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Executive Summary

Agriculture, forestry and other forms of land use generate around a quarter of global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, and in many countries, the proportion of emissions from land use is far higher. At the same time, these sectors are highly vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. There are opportunities to redirect the hundreds of billions spent annually on land use around the world toward green activities without sacrificing either productivity or economic development. Low and middle-income countries and their development partners, as well as businesses and investors, urgently need to identify the changes in public support that can help to drive scaled-up private sector investment in land use mitigation and adaptation. This study has developed three tools to help governments and their partners achieve this.

Moving to more productive and resilient forms of land use is a complex challenge. Low and middle-income countries have committed to reduce land use emissions and are preparing to adapt to the impacts of climate change, but given the crosscutting nature of land-use activities, there are often apparent trade-offs between mitigation, adaptation and development objectives. For governments and their partners finding solutions that correctly balance these priorities is crucial. Land and its resources are essential to meet the growing global demand for food, fuel, and fiber and directly support the livelihoods of over 2.6 billion people engaged in agriculture worldwide, many of whom live in the world’s poorest regions on severely degraded land.

It will be essential to significantly increase finance for green land use activities to mitigate land-use emissions and adapt to the impacts of climate change at the levels required. Developed countries have committed to mobilize USD 100 billion in climate finance annually by 2020 to help developing countries address their low-carbon and climate-resilient needs. However, the international financing mechanisms that were envisaged to deliver land-use investments, including REDD+, are not yet doing so at the necessary scale. There is an urgent need for new approaches to finance land-use mitigation and adaptation.

Annual flows of finance for land-use mitigation and adaptation constitute only a small portion of total land-use investments, with estimates ranging widely from USD 1.3 billion to 51.8 billion. Total financial flows to agriculture and forestry activities in developing countries alone are in the hundreds of billions of dollars, but these investments are predominantly business-as-usual (BAU) in nature, that is, they do not mitigate or adapt to the effects of climate change, and in some cases may increase emissions or climate vulnerability. The majority of land use finance originates from domestic private actors supported heavily by public subsidies and incentives.

Three Tools to Help Government and their Partners to Redirect Land Use Finance

Limited understanding of investments in land use mitigation and adaptation inhibits the design of efficient and effective public interventions. In many cases, we do not know how much finance is being channeled to the land-use sector, how it is being delivered, what is being paid for and by whom. Nor do we fully understand the proportion of finance going towards green versus BAU activities or the opportunities that may exist to address barriers, or create incentives to shift land use activities towards greener outcomes. In this joint study supported by the EU REDD Facility of the European Forest Institute, Climate Focus and Climate Policy Initiative have developed three tools that address these issues. Governments and their partners can use them to:

  • Inform the design of land use mitigation and adaptation strategies supported by multilateral and bilateral programs
  • Identify domestic and international financial instruments to redirect public and private finance towards greener land-use practices
  • Encourage coordination between public instruments across land-use sectors.

The tools cover national and international, public and private finance, across a full range of land-use activities.

1. Landscape of Land Use Finance

The Landscape of Land Use Finance tool provides a snapshot of public and private land use finance going to green and potentially BAU activities. It can help countries and development partners to understand how much and what type of finance is flowing, among which key actors, and to which activities. It helps by identifying channels, gaps, and blockages in the flow of finance. Governments could track public or private expenditures / investments as a first step to obtain an initial overview of core land-use financial flows, rather than comprehensively including all flows. As capacity and data availability increases, they could expand the scope to include all actors to enable a more detailed understanding of how different sources of finance interact. This analysis can also inform the design of multi-sectoral strategies to address climate-compatible development challenges (such as REDD+ programs). The diagram below shows a typical landscape of land use finance landscape diagram (known as a Sankey) where the width of flows represents the volume of finance flowing.

2. Financial Viability-Gap Analysis

The Financial Viability-Gap Analysis tool explores whether climate change mitigation and adaptation activities are viable from a financial perspective. Some green land use activities are more expensive than BAU ones, resulting in a viability gap. Here activities need to be publically funded or supported. Other green land use activities are not intrinsically more expensive but face risks or information gaps that can increase costs and discourage investors. Here public financial instruments can help overcome those barriers.

By highlighting potential barriers to the deployment of green activities (risk, information and capacity, or financial gaps), as well as the entry points for public and private finance, this tool can inform the design of tailored public incentives to unlock investment in mitigation and adaptation activities. Governments can increase the financial viability of green land use investments by:

  • Reducing costs – through e.g. low cost loans and guarantees, tax breaks, and project preparation grants
  • Increasing revenues – using e.g. price premiums, price floors, and pay-for-performance grants to improve investors’ returns
  • Improving the enabling environment – by e.g. legal / regulatory standards, land allocation and management systems, certification standards, and implementation of monitoring and enforcement systems.

The financial viability gap analysis tool can be carried out as part of a detailed sectoral assessment or at the activity level.

3. Public Finance Mapping

The public finance mapping tool provides a framework to track key public financial instruments for climate change mitigation and adaptation in any given country, jurisdiction or sector. It can identify whether instruments target BAU or green land-use activities. This tool enables governments to assess whether their overarching financial policies and instruments, including those supported by development partners, are coherent, and consistent and to what extent they provide support for green production. This tool can provide insights to enable greater coordination across sectors, technologies and geographies, among governments and donors, by identifying entry points for donors to deliver finance in ways that maximize domestic and private sources of investment. As a first step, governments could focus on mapping incentives for BAU and green activities. In time it could also be useful to map disincentives arising from, for example, taxes and fees imposed upon land use activities.

Land use encompasses a diverse and crosscutting range of political, economic, environmental and social interests. Getting the right combination of policies and financial instruments in place to unlock green investment at scale is politically challenging and often subject to long-standing vested interests. Improving the ability of governments to assess empirically how finance is flowing across land-use sectors, which viability, cost and risk gaps need to be addressed, and whether public or domestic instruments are helpful and coherent, is essential. Success will also depend on whether governments have the capacity to define, test, and verify, green activities in ways that delivers developmental and environmental outcomes. The frameworks, approaches and tools presented in the paper seek above all to help lower and middle-income countries and their development partners to identify opportunities to work together with businesses and to jointly finance green land-use transitions. Climate Focus and Climate Policy Initiative are now actively engaging country partners interested in trialing some of these approaches with the aim to publish case studies, initially for two countries, within the next year.

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