A regional sustainable financing architecture for conservation

Tim Calver, The Nature Conservancy
Publié: 08 octobre 2015
Dernière modification: 28 mars 2019
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Résumé

The Caribbean Biodiversity Fund (CBF) is the realization of the vision to create reliable, long-term funding for conservation and sustainable development in the Caribbean. The CBF and its National Conservation Trust Funds form the regional sustainable finance architecture, which support and incentives Caribbean nations to meet the goals under the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), the Caribbean Challenge Initiative, and other international and regional commitments. The CBF is a umbrella fund with permanent (an endowment fund) and non-permanent funding (sinking fund).

Classifications

Région
Caraïbes
Ampleur de la mise en œuvre
Multinational
National
Ecosystème
Estuaire
Forêt côtière
Mangrove
Récif corallien
Écosystèmes marins et côtiers
Thème
Financement durable
Défis
Manque d'accès au financement à long terme
Manque d'autres possibilités de revenu
Mauvaise gouvernance et participation
Objectifs de développement durable
ODD 13 - Mesures relatives à la lutte contre les changements climatiques
ODD 14 - Vie aquatique
ODD 17 - Partenariats pour la réalisation des objectifs
Objectifs d’Aichi
Objectif 1: Sensibilisation accrue de la biodiversité
Objectif 20: Mobiliser toutes les ressources disponibles

Emplacement

Nassau, New Providence, The Bahamas | Caribbean region

Défis

  • Limited resources for conservation in the Caribbean. The CBF and the Regional Sustainable Financing Architecture for Conservation is a new and sustainable source of funding to address environmental challenges.
  • Environment is low in the regional political priorities. The CBF and the NCTFs will be crucial in raising the profile of environment and conservation in the region.

Bénéficiaires

  • The National Conservation Trust Funds
  • Civil society
  • Government institutions
  • Community-based organizations

Comment les blocs constitutifs interagissent-ils entre eux dans la solution?

The building blocks describe 5 key areas in the design, establishment, current and future implementation, and monitoring and evaluation of this solution. While there are some sequential aspects around these building blocks, their implementation has and is often occurring in a parallel manner. For example, the CBF has been established first and now most of the national conservation trust funds are being established. The operationalization of the different trust funds will also not occur at the same time. Meanwhile maintaining the governments‘ and partners’ commitment is an important factor throughout all the building blocks.

Impacts

As a regional conservation trust fund, the CBF is a new source of funding in the Caribbean. Thus far, nine National Conservation Trust Funds (NCTFs) are legally established and at different stages of becoming fully operational, with additional countries interested in joining the process. Moreover, all NCTFs have identified and are pursuing additional sustainable financial mechanism to finance biodiversity management activities. With three NCTFs official agreements with CBF have been signed and payments will start flowing in the coming months. Once the architecture is fully functional the CBF, through its endowment, expects to generate approximately US$1.5 – 1.8million/year to be channeled through the NCTFs. New sustainable finance mechanisms established by the NCTFs would match this amount. In addition, a new US$26.5 million sinking fund focused on ecosystem-based adaptation is expected to significantly contribute to create adaptation solutions for Caribbean islands.

Histoire

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Contribué par

Portrait de ybatista_cbf@yahoo.com

Karen McDonald Caribbean Biodiversity Fund (CBF)

Autres contributeurs

Caribbean Biodiversity Fund (CBF)