Difference between revisions of "Initiative 20x20"
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- 22 impact investors and companies are deploying capital in innovative restoration projects and are becoming the blue print for sustainable land use practice that deliver environmental, social and financial returns. | - 22 impact investors and companies are deploying capital in innovative restoration projects and are becoming the blue print for sustainable land use practice that deliver environmental, social and financial returns. | ||
|Participants business organisations number=23 | |Participants business organisations number=23 | ||
− | |Participants business organisations names= | + | |Participants business organisations names=Tree Finance (Germany), |
− | Tree Finance (Germany), | + | |
Althelia funds (United Kingdom), | Althelia funds (United Kingdom), | ||
Andes Amazon Fund (Colombia), | Andes Amazon Fund (Colombia), | ||
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Terra Bella Fund (USA), | Terra Bella Fund (USA), | ||
Urapi Sustainable Land Use (Colombia). | Urapi Sustainable Land Use (Colombia). | ||
− | |||
|Participants non-governmental organisations number=73 | |Participants non-governmental organisations number=73 | ||
|Participants non-governmental organisations names=AIDER - Partnership for Integrated Research and Development (Peru), | |Participants non-governmental organisations names=AIDER - Partnership for Integrated Research and Development (Peru), | ||
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Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay. | Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay. | ||
|Number of members={{Number of members | |Number of members={{Number of members | ||
+ | |Number of members year=2020 | ||
+ | |Number of members value=113 | ||
+ | }}{{Number of members | ||
|Number of members year=2019 | |Number of members year=2019 | ||
|Number of members value=104 | |Number of members value=104 |
Revision as of 09:52, 4 August 2020
General
Name of initiative | Initiative 20x20 |
---|---|
LPAA initiative | No |
NAZCA Initiative | Yes |
Website address | http://initiative20x20.org |
Related initiatives | Commitments to Initiative 20x20 are in support of the Bonn Challenge, a global target to restore 150 million hectares of degraded land by the year 2020 through forest and landscape restoration. The commitments to Initiative 20x20 will contribute to the New York Declaration on Forests that builds on and extends the Bonn Challenge to restore 350 million hectares by 2030. |
Starting year | 2014 |
End year | |
Secretariat | World Resources Institute
Walter Vergara (Lead of the Initiative) 10 G Street NE Suite 800 Washington, DC 20002, USA |
Organisational structure | The World Resources Institute (WRI) serves as secretariat to Initiative 20x20. The International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), Centro Agronómico Tropical de Investigación y Enseñanza (CATIE), and the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), and WRI are founding members of Initiative 20x20. 17 countries in the Latin American region have established ambitions to restore and safeguard the functionality of lands.
More than 40 technical partners, including civil society organizations and academic institutions, and 21 financial partners, support processes to catalyze restoration in the Latin American region. |
Geographical coverage | Latin America and The Caribbean |
Name of lead organisation | World Resources Institute |
Type of lead organisation | Academic/Research institution |
Location/Nationality of lead organisation | United States of America |
Description
Description | Initiative 20x20 is a country-led effort to bring 20 million hectares of land in Latin America and the Caribbean into restoration by 2020. The initiative—launched formally at COP 20 in Lima—supports the Bonn Challenge, a global commitment to restore 150 million hectares of land around the world by 2020 and the New York Declaration on Forests that seeks to restore 350 million hectares by 2030.
Initiative 20x20 supports reforestation (natural and assisted), conservation of forests as well as avoided deforestation as elements of an integral restoration process. Cognizant of the various degrees of land degradation in the region, the initiative will also support efforts to recover land functionality (soil conservation and recovery; carbon storage; water retention and stable hydrologies; biodiversity conservation and recovery) through agroforestry, sylvo pastures, and other sustainable land use schemes. |
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Objectives | Initiative 20x20 aims to bring 20 million hectares of land in Latin America and the Caribbean into the process of restoration by 2020 and to change the dynamics of degradation for a sustainable and low-carbon land use. |
Activities | - Inspire national commitments to restoration by engaging in a robust dialogue with Ministers of Agriculture and Environment in the region
- Highlight the economic case of restoration - Provide technical support, share expertise and research supporting on themes around the implementation of restoration and conservation - Support the deployment of investment in restoration across Latin America and the Caribbean. |
One or two success stories achieved | - 17 countries in Latin America and the Caribbean have established ambitions to restore and avoid degradation in 50 million hectares across the region. This level of commitment from member countries has allowed them to surpass the Initiative's initial objective to bring 20 million hectares into the process of restoration.
- 22 impact investors and companies are deploying capital in innovative restoration projects and are becoming the blue print for sustainable land use practice that deliver environmental, social and financial returns. |
Monitoring and Impacts
Function of initiative | Implementation, Political dialogue | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Activity of initiative | Goal setting (ex-ante), Awareness raising and outreach, Advocacy | ||||
Indicators |
Goal setting (ex-ante) — Mitigation - Forestry
| ||||
Goals | |||||
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 | Under the initiative a major monitoring effort in envisioned, capable of documenting the restoration process in some detail. Key elements in this effort include remote sensing, on the ground sampling and modeling. | ||||
Available reporting |
Participants
Participants | Number | Names | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Members | 113 | |||||||||
Companies | 0 | |||||||||
Business organisations | 23 | Tree Finance (Germany), Althelia funds (United Kingdom), Andes Amazon Fund (Colombia), AndGreen Fund (Netherlands), CARANA Agribusiness Partnerships (USA), EcoEnterprises Fund (USA), Ejido Verde (Mexico), FIS Ameris (Chile), Fondo Acción (Colombia), Forestry and Climate Change Fund (Costa Rica), Kaeté Investimentos (Brazil), LXG Amazon Reforestry Fund (Peru), Moringa (France), Nespresso Sustainability Innovation Fund (Switzerland), Permian Global (United Kingdom), Pomeroon (Guyana), Pomona Impact (Guatamala), Root Capital (Coata Rica), SLM Partners (Australia), Symbiosis Investimentos (Brazil), Terra Bella Fund (USA), Urapi Sustainable Land Use (Colombia). | ||||||||
Research and educational organisations | 0 | |||||||||
Non-governmental organisations | 73 | AIDER - Partnership for Integrated Research and Development (Peru), Alexander von Humboldt Biological Resources Research Institute (Colombia), Amazon Conservation Team (Colombia), American Bird Conservancy (USA), ANCON (Panama), ARCAS (Guatamala), Azuero Earth Project (Panama), Biodiversity Partnership Mesoamerica (Costa Rica), Biohabitats (Panama), Bioversity International (Italy), Canopy Energy (Paraguay), Celsia (Colombia), Center for Conservation, Research and Management of Natural Areas – Cordillera Azul (Peru), CIFOR (Indonesia), CINCIA, Wake Forest University’s Center for Amazonian Scientific Innovation (Peru), CIRAD (France), Climate Focus (Netherlands), Climate Institute (USA), Colciencias (Colombia), CONDESAN (Peru), Conservation International (USA), Conservation Strategy Fund (Peru), Defensores de la Naturaleza (Guatamala), EcoAgriculture Partners (USA), Ecodes Engineering (Colombia), EcoPlanet Bamboo (Mexico), Ecosystem Restoration Camps (Peru), Fair Connection (Chile), Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (Italy), Forest Stewardship Council - FSC (Germany), Forestpa (Colombia), FUNDECOR (Costa Rica), Fundación Agreste (Argentina), Foundation for Conservation and Sustainable Development -FCDS (Colombia), Fundacion Pasticultores del Desierto AC (Mexico), Fundacion PRISMA (El Salvador), Fundación Vida Silvestre Argentina (Argentina), Fundo Brasileiro para a Biodiversidade (Brazil), Global Forest Generation (Peru), GPS (Argentina), Helvetas (Peru), Ibero-American Model Forest Network (Peru), Instituto Privado de Investigación sobre Cambio Climático (Guatemala), Instituto Centro de Vida (Brazil), International Center for Tropical Agriculture - CIAT (Colombia), International Foundation for the Restoration of Ecosystems - FIRE (Spain), International Union for the Conservation of Nature - IUCN (Switzerland), ISA Conexión Jaguar (Peru), Natural Capital Project (USA), Netherlands Development Organisation - SNV (Netherlands), OroVerde – The Tropical Forest Foundation (Germany), Osa Conservation (Costa Rica), Ovis 21 (Argentina), Pronatura Noroeste A.C. (Mexico), Rain For Climate (USA), Rainforest Alliance (USA), Rainforest Foundation (USA), Rainforest Partnership (USA), Rare (USA), Reforestamos (Mexico), Southern Wings (USA), Sustainable Amazon Foundation (Brazil), The Nature Conservancy (USA), The Sustainable Trade Initiative (Netherlands), The Tropical Agricultural Research and Higher Education Center - CATIE (Costa Rica), Tompkins Conservation (Argentina), UNIQUE Forestry and Land Use (Germany), Verra (USA), Vielca Medio Ambiente (Nicaragua), Viridis Terra International (Canada), Wetlands International (Argentina), World Agroforestry Centre - ICRAF (Kenya), World Resources Institute (USA), World Wildlife Fund (USA) | ||||||||
National states | 17 | Argentina, Belize, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay. | ||||||||
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 | Yes | No | No | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | No | No | No | No | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | No |
Not only have national states as participators