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On going AFP activities
December 2004
1. Title of the Work Plan
Forest partnership: from Kalimantan districts to the global market place
2. Main objectives of the Work Plan
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Good forest governance is incorporated in
sustainable development planning and policy and contributes to improved
livelihoods (Module 1)
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Strengthened market incentives for responsible
forestry and capacity of forest managers in Indonesia and Malaysia to
respond to those incentives (Module 2)
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Districts and key companies adopt policies and land
use plans that exclude conversion of HCVF and apply sound environmental
practices in their operations (Module 3)
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Partners and stakeholders have improved knowledge
of, and access to, each other's lessons learned, information and relevant
outputs (Module 4)
3. Expected results
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Module 1 will promote improved forest governance in
three districts in Kalimantan by fostering dialogue amongst key stakeholder
groups, providing technical support to identify potential forest and
land-use mosaics that support sustainable development, and facilitating
development of policies and mechanisms to ensure equitable distribution of
natural resource revenues amongst relevant stakeholders
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Module 2 will define pathways for business to
support conservation and sustainable management of forests in target
districts and beyond. It will strengthen market incentives for responsible
forestry and the capacity of forest managers in Indonesia and Malaysia to
respond to those incentives
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Module 3 intends to improve plantation practices,
especially in avoiding conversion of High Conservation Value Forests, and to
link best practices in targeted Conservation districts with improved
international markets
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Module 4 intends to keep the numerous partners and
their stakeholders across the districts, markets and elsewhere informed and
updated on lessons learned. It will broadcast programme results and lessons
learned to other stakeholders outside of the core partnership and bring
experience and advice to the Partnership from outside stakeholders
4. Modalities/Procedures
The Partnership will be implemented through four modules,
linked to the Partnership objectives. They are –
Module 1 - Forest governance and area based
conservation - linking community planning and priority setting at district
political levels to national planning and policy formulation in central
government.
(Lead – Tropenbos-Indonesia)
The partnership will assist three districts in
Kalimantan – Kapuas Hulu, Malinau and Pasir – to develop long-term natural
resource management visions. The Partnership will provide technical support
to government; civil society organisations including traditional adat
councils, community government institutions, district and provincial NGO
organisations and groupings; and private sector companies. They will be
brought together to develop good natural resource legislation,
implementation and market links. Efforts will focus on mitigating the root
obstacle to good governance in Indonesia; weak capacity and human resources
at district levels of government preventing holistic spatial planning and
long-term economic development visions. The outcomes will be establishment
of long-term sustainable economic development visions, consolidating
legislation, equitable distribution of resource rights and access. All will
contribute to transparent governance mechanisms and economic development. In
assisting economic development, indirect effects will be improved
alternatives for poverty reduction and multi-stakeholder participation in
governance planning crossing ethnic and gender lines.
Module 2 – International markets – defining pathways
and creating market chains for business to promote and reward sustainable
forestry practices in Malaysia and Indonesia.
(Lead – WWF International)
The Partnership will support progressive companies to
distinguish themselves from less responsible businesses within the forest
products industry by developing and applying systems for verifying the
legality of logging operations, tracing wood and fibre from source to final
use, and promoting certification as the mark of responsible forestry. The
module will strengthen the market for “good wood” and help to link
Indonesian and Malaysian producers to this market. As such it will enhance
the sustainability of forest management and improved governance projects in
these countries.
This will be achieved by recruiting strategically chosen companies to Forest
and Trade Networks in Europe and Asia and supporting them to develop and
implement action plans to eliminate wood that is harvested illegally, and/or
unsustainably from their supply chains. In Indonesia and Malaysia forest
managers and primary processors will be recruited to producer Forest and
Trade Networks and supported to develop and implement systems for verifying
the source and legality of the timber they produce and stepwise plans to
achieve certifiable standards of forest management. This work will also
generate results, practical guidance and lessons learned to support the Asia
Forest Partnership, Europe FLEGT and East Asia FLEG processes.
Module 3 – Forest Conversion and Sustainable
Plantation – collaborating with responsible actors in the oil palm industry and
other stakeholders to promote better practices and ensure that plantations do
not replace or threaten High Conservation Value Forests
(Lead – WWF Indonesia)
The Partnership will liaise with the Roundtable on
Sustainable Palm Oil, which in turn will coordinate with its current
partners. The Partnership will support private sector partners to identify
and implement better practices, work with local government to prevent forest
conversion and with international markets to provide incentives for better
practices across the industry. A particular focus will be implementation of
a recently agreed initiative between the Roundtable and WWF-Indonesia to
analyse distribution of high conservation value forests in Kapuas Hulu
district, using the results to exclude such forests from conversion and to
use idle lands (defined here as lands that have been cleared of forest that
are currently unused, unsettled and with no clear tenurial claim) for
plantation development.
Module 4 – Sharing of lessons learned and monitoring –
Disseminating lessons learned among partners and beyond for replication and
prevention of duplication of wasted effort
(Lead – CIFOR)
Information and lessons learned sharing mechanisms,
will be used for adaptive management of the partners and capacity building
and training of stakeholders and local institutions. Where necessary,
lessons will lead to actions necessary at national and international levels
where effective in tackling root causes of problems at local levels. Lessons
and tools developed to promote industry best practice and international
market-based solutions will be disseminated through international private
sector/government initiatives such as the Asia Forest Partnership and the
Roundtable on Sustainable Oil Palm.
5. Time frame
2 years (July 2004 – June 2006) with possible
extension of 3 years (July 2006 – June 2009)
6. Arrangements for potential funding
For the first two years, the Dutch Government (DGIS) will contribute Euro
2 Millions, while the coordinating partners (WWF and Tropenbos) will
allocate ca. Euro 3.5 Millions for the implementation of the program
7. Partners involved
- Overall Coordination: WWF
- Coordination for each Module: Tropenbos (Module 1), WWF
International (Module 2), WWF Indonesia (Module 3), CIFOR (Module 4)
- Coordinating Partners:
Governments: The Netherlands
Intergovernmental Organizations: CIFOR
Civil Society: WWF, Tropenbos
Potential Partners:
Governments: Indonesian Provincial and District government,
Judiciary and law enforcement agencies, National Park and other protected
area authorities; Relevant transboundary government institutions
Intergovernmental Organizations/Forums: AFP, FLEGT
Private Sector: Indonesian Palm Oil Commission, Sawit Watch, Key
Indonesian and Malaysian Companies, Key European Companies (Unilever, The
Body Shop, etc.)
Civil Society: Provincial and district NGOs; traditional community
(adapt) groups, LEI, Smartwood, Woodmark, Tropical Forest Foundation,
Tropical Forest Trust, World Business Forum
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