past decade, the BioCarbon Fund Tranches 1 and 2 have committed $90 million to 25 projects that are restoring 150,000 hectares of degraded lands and reducing deforestation in over 350,000 hectares of land.
+
  
These projects are sequestering 15 million tons of CO2e in their first 10 years of operation. The projects have all been pioneers in the land-use carbon markets and span 16 countries across major regions of the developing world (Africa, Asia, Europe, and Latin America).
+
Each ISFL program focuses on an entire jurisdiction (state, province, or region) within a country, which provides programs with the opportunity to engage with multiple sectors affecting land use and increase its impact over a relatively large area. The ISFL utilizes a landscape approach in each jurisdiction, which requires stakeholders to consider the trade-offs and synergies between different sectors that may compete in a jurisdiction for land use – such as forests, agriculture, energy, mining, and infrastructure. In doing so, solutions can be identified to serve multiple objectives and influence a variety of sectors.
|Participants=Participants investing in the BioCarbon Fund tranche 2 included six governments and public entities and 12 private companies. The BioCarbon Fund is housed within the Carbon Finance Unit of the World Bank. The current BioCarbon Fund Initiative for Sustainable Forest Landscapes (ISFL) is funded by the governments of Germany, the Kingdom of Norway, the United Kingdom, the United States and has the World bank as partner.
+
 
|Funders=The World Bank, Germany, the Kingdom of Norway, the United Kingdom, the United States
+
The goal of the landscape approach is to implement a development strategy that strives for environmental, social, and economic impact at scale. This is done by targeting interventions to improve the enabling environment for sustainable land use. Improvements in the enabling environment such as participatory forest management or land use planning can have significant impact on how land is used and can benefit communities across a jurisdiction.
|Business organisations=12
+
 
|Governmental bodies/agencies=6
+
'''Leveraging Partnerships'''
|International organisations=1
+
 
|Participating national governments=Tranche 2: Canada,Ireland,France,Italy,Spain,Luxembourg,Trache 3 (ISFL): Germany,the Kingdom of Norway,the United Kingdom,the United States and the World bank as partner
+
In order to reduce GHG emissions from land use across an entire jurisdiction while simultaneously creating livelihood opportunities, the ISFL will create partnerships with other public sector initiatives and private sector actors. Public-private partnerships (PPPs) are essential to mobilize capital and align objectives in order to create sustainable and scalable models for long-term improved land use.
 +
 
 +
Private actors – from subsistence farmers to global multi-national firms – have significant influence on the way land is used. The ISFL intends to engage these actors through its programs and, more broadly, work alongside global forums of companies that have pledged to reduce their impact on tropical forests to help identify pathways to enact these commitments. The ISFL will explore opportunities to engage the private sector in the agriculture, energy, and finance sectors, amongst others, where that sector has a significant impact on landscapes within a jurisdiction.
 +
 
 +
Engagements with the private sector can take several forms, from collaborating on sustainability approaches, to blending finance in-country, to convening stakeholders to work toward complementary goals. Through these partnerships, the ISFL can impact the private sector’s contribution to sustainable land use and increased productivity, ultimately reducing GHG emissions and generating livelihood opportunities.
 +
 
 +
The public sector has an essential role to play in shaping private sector behavior through appropriate policy setting, regulation and promoting sustainability in a variety of sectors. By addressing these issues, countries can ultimately reduce risk and drive private sector investments in a green economy that benefits people and the environment.
 +
 
 +
'''Incentivizing Results'''
 +
 
 +
By taking on the immense challenges of convening public and private actors and creating an enabling environment for sustainable development, countries can expect to generate results – including a reduction in GHG emissions. To incentivize countries to do so, the ISFL will provide significant results-based climate finance over a 10-15 year period by purchasing verified emission reductions.
 +
 
 +
This results-based finance is intended to create a positive feedback loop for successful interventions for sustainable land use in each program country. If effective, each jurisdiction can continue to generate results, sell verified emission reductions, and reinvest in successful interventions. Eventually, this model for sustainable development could be scaled up beyond each jurisdiction.
 +
 
 +
'''Building on Experience'''
 +
 
 +
The ISFL reflects the demand for progression from relatively small-scale pilot projects to a program aimed at incentivizing sustainable land use at scale. To work at scale effectively, the ISFL builds on the experiences and lessons learned by the BioCarbon Fund’s initial work piloting land use projects, REDD+ initiatives, and other sustainable forest and land use programs.
 +
More specifically, the ISFL relies on the national REDD+ readiness work of the Forest Carbon Partnership Facility (FCPF) and the United Nations REDD Programme (UN-REDD), which have created essential institutional infrastructure for large-scale land use programs, including:
 +
 
 +
* An emphasis on accountable and transparent program management arrangements
 +
 
 +
* Clear operating mandates
 +
 
 +
* Multi-sector coordination mechanisms and cross-sector collaboration
 +
 
 +
* Technical supervision capacity
 +
 
 +
* Funds management capacity
 +
 
 +
* Mechanisms for feedback and grievance redress
 +
 
 +
This streamlined approach allows the ISFL to concentrate its efforts and activities at the jurisdictional level, adding value to existing platforms, while not duplicating existing processes. By building on this experience, the ISFL can, to some extent, limit the administrative burden of implementing jurisdictional programs and focus implementation efforts at the program-level by tapping into functional coordination platforms.
 +
 
 +
The ISFL will seek to engage relevant stakeholders in program countries, taking into consideration the existing mechanisms in the country, including the FCPF, UN-REDD, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), as well as agriculture, energy, infrastructure, and other relevant stakeholder groups working in each landscape. Priority will be given to already organized groups of stakeholders and other initiatives such as broader national climate change platforms. In cases where other land-use based projects supported by the World Bank Group and other partners are established, the ISFL program will identify them for effective engagement including building on their structures of engagement, as appropriate.
 +
|Activities=''ISFL Funding Instruments''
 +
 
 +
 
 +
In order to achieve success in each ISFL program, countries will require several tools and approaches at their disposal, and the flexibility to combine them to suit the country’s context. The design of the BioCF''plus'', a true pioneer for the World Bank Group and carbon and land use funds - in combination with the results-based finance from BioCF Tranche 3 (T3) - can provide this flexibility.
 +
 
 +
'''BioCF''plus'':'''
 +
 
 +
* Provides funding in the form of a grant. 134.7 M$ pledged (2022)
 +
 
 +
* Supports countries to make improvements to its enabling environment for sustainable land use.
 +
 
 +
* Supports piloting of activities and key partnerships, including engagements with private sector.
 +
 
 +
* Provides resources to countries to develop systems for monitoring, reporting, and verifying reductions in GHG emissions to prepare jurisdictions for payments.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
'''BioCF Tranche 3:'''
 +
 
 +
* Provides results-based finance through the purchase of verified emissions reductions. 232.6 M$ pledged (2022)
 +
 
 +
* Payments provide incentives for countries to shift to a sustainable development trajectory for each jurisdiction.
 +
 
 +
* Payments can be used to sustain successful interventions to sustainable land use in each jurisdiction.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
The BioCF''plus'' has been designed specifically to operationalize the vision of the ISFL, which requires several innovative elements in order to meet the demand on the ground in ISFL countries. The fund supports technical assistance and capacity building efforts in each jurisdiction and can provide some critical investment finance to test sustainable land use approaches. This combination of finance from one source gives flexibility to countries to design their programs in an integrated way and identify the most effective approaches for land management.
 +
 
 +
In addition, the BioCF ''plus'' can directly finance advisory service projects through the International Finance Corporation (IFC). This direct funding link with the IFC is groundbreaking for the World Bank Group and aligns goals and visions more closely. IFC advisory service projects can attract private sector interest in ISFL jurisdictions and can benefit farmers and other private sector actors directly.
 +
 
 +
Meanwhile, the BioCF T3 provides payments for verified emission reductions generated across the landscape, which are expected to yield significant revenue over a 10-15 year period. These payments are envisioned to sustain and build on interventions successfully implemented in the jurisdiction and beyond. It is the ambition of the ISFL to generate a feedback loop of funding for sustainable land use.
 +
|Participants national actors number=10
 +
|Participants national actors names=Colombia,Ethiopia,Germany,Indonesia,Mexico,Norway,Switzerland,United States of America,United Kingdom,Zambia
 +
|Number of members=
 
|Have only national states as participators=No
 
|Have only national states as participators=No
 +
|SDGS=E_SDG_goals_icons-individual-rgb-01.png, E_SDG_goals_icons-individual-rgb-02.png, E_SDG_goals_icons-individual-rgb-05.png, E_SDG_goals_icons-individual-rgb-06.png, E_SDG_goals_icons-individual-rgb-10.png, E_SDG_goals_icons-individual-rgb-11.png, E_SDG_goals_icons-individual-rgb-12.png, E_SDG_goals_icons-individual-rgb-13.png, E_SDG_goals_icons-individual-rgb-15.png, E_SDG_goals_icons-individual-rgb-16.png, E_SDG_goals_icons-individual-rgb-17.png
 +
|Indicators information={{Indicators information
 +
|Indicator=Implementation;Technical operational implementation (ex-post);
 +
}}{{Indicators information
 +
|Indicator=Technical dialogue;Knowledge dissemination and exchange;
 +
}}{{Indicators information
 +
|Indicator=Technical dialogue;Knowledge production and innovation;
 +
}}{{Indicators information
 +
|Indicator=Funding;Financing;
 +
}}{{Indicators information
 +
|Indicator=Funding;Fundraising;
 +
}}
 +
|Goals mai=The ISFL aims to catalyze the development of a low-carbon rural economy in each of its program areas that will simultaneously result in livelihood opportunities for communities and an overall reduction in emissions from the land.
 +
The ISFL has detailed its mandatory and optional indicators and expected milestones in its Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning Framework, available here: https://www.biocarbonfund-isfl.org/sites/biocf/files/documents/ISFL%20MEL%20Framework%20June%202019.pdf
 +
|Available reporting=All ISFL Annual Reports are available by scrolling down in the following link: https://www.biocarbonfund-isfl.org/knowledge-center
 +
 +
The ISFL Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning Framework: https://www.biocarbonfund-isfl.org/sites/biocf/files/documents/ISFL%20MEL%20Framework%20June%202019.pdf
 
|Related initiatives=
 
|Related initiatives=
|Capacity to deliver=Yes
 
|Target in line with 2C=Yes
 
|Monitoring and Reporting=Exists/Possible
 
|Commitment=Yes
 
|Quantified=No
 
 
|Energy security=BioCarbon Fund projects generate multiple revenue streams, combining financial returns from the sale of emission reductions (a.k.a., carbon credits) with increased local incomes and other indirect benefits from sustainable land management practices. BioCarbon Fund projects also have important economic, social, and institutional co-benefits that are key incentives for local communities to participate in project implementation. Social benefits have included opportunities for greater land tenure security, new employment opportunities for communities with limited sources of income, and improved income from higher yields in agricultural, timber or wood fuel products.
 
|Energy security=BioCarbon Fund projects generate multiple revenue streams, combining financial returns from the sale of emission reductions (a.k.a., carbon credits) with increased local incomes and other indirect benefits from sustainable land management practices. BioCarbon Fund projects also have important economic, social, and institutional co-benefits that are key incentives for local communities to participate in project implementation. Social benefits have included opportunities for greater land tenure security, new employment opportunities for communities with limited sources of income, and improved income from higher yields in agricultural, timber or wood fuel products.
 
}}
 
}}
 +
FCPF, UN-REDD

Latest revision as of 13:19, 8 March 2022

General

Name of initiative BioCarbon Fund Initiative for Sustainable Forest Landscapes (ISFL)
LPAA initiative No
NAZCA Initiative No
Website address http://www.biocarbonfund-isfl.org/
Related initiatives
Starting year 2013
End year 2030
Secretariat World Bank (Global Climate Change Fund Management Unit) - Roy Parizat (Fund Manager); rparizat@worldbank.org
Organisational structure The BioCarbon Fund ISFL is a multilateral facility, supported by donor governments and managed by the World Bank.
Geographical coverage Global, Asia and the Pacific, Latin America and The Caribbean, Africa
Name of lead organisation World Bank
Type of lead organisation International organisation
Location/Nationality of lead organisation United States of America

Description

Description The BioCarbon Fund Initiative for Sustainable Forest Landscapes (ISFL) is a multilateral facility that promotes and rewards reduced greenhouse gas emissions and increased sequestration through better land management, including REDD+ (Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation), climate smart agriculture, and smarter land use planning and policies. The ISFL will pilot programs and interventions at a jurisdictional scale in order to test approaches and share lessons learned broadly.


The BioCarbon Fund Initiative for Sustainable Forest Landscapes was established in 2013. The Initiative is supported by Germany, the Kingdom of Norway, Switzerland, the United Kingdom (Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy and Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs), and the United States. It has $355 million in fund capital and supports programs in Colombia, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Mexico, and Zambia.

Objectives The ISFL aims to catalyze the development of a low-carbon rural economy in each of its program areas that will simultaneously result in livelihood opportunities for communities and an overall reduction in emissions from the land.


The ISFL will achieve its objective of greenhouse gas emission reductions, while also addressing poverty and unsustainable land use, through four key design elements.

Working at Scale

Each ISFL program focuses on an entire jurisdiction (state, province, or region) within a country, which provides programs with the opportunity to engage with multiple sectors affecting land use and increase its impact over a relatively large area. The ISFL utilizes a landscape approach in each jurisdiction, which requires stakeholders to consider the trade-offs and synergies between different sectors that may compete in a jurisdiction for land use – such as forests, agriculture, energy, mining, and infrastructure. In doing so, solutions can be identified to serve multiple objectives and influence a variety of sectors.

The goal of the landscape approach is to implement a development strategy that strives for environmental, social, and economic impact at scale. This is done by targeting interventions to improve the enabling environment for sustainable land use. Improvements in the enabling environment such as participatory forest management or land use planning can have significant impact on how land is used and can benefit communities across a jurisdiction.

Leveraging Partnerships

In order to reduce GHG emissions from land use across an entire jurisdiction while simultaneously creating livelihood opportunities, the ISFL will create partnerships with other public sector initiatives and private sector actors. Public-private partnerships (PPPs) are essential to mobilize capital and align objectives in order to create sustainable and scalable models for long-term improved land use.

Private actors – from subsistence farmers to global multi-national firms – have significant influence on the way land is used. The ISFL intends to engage these actors through its programs and, more broadly, work alongside global forums of companies that have pledged to reduce their impact on tropical forests to help identify pathways to enact these commitments. The ISFL will explore opportunities to engage the private sector in the agriculture, energy, and finance sectors, amongst others, where that sector has a significant impact on landscapes within a jurisdiction.

Engagements with the private sector can take several forms, from collaborating on sustainability approaches, to blending finance in-country, to convening stakeholders to work toward complementary goals. Through these partnerships, the ISFL can impact the private sector’s contribution to sustainable land use and increased productivity, ultimately reducing GHG emissions and generating livelihood opportunities.

The public sector has an essential role to play in shaping private sector behavior through appropriate policy setting, regulation and promoting sustainability in a variety of sectors. By addressing these issues, countries can ultimately reduce risk and drive private sector investments in a green economy that benefits people and the environment.

Incentivizing Results

By taking on the immense challenges of convening public and private actors and creating an enabling environment for sustainable development, countries can expect to generate results – including a reduction in GHG emissions. To incentivize countries to do so, the ISFL will provide significant results-based climate finance over a 10-15 year period by purchasing verified emission reductions.

This results-based finance is intended to create a positive feedback loop for successful interventions for sustainable land use in each program country. If effective, each jurisdiction can continue to generate results, sell verified emission reductions, and reinvest in successful interventions. Eventually, this model for sustainable development could be scaled up beyond each jurisdiction.

Building on Experience

The ISFL reflects the demand for progression from relatively small-scale pilot projects to a program aimed at incentivizing sustainable land use at scale. To work at scale effectively, the ISFL builds on the experiences and lessons learned by the BioCarbon Fund’s initial work piloting land use projects, REDD+ initiatives, and other sustainable forest and land use programs. More specifically, the ISFL relies on the national REDD+ readiness work of the Forest Carbon Partnership Facility (FCPF) and the United Nations REDD Programme (UN-REDD), which have created essential institutional infrastructure for large-scale land use programs, including:

  • An emphasis on accountable and transparent program management arrangements
  • Clear operating mandates
  • Multi-sector coordination mechanisms and cross-sector collaboration
  • Technical supervision capacity
  • Funds management capacity
  • Mechanisms for feedback and grievance redress

This streamlined approach allows the ISFL to concentrate its efforts and activities at the jurisdictional level, adding value to existing platforms, while not duplicating existing processes. By building on this experience, the ISFL can, to some extent, limit the administrative burden of implementing jurisdictional programs and focus implementation efforts at the program-level by tapping into functional coordination platforms.

The ISFL will seek to engage relevant stakeholders in program countries, taking into consideration the existing mechanisms in the country, including the FCPF, UN-REDD, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), as well as agriculture, energy, infrastructure, and other relevant stakeholder groups working in each landscape. Priority will be given to already organized groups of stakeholders and other initiatives such as broader national climate change platforms. In cases where other land-use based projects supported by the World Bank Group and other partners are established, the ISFL program will identify them for effective engagement including building on their structures of engagement, as appropriate.

Activities ISFL Funding Instruments


In order to achieve success in each ISFL program, countries will require several tools and approaches at their disposal, and the flexibility to combine them to suit the country’s context. The design of the BioCFplus, a true pioneer for the World Bank Group and carbon and land use funds - in combination with the results-based finance from BioCF Tranche 3 (T3) - can provide this flexibility.

BioCFplus:

  • Provides funding in the form of a grant. 134.7 M$ pledged (2022)
  • Supports countries to make improvements to its enabling environment for sustainable land use.
  • Supports piloting of activities and key partnerships, including engagements with private sector.
  • Provides resources to countries to develop systems for monitoring, reporting, and verifying reductions in GHG emissions to prepare jurisdictions for payments.


BioCF Tranche 3:

  • Provides results-based finance through the purchase of verified emissions reductions. 232.6 M$ pledged (2022)
  • Payments provide incentives for countries to shift to a sustainable development trajectory for each jurisdiction.
  • Payments can be used to sustain successful interventions to sustainable land use in each jurisdiction.


The BioCFplus has been designed specifically to operationalize the vision of the ISFL, which requires several innovative elements in order to meet the demand on the ground in ISFL countries. The fund supports technical assistance and capacity building efforts in each jurisdiction and can provide some critical investment finance to test sustainable land use approaches. This combination of finance from one source gives flexibility to countries to design their programs in an integrated way and identify the most effective approaches for land management.

In addition, the BioCF plus can directly finance advisory service projects through the International Finance Corporation (IFC). This direct funding link with the IFC is groundbreaking for the World Bank Group and aligns goals and visions more closely. IFC advisory service projects can attract private sector interest in ISFL jurisdictions and can benefit farmers and other private sector actors directly.

Meanwhile, the BioCF T3 provides payments for verified emission reductions generated across the landscape, which are expected to yield significant revenue over a 10-15 year period. These payments are envisioned to sustain and build on interventions successfully implemented in the jurisdiction and beyond. It is the ambition of the ISFL to generate a feedback loop of funding for sustainable land use.

One or two success stories achieved

Monitoring and Impacts

Sustainable Development Impact:
E SDG goals icons-individual-rgb-01.png   E SDG goals icons-individual-rgb-02.png   E SDG goals icons-individual-rgb-05.png   E SDG goals icons-individual-rgb-06.png   E SDG goals icons-individual-rgb-10.png   E SDG goals icons-individual-rgb-11.png   E SDG goals icons-individual-rgb-12.png   E SDG goals icons-individual-rgb-13.png   E SDG goals icons-individual-rgb-15.png   E SDG goals icons-individual-rgb-16.png   E SDG goals icons-individual-rgb-17.png  
Function of initiative Funding, Implementation, Technical dialogue
Activity of initiative Fundraising, Technical operational implementation (ex-post), Knowledge dissemination and exchange, Knowledge production and innovation, Financing
Indicators
Goals The ISFL aims to catalyze the development of a low-carbon rural economy in each of its program areas that will simultaneously result in livelihood opportunities for communities and an overall reduction in emissions from the land.

The ISFL has detailed its mandatory and optional indicators and expected milestones in its Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning Framework, available here: https://www.biocarbonfund-isfl.org/sites/biocf/files/documents/ISFL%20MEL%20Framework%20June%202019.pdf

Comments on indicators and goals
How will goals be achieved
Have you changed or strenghtened your goals
Progress towards the goals
How are you tracking progress of your initiative
Available reporting All ISFL Annual Reports are available by scrolling down in the following link: https://www.biocarbonfund-isfl.org/knowledge-center

The ISFL Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning Framework: https://www.biocarbonfund-isfl.org/sites/biocf/files/documents/ISFL%20MEL%20Framework%20June%202019.pdf

Participants

Participants Number Names
Members 10  
Companies 0
Business organisations 0
Research and educational organisations 0
Non-governmental organisations 0
National states 10 Colombia,  Ethiopia,  Germany,  Indonesia,  Mexico,  Norway,  Switzerland,  United States of America,  United Kingdom,  Zambia
Governmental actors 0
Regional / state / county actors 0
City / municipal actors 0
Intergovernmental organisations 0
Financial Institutions 0
Faith based organisations 0
Other members 0
Supporting partners 0
Number of members in the years
Have only national states as participators No


Theme

Transport Agriculture Forestry Business Financial institutions Buildings Industry Waste Cities and subnational governments Short Term Pollutants International maritime transport Energy Supply Fluorinated gases Energy efficiency Renewable energy Supply chain emission reductions Adaptation Other Resilience Innovation Energy Access and Efficiency Private Finance
No Yes Yes No No No No No No No No No No No No Yes Yes No Yes No No No
Last update: 8 March 2022 12:19:06

Not only have national states as participators

FCPF, UN-REDD