TerenceHay Edia
TerenceHay Edia
TerenceHay Edia
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%
International Waters 5%
Protected areas
in the WDPA:
1962 1,000
1980 40,000
2003 >100,000
2009 >130,000
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)
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
Possible Indicators
Carbon stocks
Human population
Linguistic diversity
Crop diversity
“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.”
CBD CoP 11
India
Local Action
Global Impact
Thank You