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Just over two years after the submission of its forest emissions reference level (FREL), covering deforestation in the Amazon, Brazil begins the preparation of a FREL for deforestation in the Cerrado biome. The VI meeting of the Technical Working Group on REDD+ was held between 20 and 21 June in Brasilia, with the aim of collecting inputs and identifying knowledge gaps. Experts on land cover mapping, ecology and vegetation classification in the Cerrado attended the meeting and contributed with their inputs for the preparation of the FREL submission draft. The participants had the opportunity to discuss key issues regarding the development of the reference level for deforestation in the Cerrado. A widely discussed issue was the necessity to promote consistency between the legends applied to the different vegetation maps produced for the biome scale, as it had already occurred during the previous meeting. Moreover, the issues that require consistency between the coming FREL submission and the Third National Communication of Brazil to the UNFCCC were analyzed, producing inputs for the preparation of a first draft. The Technical Working Group meeting furthers REDD+ in Brazil, as it provides the opportunity for conceptual debates that are key to verifying results achieved in reducing deforestation. The next meeting should continue to address such discussions, having as a basis a more advanced draft of the FREL for deforestation in the Cerrado biome.   PAVING THE WAY TO A NATIONAL FREL   The option for the Cerrado for Brazil's next REDD+ submission to the UNFCCC is justified by the significance of the Cerrado to the total emissions from the land use, land-use change and forestry sector (LULUCF). According to data for 2010 from the Third National Communication, Cerrado emissions amount to approximately 19.6% of the LULUCF sector total. The initiative signals Brazil’s intent to advance towards measuring, reporting and verifying (MRV) results on a national scale, as planned on the National REDD+ Strategy. Brazil has adopted a step-wise approach to REDD+, that entails promoting the MRV of new activities and biomes as the country builds capacity for doing so. Doing that, in turn, should contribute to enhancing Brazil's potential for attracting additional results-based payments from international partners.

Entre os dias 16 a 18 de junho foi realizada missão de intercâmbio de Cooperação Sul-Sul entre Indonésia e Brasil. A visita de estudo ao Brasil, promovida pelo Banco Mundial, teve como objetivo permitir ao Comitê de Coordenação Nacional do DGM (Dedicated Grant Mechanism for Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities em inglês) da Indonésia conhecer o projeto DGM Brasil em fase de implantação. O Programa DGM Global é uma iniciativa estabelecida no âmbito do Programa de Investimento Florestal (FIP), com a finalidade de apoiar Povos Indígenas e Comunidades Locais para conservação dos recursos naturais e a inclusão social. O Ministério do Meio Ambiente foi convidado a apresentar a Estratégia Nacional para REDD+ do Brasil, sua estrutura de governança e as possibilidades de engajamento de povos e comunidades locais na implementação da ENREDD+. A oportunidade serviu para troca de experiências com representantes da Indonésia e também para aproximação com os representantes do Comitê Gestor do DGM Brasil, composto por representantes de povos indígenas e comunidades tradicionais do Cerrado. 

The 3rd voluntary meeting of REDD+ national entities and focal points took place during the Climate Change Conference in Bonn, on 23 May 2016. The goal of the meeting was to provide an opportunity for countries to share their experiences and lessons learned in the implementation of REDD+ and to promote discussion on the needs and challenges for its funding (click here to see the agenda). Leticia Guimaraes, the Ministry's Forest and Climate Change Manager, presented Brazil's experience in the implementation of the Warsaw Framework for REDD+. Brazil was the first country to complete the process to have its REDD+ results recognized under the UNFCCC and inserted in the Lima REDD+ Information Hub. Click here to see Brazil's presentation . The Latin American Working Group on REDD+ results-based finance presented a Joint Declaration to the Green Climate Fund (GCF). This Declaration aims to provide guidance to the GCF on key aspects regarding the procedures to operationalize REDD+ results-based payments, taking into account the Warsaw Framework for REDD+ and the GCF's results-based payment Logic Model. The Latin American countries that signed the Declaration enumerated the following issues as priorities: resource allocation for results-based payments, operational package, payment transfer methods and the absence of need for further reporting requirements.   Click here to see the Declaration (available in Spanish only).
Brazil's REDD+ Focal Point The Decree No. 8.576/2015 defined that the Chair of the National REDD+ Committee, the Ministry of the Environment, will be Brazil's REDD+ focal point to the UNFCCC.
Voluntary Meetings The voluntary meetings, encouraged by decision 10/CP.19 , aim to provide the oportunity for countries to share their experiences and discuss the challenges in the implementation of REDD+. Click here to learn more about it.

The members of the National REDD+ Committee (appointed by the Ministry of the Environment's Ordinance No. 91/2016 (Portuguese only), convened for their first regular meeting in 7 April. The agenda included the inauguration and presentation of the members, a presentation on the National REDD+ Strategy and discussions on the Rules of Procedure. The meeting was considered successful by the members. The Director of the Department of Policies to fight Deforestation and Chair of the Committee, Thelma Krug, said she was pleased with the outcome, particularly because of the consensus reached on the Rules of Procedure. This definition creates the conditions for the effective implementation of the National REDD+ Strategy. The Rules of Procedure covers issues regarding the nature of the Committee, the powers and duties of its members, the meetings and the decision-making process. The document will be formalized by an Ordinance by the Ministry of the Environment and will be made available on the REDD+ Brazil website shortly after that.   Another important definition made the Committee's meetings open to the public. Anyone interested in attending a meeting should inform, 5 working days in advance, the Committee’s Executive Secretariat.  The National REDD+ Committee meetings require a quorum of at least 5 members of the federal government and three invited members (states, municipalities and civil society). This combined with the decision-making method agreed (which will seek consensus and decide with 75% of approval when unable to reach consensus) implies that every decision will have the approval of at least one of the invited members, in line with the REDD+ safeguard "d" on full and effective participation of stakeholders. Additional agenda items would address the Thematic Advisory Boards and the process "Dialogues with the Brazilian Society on the National REDD+ Strategy", however, there was no sufficient time for such discussions. The Committee is scheduled to meet every six months. However, its members indicated the need for another extraordinary session in the coming months, to address, among other things, the establishment of the Thematic Advisory Boards.  More information on the work being conducted by the National REDD+ Committee and on the schedule of meetings will be made available soon.

The Ministry of the Environment's Climate Change and Forests Unit sent two representatives to the Workshop of the Latin American Working Group on REDD+ Results-Based Finance. The event took place in Panama City, from 29 to 30 March, and was promoted by the UN-REDD Programme. Representatives from Costa Rica, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico and Peru attended the event, staff from the United Nations Development and Environment Programmes (UNDP and UNEP) and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) provided valuable support to the workshop, these entities make up the UN-REDD Programme. The aim of the Workshop was to discuss the experience of countries in the implementation of REDD+ results-based payment schemes, with a focus on lessons learned that could provide guidance for the Green Climate Fund's (GCF) process of operationalizing REDD+ results-based payments. Based on the discussions that took place and on the common understandings found, the Group will prepare a declaration with its recommendations to the GCF, which will be available on our website when finalized. The declaration will present contributions with the goal of ensuring that the operationalization is effective and consistent with the results-based payments logic, which entails greater autonomy to countries in defining how to invest the funds received. The countries discussed their views on the different models and agreements for results-based payments in which they are involved. Bilateral agreements, such as the Brazilian Amazon Fund, and multilateral funds such as the Forest Carbon Partnership Facility, which has agreements with Costa Rica, Chile and Mexico. The insights on the existing agreements should also help to promote adjustments to improve the arrangements and terms of existing agreements.   According to the Ministry of the Environment's Project Manager, Leticia Guimarães, "Exchanges with the Latin American countries involved in the implementation of REDD+ are always rich experiences. The lessons learned and the points of convergence found strengthen the debate on REDD+ finance and can definitely offer important contributions regarding the operationalization of REDD+ results-based payments by the Green Climate Fund."    REDD+ results-based payments and the GCF According to decisions agreed under the Conference of the Parties (COP) of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the GCF should play a central role in mobilizing resources for REDD+ results-based payments.During its most recent meeting in March, the GCF's Board defined that the procedures to operationalize REDD+ results-based payments should be concluded by next October.

The Ministry of Environment (MMA for the acronym in Portuguese)) is pleased to announce the National REDD+ Strategy (ENREDD+ for the acronym in Portuguese) launch event. The event will take place on 6 April in Brasilia. The first meeting of the National REDD+ Committee (CONAREDD+ for the acronym in Portuguese) will take place on April 7 also in Brasilia. More details will be made available soon. The Climate Change and Forests Unit has been working intensively in these first months of 2016 to set in motion the implementation of the ENREDD+. In November 2015, the Decree No. 8,576 established the CONAREDD+, which will be responsible for coordinating, overseeing and monitoring the implementation of the ENREDD+. In order to carry out these tasks, its members will have to be appointed, its Rules of Procedure agreed and Thematic Advisory Boards created, these issues should form the agenda of the first meeting. The MMA, acting as the Executive Secretariat of the CONAREDD+, has already received the nominations of representatives from the federal and state governments. The Brazilian State Environmental Entities Association has nominated representatives from the states of Mato Grosso and Acre as members and from Para and Rondonia as alternate members. The selection of the two representatives from organized civil society in the CONAREDD+ will take place at a meeting of the Brazilian Forum on Climate Change. Everybody is invited to take part in the meeting on 11 March. The expectation is that the selection will enable the participation of the various sectors interested in the implementation of REDD+ in Brazil, especially traditional communities and indigenous peoples. The Ordinance to appointment the CONAREDD+ members will be issued by the MMA as soon as the Executive Secretariat receives the nominations of all representatives. The Executive Secretariat is also preparing documents to support the operations of the CONAREDD+ and its Thematic Advisory Boards. This material will be available on this website soon, so that stakeholders can submit their contributions and suggestions before the document is submitted for validation by the CONAREDD+ members. The MMA maintains ongoing informal communication with representatives of partner institutions, civil society organizations and the private sector to address key aspects of the implementation of REDD+ in Brazil. The relationship with stakeholders will be strengthened by the process of "Dialogues about the ENREDD+ with the Brazilian Society”, currently in its planning stage. Keep visiting our website for more updates. If have any question and/or suggestions, do not hesitate, contact us on the email: O endereço de e-mail address está sendo protegido de spambots. Você precisa ativar o JavaScript enabled para vê-lo. Meeting of the Brazilian Forum on Climate Change for the selection of representatives from civil society in the CONAREDD+ Date: 04/11/2016 10:00 14:00 Location: Auditorium of the Ministry of Environment Address: SEPN 505, Block "B", Marie Prendi Cruz Building, Postal Code: 70730-505 - Brasília - DF

The Ministry of Environment (MMA for the acronym in Portuguese)) is pleased to announce the National REDD+ Strategy (ENREDD+ for the acronym in Portuguese) launch event. The event will take place on 6 April in Brasilia. The first meeting of the National REDD+ Committee (CONAREDD+ for the acronym in Portuguese) will take place on April 7 also in Brasilia. More details will be made available soon. The Climate Change and Forests Unit has been working intensively in these first months of 2016 to set in motion the implementation of the ENREDD+. In November 2015, the Decree No. 8,576 established the CONAREDD+, which will be responsible for coordinating, overseeing and monitoring the implementation of the ENREDD+. In order to carry out these tasks, its members will have to be appointed, its Rules of Procedure agreed and Thematic Advisory Boards created, these issues should form the agenda of the first meeting. The MMA, acting as the Executive Secretariat of the CONAREDD+, has already received the nominations of representatives from the federal and state governments. The Brazilian State Environmental Entities Association has nominated representatives from the states of Mato Grosso and Acre as members and from Para and Rondonia as alternate members. The selection of the two representatives from organized civil society in the CONAREDD+ will take place at a meeting of the Brazilian Forum on Climate Change. Everybody is invited to take part in the meeting on 11 March. The expectation is that the selection will enable the participation of the various sectors interested in the implementation of REDD+ in Brazil, especially traditional communities and indigenous peoples. The Ordinance to appointment the CONAREDD+ members will be issued by the MMA as soon as the Executive Secretariat receives the nominations of all representatives. The Executive Secretariat is also preparing documents to support the operations of the CONAREDD+ and its Thematic Advisory Boards. This material will be available on this website soon, so that stakeholders can submit their contributions and suggestions before the document is submitted for validation by the CONAREDD+ members. The MMA maintains ongoing informal communication with representatives of partner institutions, civil society organizations and the private sector to address key aspects of the implementation of REDD+ in Brazil. The relationship with stakeholders will be strengthened by the process of "Dialogues about the ENREDD+ with the Brazilian Society”, currently in its planning stage. Keep visiting our website for more updates. If have any question and/or suggestions, do not hesitate, contact us on the email: O endereço de e-mail address está sendo protegido de spambots. Você precisa ativar o JavaScript enabled para vê-lo. Meeting of the Brazilian Forum on Climate Change for the selection of representatives from civil society in the CONAREDD+ Date: 04/11/2016 10:00 14:00 Location: Auditorium of the Ministry of Environment Address: SEPN 505, Block "B", Marie Prendi Cruz Building, Postal Code: 70730-505 - Brasília - DF

Domingo, 10 Julho 2016 21:00

REDD+ at COP-21

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The 21st Conference of the Parties (COP) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) came to an end last Saturday, 12 December, with the anticipated Paris Agreement. The document is the result of the consensus among 195 countries and the European Union about the necessity to face climate change in order to hold the increase in global temperatures to “well below” 2°C above pre-industrial levels and to pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1,5°C. The agreed text brings two provisions on reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation, and the role of conservation, sustainable management of forests and enhancement of forest carbon stocks (REDD+), one on the decision and one on the Agreement: Paragraph 55 of the decision "55. Recognizes the importance of adequate and predictable financial resources, including for results-based payments, as appropriate, for the implementation of policy approaches and positive incentives for reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation, and the role of conservation, sustainable management of forests and enhancement of forest carbon stocks; as well as alternative policy approaches, such as joint mitigation and adaptation approaches for the integral and sustainable management of forests; while reaffirming the importance of non-carbon benefits associated with such approaches; encouraging the coordination of support from, inter alia, public and private, bilateral and multilateral sources, such as the Green Climate Fund, and alternative sources in accordance with relevant decisions by the Conference of the Parties;" Article 5 of the Agreement "1. Parties should take action to conserve and enhance, as appropriate, sinks and reservoirs of greenhouse gases as referred to in Article 4, paragraph 1(d), of the Convention, including forests. 2. Parties are encouraged to take action to implement and support, including through results-based payments, the existing framework as set out in related guidance and decisions already agreed under the Convention for: policy approaches and positive incentives for activities relating to reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation, and the role of conservation, sustainable management of forests and enhancement of forest carbon stocks in developing countries; and alternative policy approaches, such as joint mitigation and adaptation approaches for the integral and sustainable management of forests, while reaffirming the importance of incentivizing, as appropriate, non-carbon benefits associated with such approaches." Another much welcomed provision comes from a decision regarding the Green Climate Fund (GCF). The text, on paragraph 23, urges the Fund’s Board to operationalize REDD+ results-based payments. That is considered a key move to drive REDD+ implementation in Brazil and worldwide. In addition to that, three decisions regarding REDD+ methodological aspects were approved. Their content was agreed during the 42nd session of the Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice (SBSTA), which took place in Bonn, Germany, in July 2015. The decisions addressed the last outstanding issues, so that there is no need for further guidance regarding REDD+ implementation. They refer to: 1. Safeguards: the draft decision defines that the existing framework of guidelines is sufficient for the full implementation of REDD+ activities.  2. Alternative Policy Approaches: the draft decision decides that donors may provide resources and technical support for such initiatives. Developing countries that wish to develop such activities will have access to UNFCCC online platform as a means to share their experiences and information. Joint Mitigation and Adaptation approaches for the integral and sustainable management of forests are examples of Alternative Policy Approach. 3. Non-carbon Benefits: the draft decision concludes that benefits unrelated to carbon do not constitute a requirement for developing countries to receive support for the implementation of REDD+ activities or to receive results-based payments. The countries are, however, encouraged to consider, evaluate and report on such benefits, where appropriate, in accordance with their national circumstances and capabilities. We will post the links to the relevant decisions as soon they are numbered and released by the UNFCCC.

By establishing its National REDD+ Strategy (ENREDD+ in Portuguese), Brazil fulfills the last requirement to get its REDD+ results recognized under the UNFCCC. Brazil has completed the measurement, reporting and verification process of REDD+ results achieved by reducing emissions from deforestation in the Amazon biome between 2006 and 2010. The 2.971 Gt CO2e result is equivalent to more than double Brazil's estimated emissions for 2012, and it represents one of the most significant climate change mitigation contributions for that time period. The recognition materialized with the launch of the Lima REDD+ Information Hub, during an event at COP-21. This platform is a repository for all the relevant REDD+ documentation ender the Convention, such as technical submissions, REDD+ results-based payments, donors, figures etc. The Info Hub will be key for providing transparency to the international system that carries out and monitors REDD+ actions worldwide. As the first country to fulfill all the requirements to have its results recognized, Brazil had the opportunity to inaugurate the Lima REDD+ Information Hub. All the submissions to the UNFCCC developed so far are already available on Lima REDD+ Information Hub. Brazil welcomes the opportunity to present its results with the recognition provided by this platform and expects that it can help attracting new donors and boosting REDD+ results-based payments.

Climate change presents a critical global challenge that can only be addressed through the multilateral process. Brazil strongly supports the international regime established under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and is committed to its strengthening by contributing with its best efforts to negotiate an agreement that is legally binding, universal, equitable, balanced and ambitious, with the ultimate goals of keeping global average temperatures below 2°C above pre-industrial levels and of steering the global community towards a path of sustainable development. After a number of rounds of negotiations in preparation for the 21st session of the Conference of the Parties (COP), the latest session, held in Bonn past October, resulted in an improved draft text that will be the starting point for the Paris Agreement. There remains, nonetheless, a series of issues to be negotiated during COP21. As we approach COP-21, to be held in Paris, France, between 30 November and 11 December, we bring an overview of Brazil’s expectations regarding some of the main issues to be negotiated before the world can reach the long anticipated Paris Agreement. The new agreement must observe the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities (CBDR), one of the key principles of the Convention. Historical contributions to climate change ought to be taken into account for definitions regarding key aspects, such as climate finance to developing countries and technology transfers. In line with that, Brazil intends to advocate for the concentric differentiation approach. Another important element for Brazil will be the definition of a five year cycles for Parties to update their Nationally Determined Contributions. This should enable countries to assess how their implementation has progressed, setting more ambitious emission reduction targets moving forward. In September 2015, the Brazilian Government gave a clear demonstration of the country’s serious intent to contribute to climate change mitigation and adaptation. Brazil’s Intended Nationally Determined Contribution (INDC) sets forward an economy wide absolute target of reducing its greenhouse gas emissions by 37% below 2005 levels in 2025 and 43% by 2030. This contribution has been set, notwithstanding Brazil’s intertwined challenges posed by population growth, social mobility and expanding the access to energy. Brazil is also determined to contribute beyond climate mitigation actions, particularly in the form of South-South cooperation, through the provision of technical and capacity-building support to other developing countries. In a context where actions in the land use change and forest sector will be key to achieve the 2025 and 2030 objectives, Brazil defined REDD+ as a mean for the implementation of Brazil’s INDC. Brazil expects that the agreement that will be approved by the COP-21 will further foster the support for results-based payments to enhance the effectiveness of REDD+ actions. Brazil has been the first country to implement the Warsaw Framework for REDD+. In September 2015, the verification process of REDD+ results achieved in the Amazon biome was successfully concluded, attesting emissions reduction to the tune of 2.9 Gt CO2e between 2006 and 2010. Making it an unquestionably major mitigation contribution in this period.

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