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South sumatra eco region alliance

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Page 1: South sumatra eco region alliance
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Public – Private - People - Partnerships

His Excellency Alex Noerdin, Governor of South Sumatra

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Commitment of Government of South Sumatra

Sustainable supply shed, multiple commodities by:

• Support Partnership in Landscape Management towards the Provincial Green Growth Plan

• Ensure fire action (Fire Free Villages) plans for high-risk areas

• Formalize commitment on restoration and no new development on peat

• Review licenses and legality on peat and forest

• Support local livelihood in rehabilitation and renovation

• Establish task force/ special agency for implementation

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Role of Government of South Sumatra

• Mainstream the Provincial Green Growth Plan including the landscape partnership

• Take leadership in institutionalization• Develop legal and policy tools• Convene and lead cooperation with multi-stakeholder bodies• Lead implementation, monitoring and enforcement• Advocacy at national and international level

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Public – Private - People - Partnerships

Andjar Rafiastanto Country Manager Indonesia

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Theory of Change

Sustainable Landscape and Green

Growth

A. Government Jurisdictional

Policy, Institutions and Actions

B. Public-Private People

Partnership for A Sustainable

Landscape Model

C. A System for Monitoring and

Reporting Change and Progress, and

Transparency

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Component 5 - National policy, Transparency M&E & shared learning. Relevant international opportunities, national policy issues, constraints and lessons to up-scaling the

sustainable landscape management model are identified, shared and acted on by the government and industries

Component 4 - Community empowerment in the landscape. Communities in the pilot landscape

have improved land tenure security and the basis for long-term sustainable livelihoods

Component 3 - Landscape management and private sector. A sustainable / responsible landscape management pilot is

completed with a focus on all private sector and public agency land managers in the landscape with participation

from communities

Component 2 – Governance. A province-wide policy, institutional basis and capacity for sustainable landscape

management is developed that links the public and private sectors and enables community participation

Component 1 – Forest, biodiversity and peatlands. The bio-physical basis and understanding for peat and lowland landscape management, GHG reduction and priorities for

conservation is established in the target areas

Project components C

HA

NG

E

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Theory of Change

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Public – Private - People - Partnerships

Fitrian Ardiansyah Indonesia Country Director

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• Expansion vs land use intensification

• Mapping of supply flows (small to large scale suppliers; small farmers)

• Identification of issues: (1) organisation of small farmers(2) Legality(3) Capacity & knowledge(4) Balancing forest & peat protection(5) Access to finance Replanting

• A comprehensive package of solutions and agreement

Sourcing areas and a supply shed of commodities

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Landscape approach

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Public – Private - People - Partnerships

Aida Greenbury Managing Director Sustainability and Stakeholder Engagement, Asia Pulp & Paper

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APP FOREST CONSERVATION POLICY (FCP)

Launched in February 2013:• No natural forest conversion – protection of High Conservation Value (HCV) & High Carbon Stock (HCS) forests

• Peatland management for reduction of GHG emissions

• Social and community engagement

• Third party suppliers

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LANDSCAPE APPROACH: BACKGROUND• In April 2014, APP announced a plan to support the protection and

restoration of one million hectares of forest across Indonesia. • 10 landscapes were identified through stakeholders input, including the

government, • WWF and Greenpeace. A plan to provide the implementation guidance

has been completed in 2015.

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Public – Private - People - Partnerships

Mansuetus Alsy Hanu National Coordinator – Indonesian Palm Oil Smallholder Union (SPKS)

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Critical improvements for smallholders to reduce deforestation

1. Land mapping for smallholders to assist with development of land tenure issues.

2. Establish smallholders organization into co-operatives.  3. Capacity building to increase productivity.  4. Provide materials and training for smallholder to increase yield and reduce costs such as seed-fertilizers. 5. Establish good governance in the village level to control governance of the land smallholders. 

6. Landuse mapping and improved spatial planning to identify suitable land for smallholder expansion.

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Public – Private - People - Partnerships

Dr Hadi Daryanto Director General of Social Forestry and Environment Partnership, Ministry of Environment and Forestry

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BACKGROUND OF SOCIAL FORESTRY IN INDONESIA

1.Forest resources has not been able to give prosperity to local people (Chapter 33 point 3 of UUD 1945 stipulates that earth, water, and natural resources within are owned by the state and used as much as for the people’s prosperity);

2.It is time to strengthen social forestry (Chapter 3 point 2 of UU 31 of 1999: strengthening social forestry is required to open way for legal access, financial access, and market access to local people;

3.RPJM 2015-2019: the seventh Nawa Cita (Nine Goals): to realize self-dependence in economy by empowering strategic sectors in domestic economy, improve water defence, improve the involvement of society in health recovery: HTR (Community Based Plantation Forest), HKm (Community Forestry), HD (Village Forest), Rights Forest, Community Forest, HHBK (Non-timber Forest Products) and Partnership;

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Definition and Criteria of Social Forestry Indicative Map

CRITERIA PARAMETER Data resources

K1 Production-based forestry aimed at social management at the directive mapping of forestry utilization without permit problem

4,050,837 4,050,837 PHPL

K2 Claims of custom-based forest from registration result by BRWA/AMAN 3,592,109 BRWA, AMAN

K3 Potential location of social forest from the mapping result by JKPP 5,750,021 791,611 JKPP

K4 Community-based forest system KPSHK 1,366,301 KPSHK

K5 Location not included TORA at 4 provinces (South Kalimantan, West Nusatenggara, Lampung, Bali)

176,087 176,087 PKTL

256,137 HKm/PSKLK6 Social Forest area currently in processed and being proposed by BPDAS 2,650,183 718,532 HD/PSKL

297,757 HTR/PSKL1,379,757 BP DAS Proposal

K7 Partnership Area with KPH/Forestry management/Permit holder 137,187 137,187 PKTL- - INDONESIAN FORESTRY12,766,315

ANALYTICAL RESULT BY GIS (mio hectares)

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PETA INDIKATIF AREAL PERHUTANAN SOSIAL (PIAPS) or Indicative Map of Social Forestry Area

Up to 28 Oct 2015

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Web examples: Public – Home http://pskl.menlhk.go.id/akps

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