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Phase III: remuneration of positive externalities

Workshop on Remuneration of Positive Externalities, FAO Rome, 15 – 16 April 2009

On 15-16 April 2009 a workshop was held at the FAO Headquarters in Rome about the remuneration of positive externalities (RPE) in mountain regions to concretely plan further the third phase of the SARD-M project. The workshop was attended by the four Regional Focal Points (Sub Saharan Africa South America, Europe, and Mediterranean,), the Adelboden Group Bureau members and also experts of the Interdepartmental Working Group “Mountain” in FAO, as well as World Food Programme, Balkan Foundation for Sustainable Development, Dinaric Arc Initiative, ICIMOD, Swiss Federal Office for Agriculture (FOAG), CARE Tanzania...

The main objective was to discuss the third phase of the SARD-M project and to exchange information. Participants presented proposals for pilot projects to test the remuneration of positive externalities in concrete cases and draw lessons. The outcome is a list of 8 proposals (or preliminary studies) in order to submit a project file.

For more information, some Power Points of the two days workshop are available on the SARD-M website in the section project outputs.

Pilot project proposals and preliminary studies proposals:

CountryProposerContent
Bosnia-HerzegovinaDinaric Arc InitiativeAssure the maintain of the cultural landscape in the Cetina river watershed through sustainable agriculture and forestry
ColombiaCONDESANLand use change for water quality and quantity improvement at Fuquene Lake
EthiopiaGMPAssure quality and continuity of water supply from the rural caption area to the metropolitan of Addis Abeba
EthiopiaGMP & WFPRPE on MERET sites: carbon storage in soil
Hindu-Kush HimalayaICIMODTransfer payment from hydropower industry to providers of positive externalities (good land use)
MacedoniaBFSDMaintenance/establishment of biodiversity-friendly farming in the Prespa region (preliminary study proposal)
NepalWOCANClimate change adaptation measures focused on women (Forest carbon fixation)
UkraineHeifer InternationalEfficient natural resource use through community-based initiatives (labeled products; value-added food chain)































Summary of the Sustainable Agriculture and Rural Development in Mountain Regions (SARD-M) member states meeting, 27th May 2009

The ‘Sustainable Agriculture and Rural Development in Mountain regions’ project (SARD-M) organized a meeting on “Food Security through additional income generation: remuneration of positive externalities”, held on 27th May 2009 at FAO Headquarter in Rome. The aim of this 2 hour workshop was to open the project to new member states, as donors or beneficiaries: 24 FAO member states representatives attended, including the project initiators, France and Switzerland.

In fact about 34% of rural mountain people are submitted to food insecurity. At the global level, the new challenge for 2050 include ways in which food security can be ensured for 9 billion people in a context of energy and food price rising, without further depleting the earth’s natural resources.
Furthermore, mountain ecosystems (covering 25% of earth surface) are particularly sensitive to climate change and require special efforts for adaptation. Agriculture is a key area for Green House Gases emission and offers a large potential for climate change mitigation (Schmidhuber January 2009). Moreover, these ecosystems are a significant source of public goods / Positive Externalities such as clean air, biodiversity, quality products and landscapes, which are essential for mankind. About half of world’s fresh water comes from mountain regions! In this perspective marginal areas such as mountain regions have to be kept into the world market to contribute ensuring food security.
In an effort to tackle these issues, the SARD-M project proposes to facilitate additional income generation by Remunerating these Positive Externalities (RPE); Carbon sequestration may also be taken on board by the SARD-M project, and COP 15 Climate Change may open new perspectives, giving new impetus.
Having implemented some pilot projects and assessed specific relevant policies, institutions and processes, SARD-M will prepare a collection of practical guidelines for decision makers, to assist them in RPE with new economic mechanisms for payments transfers. This would be in line with the Millennium Development Goals 1, 7 & 8 and would contribute to achieving chapter 13 & chapter 14 of Agenda 21, in conformity with world trade agreements.

During the discussions, the attending representatives expressed a strong interest in the issues which were raised, and agreed with the approaches advocated and presented. They have been invited to join France and Switzerland in supporting the project.

Here are the PowerPoints and documents presented during the meeting.

 


 

 


 

Related articles and PowerPoints

Documents workshop on RPE May 2009

Documents workshop on RPE May 2009 for the stakeholders