United Nations Development Programme Global Environment Facility Group - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 30
About This Presentation
Title:

United Nations Development Programme Global Environment Facility Group

Description:

BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY is shrinking due to species extinction. ... Generate more frequent extreme weather events. Degrade agro/ecosystems, spread desertification ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:82
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 31
Provided by: jamesm56
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: United Nations Development Programme Global Environment Facility Group


1
United Nations Development Programme Global
Environment Facility Group
  • Protecting the Earths Life Support Systems
  • Biosphere
  • Atmosphere
  • Hydrosphere

2
The Biosphere
  • BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY is shrinking due to species
    extinction.
  • This permanent loss of genetic resources
    threatens
  • ecosystem functioning
  • agrobiodiversity
  • the entire web of life
  • Primary human-induced causes degradation of
    ecosystems, deforestation and desertification

3
The Atmosphere
  • CLIMATE CHANGE - 1998 had the highest average
    temperature since beginning of record-keeping 150
    years ago. Records set in each of last 18 months.
  • Climate change threatens to
  • Inundate coastal areas due to sea level rise
  • Generate more frequent extreme weather events
  • Degrade agro/ecosystems, spread desertification
  • Primary human-induced cause green house gas
    emissions of CO2, methane, and nitrous oxide from
    burning of fossil fuels and wood

4
The Hydrosphere
  • INTERNATIONAL WATERS are being polluted and
    over-exploited on a massive scale.
  • Degradation of the oceans and shared fresh water
    bodies threatens
  • all aquatic species, food-chains, ecosystems
  • fresh water resources available for human uses
  • Primary causes discharge of contaminants from
    ship-borne and land-based sources

5
Environmental Conventions
  • Global Environment Facility provides the
    financial mechanism for implementation of
  • Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD)
  • United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
    Change (UNFCCC)

6
Global Environment Facility Timeline
  • 1991 - 1994 1 Billion to launch GEF Pilot
    Phase1995 - 1998 2.2 Billion allocation-GEF
    Operational Phase 1
  • 1999 - 2001 2.8 Billion replenishment-GEF Phase
    2

7
GEF Governance Structure
COUNCIL 32 Members 18 Recipient 14 Donor
ASSEMBLY All 164 Members
CONVENTIONS Provide Policy Guidance
  • GEF Council meets every 6 months to review and
    approve all projects, Work Programmes, Business
    Plans, policies.
  • GEF Assembly meets every 3 years to review
    general policies, operations, and amendments to
    the GEF Instrument.

8
GEF Operational Framework
9
GEF Implementing AgenciesA Tripartite
Partnership
World Bank investment projects, GEF fund
trustee UNDP technical assistance / capacity
building projects UNEP certain global projects,
support STAP
10
GEF Funding Opportunities
  • Full-size Projects (1 million and up)
  • Medium-sized Projects (up to 1 million)
  • Project Development Funds (up to 350,000)
  • Small Grants Programme (up to 50,000)
  • Enabling Activities

11
GEF Operational Programmes
  • 1) Biodiversity Arid and semi-arid
    ecosystems
  • 2) Biodiversity Coastal, marine, freshwater
    ecosystems
  • 3) Biodiversity Forest ecosystems
  • 4) Biodiversity Mountain ecosystems
  • 5) Climate Change Removing Barriers to energy
    conservation
  • 6) Climate Change Promoting adoption of
    renewable energy by removing barriers and
    reducing implementation costs
  • 7) Climate Change Reducing the long-term costs
    of low GHG-emitting energy technologies
  • 8) International Waters Water-based program
  • 9) International Waters Integrated land and
    water Multiple Focal Area
  • 10) International Waters Contaminant-based
    program

12
Key to GEF Partnership Incremental Cost
  • Cost of activities for the global environment
    beyond what is required for national development
  • GEF projects must complement national programmes
    and policies to maximize global benefits
  • Establish the baseline
  • Determine cost of GEF alternative
  • Incremental Cost (project budget) GEF
    Alternative - Cost of Baseline

13
Other Project Eligibility Requirements
  • Country-driven and endorsed by host government
  • Produce identifiable global benefits
  • Participation of all affected groups and
    transparency
  • Consistency with the Conventions
  • Possess strong scientific and technical merit
  • Financially sustainable and cost-effective
  • Include processes for monitoring, evaluation, and
    incorporation of lessons learned
  • Play catalytic role that leverages other financing

14
Biodiversity Project Examples
  • Belize Coastal Zone Management
  • Created coastal zone authority, legislation, and
    plans for managing longest barrier reef in
    Western Hemisphere
  • Azraq Oasis
  • Developed and implemented successful restoration
    of oasis ecosystem vital to local and migratory
    species
  • Mesoamerican Biological Corridor
  • Coordinating multi-donor, region-wide initiative
    to assemble jointly managed system of protected
    areas

15
Climate Change Project Examples
  • Brazil Biomass Gasification Turbine (BIG-GT)
  • Coordinated public/private partnership to
    develop and build worlds first commercial scale
    BIG-GT plant
  • Zimbabwe Rural Solar Energy Project
  • Created special production and financing system
    that has installed over 9,000 small-scale PV
    units to date
  • China Coal-bed Methane Recovery Project
  • Transferred and adapted technology that has
    since attracted over 200m for further
    implementation

16
International Waters Project Examples
  • East Asian Seas Regional Programme
  • Demonstrated successful approaches to integrated
    coastal zone management that will be replicated
    across region
  • Black Sea Regional Programme
  • Assisted countries in identifying priority
    transboundary issues and developed Strategic
    Action Programme
  • Gulf of Guinea Large Marine Ecosystem Project
  • Built regional and national capacities for
    sustainable management of marine and coastal
    ecosystems

17
Annual UNDP-GEF Work Programmes Fiscal Years
1995-2000
Figures as of Jan. 1999. FY 1999 2000
projections are based on approved 3 year Business
Plan
18
UNDP-GEF Total Portfolio
  • Number of full Projects
  • 136 Climate Change
  • 129 Biodiversity
  • 17 Intl Waters

Total Portfolio (with PDFs) as of Jan. 1999
756 million
FY99 Projection
19
Project Distribution by Region
Africa Arab States 140.8m
94.55m Asia Pacific
Global 189.29
25.66m Europe CIS 72.11m Latin America
Caribbean 153.43m
20
UNDP-GEF Enabling Activity Projects
  • 79 countries have Biodiversity Enabling
    Activities
  • 84 countries have Climate Change Enabling
    Activities
  • -- To prepare national communications to a
    convention compilation of information,
    inventories, dissemination of information.
  • -- To prepare plans, strategies or programmes to
    fulfill Convention commitments policy analysis,
    training, strategy and action plan development.

21
GEF Small Grants Programme
  • Managed by UNDP
  • Provided up to 50,000 to over 1,100 projects
  • Operational in 43 countries
  • 30 million replenishment 50 must be cofinanced
  • National level Coordinators and Selection
    Committees guided by Country Strategies

22
Project Implementation Review
  • 1996
  • Increase Time Frames
  • Ensure stakeholder participation in project
    decision-making

  • 1997
  • Importance of Legislation
  • Form Technical Committees
  • Establish Impact Ratings
  • 1998
  • Perform capacity needs assessment
  • Leveraging continues throughout project
    implementation
  • Importance of local income-generating
    activities
  • Use Logical Framework for monitoring/evaluation

23
UNDP-GEF Administrative Budget
  • UNDP-GEF Group is financially independent of
    UNDP.
  • GEF Fiscal Year runs 1 July to 30 June. GEF
    Council approves annual Work Programme targets in
    October.
  • Administrative budget determined by approved Work
    Programme targets.
  • Administrative budget resources must be returned
    if Work Programme targets are not met.

24
Corporate GEF Programmes Managed by UNDP
  • Small Grants Programme
  • Climate Change Enabling Activity Support
  • Biodiversity Enabling Activity Support
  • GEF Country Workshops

25
GEF Project Cycle
Work Program Approval
Concept Paper
Project Brief
Project Document
IN-COUNTRY CONSULTATION REVIEW
GOVERNMENT PARTICIPATION SUPPORT
Independent Technical Review
IA Field Project Approval
IA Country Office
IA Headquarters Review
GEF CEO/Chairman GEF Council
IA Headquarters
GEFOP
Signing by IA Government
GEF CEO/Chairman
Project Development Funds
FUNDING AND IMPLEMENTATION
GEF Council
26
Reasons for the UNDP-GEF Growth
  • Clear mission provide support to project
    developers and implementers both on the ground
    and in relations with the GEF Council,
    Secretariat, World Bank and UNEP.
  • Group structure is decentralized yet adapted to
    high-level interaction - very efficient for
    producing GEF-able projects.
  • HQ professionals are expert at arranging
    incremental costs -- paving the way for
    approval of projects by GEF Council

27
Annual UNDP-GEF Strategies
  • 1996 The GEF A Strategic Imperative for UNDP
  • Predicted GEF could account for 20 of UNDP
    business by 1998. Identified need to strengthen
    management capacity
  • 1997 Reengineering UNDP-GEF
  • Focused on decentralizing expertise through
    development of subregional consultant networks
  • 1998 UNDP-GEF Action Plan
  • Focused on training - HQ hands-on program
  • Systems development - PIMS II and intranet

28
1999 Strategy / Challenges
  • Set up Country Workshops Unit
  • Set up new Small Grants Programme Team
  • Set up Enabling Activity Support Teams
  • Enhance Monitoring, Evaluation, and Project
    Implementation support
  • Enhance internal and external project
    communications
  • Strengthen subregional consultants network

29
UNDP-GEF Organizational Chart
30
Global Environment and the Future of
International Cooperation
  • GEF reflects a new spirit of global cooperation
    rooted in collective dependence on the earths
    biosphere, atmosphere, and hydrosphere.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com