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GBF/TILCEPA

UNDP/GEF SGP
and the
Indigenous and Community
Conserved Areas (ICCAs) Registry

Terence Hay-Edie
UNDP/GEF Small Grants Programme (SGP)

GBF/TILCEPA
SGP background
 Total GEF investment in SGP since 1992 pilot phase
over $600 million
 SGP provides direct access for national NGOs and
CBOs, and indigenous peoples up to $50,000
 Projects approved by a National Steering Committee
with a non-governmental majority (incl. indigenous
reps)
 Over 14,500 projects funded since 1992 in 123
countries
 Implemented by UNDP on behalf of the GEF
partnership of agencies
SGP Coverage: Rapid growth from 65 to 123
countries over the last 5 years
SGP Project portfolio by GEF focal area
Project Portfolio by Focal Areas, July 2011

Biodiversity 50%

Climate Change 18%

Multifocal Area 12%

Land Degradation 11%

International Waters 5%

Persistent Organic Pollutants 2%

Climate Change Adaptation 1%


SGP as a ready and effective
programming and delivery mechanism
 SGP voluntary National Steering
Committee (NSC) operational
country level mechanisms
established and ready
 Active and capable network of
community level grassroots
constituencies
 Ready “infrastructure” for rolling
out a global programme for funding
community intervention
 Above characteristics ensure
effective delivery of funding
DIRECTLY to poor communities
even in remote areas.
SGP portfolio support to
indigenous peoples
 Direct support to
indigenous peoples
approx 15% of SGP
portfolio out of 14,500
small grants
 Also approx 17% of SGP
projects with women’s
organisations
 Participatory video &
other innovative formats
for increased access for
remote populations
SGP approaches: Participatory Video

o Need for alternative proposal


formats and tools
o Allow for expression in local
and vernacular languages
SGP approaches: Photo Stories
July 2011 workshop with
UNESCO, UNU, CBD Sec & IPCC
Indigenous Peoples,
Marginalized Populations and
Climate Change: Vulnerability,
Adaptation and Traditional
Knowledge
Global Extent of Protected Areas

Protected areas
in the WDPA:
1962 1,000
1980 40,000
2003 >100,000
2009 >130,000

UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre


World Database on Protected Areas

UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre


“Protected Planet” Portal
(protectedplanet.net)

UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre


Global ICCA Registry - history
 Global reporting estimates of protection lacks for most ICCAs
 No global dataset on ICCAs
 “Worldwide ICCA Database”- case studies from 18 countries
 ICCA Registry initiated parallel to ICCA Consortium (WCC, Barcelona 2008)
 Support provided to UNEP WCMC by UNDP/GEF SGP
 Phase 1 Registry implemented (Feb 2009-Sept 2010)
 Phase 2 (Oct 2010-Feb 2012)
Protected Areas Governance Matrix
Governance A. Government Managed Protected Areas B. Co-managed Protected Areas C. Private Protected Areas D. Community
Type Conserved Areas
IUCN Federal Local/ Government Transboundary Collaborative Joint Declared …by …by for Declared Declared
Category or municipal delegated conservation management management and run non-profit profit and and run
(management. national ministry management ( involving (various (pluralist by organisation organisations run by by local
objective) ministry or (e.g. state forms of management individual s (e.g. indigenous communities
or agency in to an agencies & pluralist board) landowner (e.g. individual or peoples
agency charge NGO) others) influence) NGOs, corporate
in charge universities, land-owners)
etc.)

I - Strict
Nature
Reserve/
Wilderness
Area
II – National
Park
(ecosystem
protection;
protection
of cultural
values)
III – Natural
Monument
IV – Habitat/
Species
Management

V – Protected
Landscape/
Seascape

VI – Managed
Resource
Global definition of ICCAs
 IUCN Protected area definition:
“a clearly defined geographical space, recognised, dedicated and managed, through
legal or other effective means, to achieve the long-term conservation of nature with
associated ecosystem services and cultural values” (Dudley et al, 2008)

 Indigenous Peoples & Community Conserved Areas and Territories (ICCAs):


“…natural and modified ecosystems including significant biodiversity, ecological
services and cultural values voluntarily conserved by indigenous and local
communities through customary laws or other effective means…” (WPC, Rec V 26,
2003)
 Defining characteristics of ICCAs
1. Community has close relationship with area
2. Community holds power in decisions, by law or by practice
3. Voluntary management achieves conservation
Global enabling policies
 Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD, 1992) recognition of role of local communities and
indigenous peoples in conservation of biological (and cultural) diversity
 Increasing recognition of role of community role in conservation
 5th IUCN World Parks Congress (2003)
 CBD Programme of Work on Protected Areas (2004)
 UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (Sept 2007)
 “ICCA” term adopted by members of the IIFB (International Indigenous Forum on
Biodiversity) and TILCEPA at COP9 (May 2008) 
 International exposure through IUCN WCPA Guidelines (2008)
 Global ICCA Consortium (membership-based organisation) formed at the IUCN World
Conservation Congress (Oct 2008)
 CBD 10th Conference of Parties (Oct 2010) includes ICCAs in 2020 ‘Aichi targets’ for protected
areas (17% terrestrial, 10% marine)
 More clarity needed on relationship with PAs and “other area-based forms of conservation
measures” referenced under the 2020 Aichi targets
How to Contribute

UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre


ICCA Website
 Overview of project, links, global map

 Basic information about each ICCA in pilot countries

 Map and stats of ICCAs at national scale

 Case study pages for featured ICCAs in pilot countries


 Context
 Participatory maps/videos
 Interviews
 Photos
 Stories

www.ICCAregistry.org
ICCA Registry information fields
Maps are
generated to show
 Key fields the values of
 Name (English and Indigenous/Local Language) ICCAs
 Community(ies)
 Designation
 Date of establishment
 IUCN Protected Areas Management Category
 Governance
 Purpose
 Physical Boundaries
 Overlays with other data
 Habitat (Mangrove & Seagrasses, Forest cover,
Coral reefs)
 Biodiversity (AZE, KBA, IBA, WWF Ecoregions, GBF/TILCEPA

IUCN Red List)


 Global (Carbon stocks, Water valuation,
Human health indices, Linguistic diversity)

UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre


How to Register

UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre


Free, Prior Informed Consent (FPIC)

UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre


Innovative Mapping for Documenting
Conservation
Philippines pilot study

Possible Indicators

Total area coverage

Carbon stocks

Endangered species and special habitats

Important Bird Areas, other

Human population

Sea level rise

Linguistic diversity

Crop diversity

UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre


Philippine’s ICCAs
 12.46% of the Philippines’ terrestrial areas and
0.44% of marine areas are covered by ICCAs
(including Ancestral Domain) [550 records in
total]. When ICCAs are combined with other
protected areas, these figures jump to 21.12%
and 1.58% respectively.
 Over 75% of all Endangered and Critically
Endangered marine and terrestrial IUCN Red List
fauna species in the Philippines have ranges that
extend into ICCAs.
 10 out of the total 15 Alliance for Zero
Extinction sites in the Philippines fall within 50
km of ICCAs, showing spatial relevance (1 out of
15 Alliance for Zero Extinction sites falls within
an ICCA).
 70.2% of terrestrial ICCA areas have closed
forest cover (greater than 40% canopy cover),
19% higher than the Philippines as a whole.

UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre


Mexico’s ICCAs

UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre


Case Study Example

“The publication of information and data will allow more people to know about our project. This will bring more interest
and more visitors, and it is also a way to show the organizations that have supported us that we grew and we are still
growing and their investment is benefiting both people and conservation. The publication on a website created by an
important international organization helps raise the profile of our work and activities. Furthermore, it allows us to share
our experience with other communities, to learn from their experience and support them through our experience. Along
with other stories of other ICCAs it will also help show those who are skeptical that community conservation and
development is possible.”

Jose Ines Loria – from the Unidad de Manejo Ambiental (UMA)


San Crisanto, Mexico

UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre


Australia Indigenous Protected Areas
(IPAs) and Key Biodiversity Areas

UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre


Current Registry status
(Phase 2; Oct 2010-Feb 2012)

Registry website content Activities


 16 interactive case studies on  ICCA capacity-building workshop
website (Japan 2010)
 6 interactive country maps  Updated and expanded content in
online ICCA Registry
 New website content
 National maps for at least 4 countries
 22 country summaries
(UK, Australia, Ecuador, Guyana)
 36 ICCAs registered in database
 Contribution to at least 1 national
 Interns converting data from ICCA level ICCA workshop or process
Forum spreadsheets/ (Aust)
 Links with UN-REDD process, other
UN agencies

UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre


Governance of ICCA Registry
UNEP-
WCMC ICCA Advisory
Committee
Relevant
Experts Subgroups:
1. Peer Review Mechanism
2. Free Prior Informed Steering ICCA Registry
Decisions
ICCA Consent Process Committee Management
3. Registry Structure
Consortium

CBD CoP 11
India
Local Action
Global Impact

Thank You

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