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RECOFTC joins the Interim Executive Committee of the new Peoples Forests Partnership

Partnership will drive rights-based climate finance directly to Indigenous Peoples and local communities that they can use to protect the forest and invest in their own development.
Interim Executive Committee
Representatives of the Peoples Forests Partnership founding members with seats on the Interim Executive Committee meet in Washington D.C., 14 June 2022.

As a founding member of the Peoples Forests Partnership, RECOFTC and other partners signed a Constitution Act in Washington D.C. on 14 June 2022 formally establishing the Partnership’s Interim Executive Committee and decision-making structure and guidelines. Announced on 7 November at the United Nations climate summit (COP26) in Glasgow, the Partnership is driving rights-based climate finance directly to the primary stewards of the world’s remaining natural forests—Indigenous Peoples, traditional landowners and local communities.

“The Partnership launched in Glasgow is now ready to begin directing carbon finance to forest communities,” said David Ganz, RECOFTC’s Executive Director. “We have developed human-rights-based principles to guide these investments and ensure that the rights of Indigenous Peoples and local communities are respected.”

Direct climate investment is crucial to achieving the global climate change goal of limiting planetary warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius. Indigenous and local communities manage about 50 percent of the world’s land and more than one-fifth of forest carbon.

“If we are going to achieve the goals of the Paris Agreement and prevent the most devastating effects of climate change, we must have the full participation of the guardians of the world’s forests and recognition of their rights,” said Beto Borges, Director of the Communities and Territorial Governance Initiative at Forest Trends. “We designed the Peoples Forests Partnership to help meet this need.”

In Glasgow, more than 100 countries signed a landmark agreement to end and reverse deforestation by 2030 and pledged US$19.2 billion. In addition, governments and philanthropists committed US$1.7 billion in direct funding for indigenous and traditional communities for forest conservation. Yet, until now, there were no rights-based mechanisms for directly transferring carbon payments to indigenous and local communities that are built on a foundation of safeguards and standards to protect their rights and cultures. Indigenous and local partners have been calling for such a mechanism, stating that other programs have not sufficiently engaged them in the development of safeguards and best practices.

Led by an Interim Executive Committee with 50 percent representation by Indigenous Peoples’ and local communities’ organizations and 50 percent women, the Partnership has already developed a set of Principles to guide direct investment in market based and non-market based climate and conservation opportunities. The Principles, released today, were authored and endorsed by the indigenous and local community representatives present at the meeting.

The Principles ensure that companies obtain the free, prior, and informed consent (FPIC) of Indigenous Peoples and local communities for all carbon and conservation contracts and activities. All Members of the Peoples Forests Partnership must also commit to providing fair and equitable benefits to Indigenous Peoples and local communities in ways that allow their governing bodies to invest their revenues according to their own self-determined priorities, traditional knowledge, cultures, and spiritual practices.

The Peoples Forests Partnership aims to support COP26’s “no-deforestation by 2030 goal”, and functions as a private sector-focused counterpart to government and donor commitments.

The founding members of the Peoples Forests Partnership, with seats on the Interim Executive Committee, include three organizations representing Indigenous Peoples and local communities, two non-profit international organizations, and three corporations:

  • Alianza Mesoamericana de Pueblos y Bosques (AMPB)
  • Center for Indigenous Peoples’ Research and Development (CIPRED)
  • Everland
  • Forest Trends
  • Greencollar
  • Organización Nacional de los Pueblos Indígenas de la Amazonía Colombiana (OPIAC)
  • RECOFTC
  • Wildlife Works

For more information on the Peoples Forests Partnership and/or to express your interest in joining, visit peoplesforestspartnership.org.

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RECOFTC’s work is made possible with the support of the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC) and the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida).