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Accessing funds for sustainable forest management








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    Book (stand-alone)
    Workshop report of the Expert Meeting on Strengthening Finance for Sustainable Forest Management through National Forest Funds held at Catie, Costa Rica, 28-30 January 2013
    This workshop was sponsored by FAO and GIZ on behalf of the Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ)
    2013
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    With growing environmental awareness and increasing recognition of the ecosystem service benefits of forests, many countries are taking actions to support sustainable forest management (SFM). For this purpose, a variety of financial mechanisms and instruments are being tested and developed. These include payments for environmental services, carbon financing, debt-for-nature swaps, etc.
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    Article
    Designing ecological fiscal transfer policy using the Regional Incentive Fund (DID), Specific Allocation Fund (DAK), and Village Fund (DD) to realize sustainable forest governance in Indonesia
    XV World Forestry Congress, 2-6 May 2022
    2022
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    Ecological fiscal transfers (EFTs) are useful tools to mitigate the potential trade-off between the economic costs and environmental conservation. If managed properly, they will reward regions for investing in conservation and incentivizing the expansion of ecological areas. In recent years, EFT has been discussed by the Government of Indonesia and has been developed by adding ecological aspects to existing fiscal transfers or specifically employed for environmental uses. This study offers scenarios and simulations for implementing EFT in three existing fiscal transfers: (1) Regional Incentive Funds (DID), (2) Specific Purpose Funds for environment and forestry sectors (DAK LHK), and (3) Village Funds (DD). We find that our simulations distribute the existing fiscal transfer more equitable to regions having better ecological indicators. Also, the EFT system only changes the fiscal transfer’s formulation by adding ecological indicators thus not imposing additional burden on the fiscal budget. We believe EFT enhances the subnational governments’ roles in preservation allowing for better biodiversity and environmental management due to having local knowledge. We suggest in order to support EFT, the collection of various data and information related to ecological aspect is vital. Keywords: Ecological Fiscal Transfer, Forest Cover, Indonesia, Regional ID: 3486335
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    Presentation
    A Managed-Access Approach to Sustain Small Scale Fisheries Management in Southeast Sulawesi, Indonesia
    FAO Tenure and User Rights in Fisheries
    2018
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