Agricultural NAMA: in the context of the Costa Rican Climate Change Strategy
and the Hemispheric Cooperation.
Daniela Medina Hidalgo Specialist in Information and Knowledge Management
Agriculture Natural Resources and Climate Change Program
Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture
Luis Zamora Quiros National Coffee Manager
Ministry of Agriculture
Costa Rica
The Bases for Mitigation Action in Costa Rica
1990 Forestry Law and establishment of FONAFIFO ( National Forestry Financing Fund) and the Payment for Environmental Services Program (PES).
Opportunities for the agricultural sector to include agro forestry in PES schemes. (coffee and livestock)
The Bases for Mitigation Action in Costa Rica
2009 National Climate Change Strategy
The ambitious goal to achieve carbon neutrality in 2021 in the context of eco competitiveness.
National Agenda
International Agenda
National Mitigation Objectives
Two main goals.
The development of metrics: Verifiable and reliable quantification systems.
Capacity and technology development: Efficiency in the implementation measures.
• PES • C Neutral Trademark • Official Markets CDM • Voluntary Markets
Development of Carbon Markets
• Reforestation • Agro forestry Systems • Avoided Deforestation • Natural Regeneration
CO2 Sequestration
• Energy, Transportation, Solid Wastes, Industry, Agriculture, Land Management, Tourism
GHG Reduction
A Leading National Institution
Coordinate the establishment of sectoral action plans
Articulate initiatives in the bigger context of the national strategy .
Strengthening Synergies
Climate Change Objectives in the National Policy for the Agricultural Sector
Promote Intersectoral efforts to mitigate and adapt to climate change.
Achieve excellence in the agro environmental management.
Support sustainability in the production processes, allowing greater differentiation of the national exportable supply in world markets.
Planning Mitigation Actions: The Coffee Sector as a Starting Point
Agriculture represents 32,5 % of the national exports, form which coffee is responsible for 9,2%
The Coffee Sector (Distribution of production)
FUENTE: ICAFE, Distribucción de la Nómina por área Cafetalera, Cosecha 10-11
90.000 Ha.
50.671 Producers
172 Processing Plants
57 Exporters
32 Toasters
172
57
32
Beneficios
Exportadores
Tostadores
8% Costa Rican Labor
Force
4 Unions
NAMA: setting the first experiences trough the Coffee Sector
A model for the whole agricultural sector
Institutional support (ICAFE).
The potential to coordinate with other mitigation initiatives like PES.
Considerable impact in relation to total the emissions generated by the agricultural sector.
Practical examples like the carbon neutrality certification obtain by Coopedota.
Organizations involved in the process
Public Sector
NAMA Development and Implementation
Ministry of Agriculture
Ministry of Environment
ICAFE
INTECO
Private Sector
Development of Pilot experiences
Coopedota
CO2.cr
Academy Research Development
CATIE
UNA
INCAE
Regional
Cooperation Knowledge Sharing
and Up scaling IICA
PROMECAFE
Main Components needed to develop and implement NAMAs
Knowledge Management (develop, systematize and
share)
Development and validation of MRV methodologies (Research Centers, National Institutions)
Development of Pilot Projects ( Private Sector, Cooperatives, Trade Associations)
Institutional Articulation (Donors, Cooperation Agencies National Institutions, Cooperatives, Exporters)
Key constraints identified so far in the process
Technical and Financial Support.
Clarity and more information of key aspects in the process, like MRV methodologies.
How to link and develop operational schemes to integrate NAMAs with local carbon markets and other mitigation actions like PES.
National Level International Level
Develop NAMAs for: Livestock, Sugar Cane, Rice, Banana and Pineapple. Prioritized for their impact (GHG emissions ) and the existing institutional backstopping.
Sharing experiences with other countries, trough IICA´s cooperation schemes and regional platforms.
Up scaling the NAMA experience of the coffee sector
Thank You Muchas Gracias
Daniela Medina (IICA) [email protected] David Williams (IICA) [email protected]
Luis Zamora (MAG) [email protected] Tania Lopez (MAG) [email protected] Mario Arroyo (ICAFE) [email protected]