pei annual progress report 2010 -- report
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"Scaling-Up the UNDP-UNEP Poverty-Environment Initiative", October 2011TRANSCRIPT
UNDP-UNEP Poverty-Environment Initiative
Environment for the MDGs
PEI ANNUAL PROGRESS REPORT2010
Executive Summary
UNDP-UNEP Poverty-Environment FacilityP.O. Box 30552 - 00100 Nairobi, KenyaFax: +254 20 762 4525E-mail: [email protected]: www.unpei.org
Belgian Development Cooperation Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs (DANIDA)
European Commission Irish Aid
Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation
Swedish Environmental Protection Agency Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency
UK Aid US Department of State
GOBIERNO DE ESPAÑA
MINISTERIO DE ASUNTOS EXTERIORES Y DE COOPERACIÓN
The Poverty-Environment Initiative (PEI) of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the United Nations Environ-ment Programme (UNEP) is a global UN effort that supports country-led efforts to mainstream poverty-environment linkages into national development planning. The PEI provides financial and technical assistance to government partners to set up institutional and capacity-strengthening programmes and carry out activities to address the particular poverty-environment context.
The PEI is funded by the Governments of Belgium, Denmark, Ireland, Norway, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom, the United States, and by the European Commission and with core funding of UNDP and UNEP.
First edition. Published 2011.© 2011 UNDP-UNEPProduced by the UNDP-UNEP Poverty-Environment Initiative
Directors of Publication: David Smith and George BoumaWriter and Project Coordinator: Victoria E. Luque PanaderoPublication Assistance: Mónica López Conlon Editing, design, and layout: Nita CongressCover photos: PEI Thailand; Sean Sprague, Lineair/Specialist Stock
Printed by: UNON Publishing Services Section, Nairobi, ISO 14001:2004-certified.
All $ referred to in this publication are US$, unless otherwise specified.
PEI Annual Progress Report 2010 and its Executive Summary are available online at www.unpei.org.
This publication may be reproduced in whole or in part and in any form for educational or non-profit purposes without special permission from the copyright holder provided acknowledgement of the source is made. The UNDP-UNEP Poverty-Environment Facility would appreciate receiving a copy of any publication that uses this publication as a source; send to [email protected]. No use of this publication may be made for resale or for any other commercial purpose whatsoever without prior permission in writing from UNDP and UNEP. The designation of geographical entities in this report, and the presentation of the material herein, do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the publisher or the participating organizations concerning the legal status of any country, territory or area, or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.
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PEI AnnuAl ProgrEss rEPort2010
Executive summary
unDP-unEP Poverty-Environment Initiative
Environment for the MDgs
PEI Annual Progress Report 2010: Executive Summary • 1
In 2010, the United Nations Development Programme–United Nations Environment
Programme Poverty-Environment Initiative (UNDP-UNEP PEI) saw the consolidation of its pro-gramme in 18 countries spread across Africa, Asia and the Pacific, Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States, and Latin America and the Caribbean (see map on pages 8 and 9). During 2010, the PEI continued to provide sustained pro-grammatic support to developing countries to strengthen their capacity to respond to concerns of poor and vulnerable groups by integrating crit-ical poverty-environment issues—such as food security or climate vulnerability—into develop-ment policy planning and implementation.
As described in this year’s annual report, our country partners have achieved a number of outcomes that contribute to pro-poor economic growth based on sound environmental manage-ment. While much work remains, this past year has once again demonstrated the added value of a joint UNDP-UNEP programme delivering
support at the country, regional and global levels. The PEI harnesses the respective expertise and comparative advantages of both host agencies, UNDP and UNEP. As we reflect on our experience halfway through the PEI Scale-Up Programme (2008–2012), ample evidence demonstrates that this approach is a generally successful one for poverty-environment mainstreaming at the national—and increasingly, the subnational—level. Our approach has also proved to be a flexible one, selecting, tailoring and combining activities, tactics, methodologies and tools to achieve intended outcomes at different stages in the design or implementation of development planning in the various PEI countries.
How do we operate?
The PEI sets out to help governments change the way they do business. Our work is based on the simple premise that economies depend on environmental natural resources and that poor
The joint UNDP-UNEP PEI in brief
The UNDP-UNEP PEI has its origins in a growing appreciation of how increasing investment in environmental sustainability
can help achieve poverty reduction and more generally improve livelihoods for the poor. The PEI is a catalytic global UN
programme that supports country-led efforts to put in place enabling conditions—policies, instruments, capacities and
behaviours—that support the continued integration of pro-poor environmental sustainability issues into national and sub-
national development planning processes and related implementation plans. We do this by helping key actors understand
the linkages between environmental sustainability and poverty reduction, and to then integrate environmental sustainabil-
ity objectives into national development planning as a priority element of poverty reduction efforts. We work mostly at the
central, sector and subnational government levels, as well as with private sector and civil society institutions in developing
and emerging countries.
• Understanding poverty-environment linkages • Building capacity in pro-poor environmental sustainability
• Long-term support from governments • Environmentally sustainable management of natural resources
• Improved livelihoods • Reduced poverty
Sustained increased investments in pro-poor environmental priorities
Integrate environmental sustainability into national
development plans
Meet national development goals/Millennium
Development Goals
2 • PEI Annual Progress Report 2010: Executive Summary
people are disproportionately dependent on these resources. Our approach is to make the case that more environmentally sustainable natu-ral resource management, rather than detracting from the accomplishment of development objec-tives, actually contributes to the achievement of goals such as poverty reduction and sustained economic growth. Our focus of intervention is therefore on poverty reduction strategies and other planning and budgeting processes.
A key aim of the PEI is to demonstrate to gov-ernments and donors the value of providing the longer-term support needed for a sustained increase in investments and capacity building in pro-poor sustainability to help achieve develop-ment goals. We provide financial and technical assistance to governments to:
• set up analytical, institutional and capacity-strengthening programmes to better integrate pro-poor environmentally sustainable natural resource use into policy and budgets; and
• bring about enduring institutional change by increasing understanding of how environmen-tal sustainability can contribute to the achieve-ment of development goals.
Our work is based on a three-component pro-grammatic approach:
1. Finding the entry points and making the economic case, based on country-specific evi-dence; this sets the stage for mainstreaming
2. Mainstreaming poverty-environment link-ages into policy processes, focusing on inte-grating poverty-environment linkages into an ongoing policy process, such as a poverty reduction strategy paper (PRSP), subnational development plan or sector strategy
3. Meeting the implementation challenge, to ensure the sustainability of PEI efforts by inte-grating poverty-environment linkages into budgeting, implementation and monitoring processes
The PEI operates at the country, regional and global levels and consists of an “umbrella,” or global programme, as set out in the joint UNDP-UNEP programme document results framework (2008–2012).
Our chief partners at the country level are policy and budget decision makers—i.e., the ministries of planning, finance, environment and related sectors, such as agriculture, plus the poverty, governance and environment units of the UNDP Country Offices. The PEI also works with other relevant actors at the national and subnational levels, such as leading practitioner and knowl-edge organizations, civil society organizations and the private sector.
The value of joint programming
The PEI arguably represents the most comprehensive
partnership between UNDP and UNEP, with joint deci-
sion-making, joint programming, joint staffing and a
unique joint UNDP-UNEP financial management arrange-
ment through pooled funds. Vital to its success in this
regard is the PEI’s ability to navigate—or at least adapt
to—frequently divergent agency operating systems. Also
vital is the commitment of PEI staff and their UNDP-UNEP
counterparts and colleagues to joint programming, dem-
onstrated by a flexible, open, team-oriented approach
that looks beyond proprietary considerations.
PEI management structure
Joint PEI Management Board
Donor Steering Group
Technical Advisory Group
Joint government–UN PEI country teams
PEI Africa
PEI AP
PEI ECIS
PEI LAC
Poverty-Environment Facility
AP = Asia and Pacific; ECIS = Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States; LAC = Latin America and the Caribbean.
PEI Annual Progress Report 2010: Executive Summary • 3
The PEI at a glance
PEI programme growth by region/country
0
5
10
15
20
2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 MaliMauritaniaRwandaTanzaniaUganda
BhutanKenyaMalawiMozambique
BangladeshLao PDR
BotswanaBurkina FasoTajikistanThailandUruguay
KyrgyzstanNepal
Africa
Asia & the Paci�c
Latin America & the Caribbean
Europe & the Commonwealth of Independent States
Distribution of PEI support by category
Prepar-atory
phase 11%
Technicalsupport
22% Full programme
67%
Dominican Republic,Guatemala,Timor Leste
Armenia,Burundi, Liberia, Papua New Guinea,the Philippines,Sri Lanka, Viet Nam
Bangladesh, Bhutan, Botswana, Burkina Faso,Kenya, Kyrgyzstan, Lao PDR, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Nepal, Rwanda, Tajikistan, Tanzania, Thailand, Uganda, Uruguay
Programmatic implementation status as per PEI scale-up outcome
Regional programme Focus Timeline
Africa
Asia and the Pacific
Europe and the Common-wealth of Independent States /
Latin America and the Caribbean
Implementation fully consistent with intended outcome. Some outcomes potentially not delivered by December 2012. Unlikely to fully deliver outcomes by December 2012. For
Latin America and the Caribbean, this largely reflects the funding disbursement freeze in effect for the Dominican Republic and Guatemala.
What is our value added?
Full integration of the environment into national economic planning processes so as to improve the livelihoods and security of the poor is a long-term change process, usually taking 10–20 years, including for capacity building. The initial indica-tors of success include ensuring better integra-tion of environmental sustainability into national, sectoral and subnational strategies. Longer-term aims include increasing national budget alloca-tions for pro-poor environmental management and creating the enabling conditions for success-ful poverty reduction. In supporting this pro-cess in selected countries, the PEI is aiming for a broader impact by building up a body of knowl-edge so that principles and operational practices can be widely applied.
PEI country programmes are fully owned by the respective government and are integrated into government processes. Compared with some institutional-strengthening technical assistance programmes, the PEI only operates through exist-ing government processes. The PEI operates by influencing existing policy and decision-making practices, not by establishing new processes in parallel. In many respects, this is both a signifi-cant added value and a source of the challenges facing the PEI in achieving its objective.
An important value added of the PEI continues to be that it is the only programme offering the level of sustained programmatic engagement on pro-poor environmental sustainability main-streaming needed to bring about the desired change in developing and emerging countries. This level of engagement is essential, since such impact means changing national priorities in a cross-government and multisector manner—a challenging task, as reflected by the increasing demand for PEI support.
Another value added of the PEI is that it demon-strates a practical way to operationalize the con-cept of sustainable development in a pro-poor manner in developing countries.
4 • PEI Annual Progress Report 2010: Executive Summary
• The impact on national planning processes (already felt in most of the new scale-up coun-tries) is closely linked to identifying the appropriate entry points and cultivating change agents for sustainable develop-ment. These successes have resulted from a combination of timing our work to planning and budgeting processes and identifying PEI “champions” to influence these.
• The PEI has established critical links with ministries of finance and planning. Also, in most PEI countries, we have played an impor-tant role in strengthening the links between finance and planning ministries on the one hand and environment and—increasingly—sector ministries on the other. Similarly, the PEI has supported other government/develop-ment partner initiatives at the country level to strengthen ties with the ministries of finance and planning.
• The PEI has seen a significant mobilization of core funds from UNDP Country Offices. Approximately 28 percent of total PEI country programme budgets come from this source, which indicates senior management sup-port—and signals increased success in “main-streaming” the PEI within UNDP Country Pro-grammes.
• In addition to UNDP Country Office core funds, the PEI has received a steady increase of fund-ing at the country level. In-country bilateral donors and commitments from government counterparts indicate a keen interest in the PEI. This priority accorded to the programme by our partners, particularly those in-country, to implement the PEI is a positive outcome of our work.
• Within UNDP Country Offices, the PEI plays an important role in bringing the poverty, gov-ernance and environment practice teams together. The PEI also responds to demands for integrating environmental sustainability into development policy; we are increasingly focusing on poverty aspects, as per the recom-mendations of the Norway evaluation of the PEI Africa pilot programme.
Highlights of achievements from the PEI scale-up
Looking back since we began the PEI scale-up, considerable progress and achievements have been made at the country, regional and global levels. Below, we highlight some of the main achievements made thus far (2008–2010) at these three levels. The table at the end of this executive summary plots significant PEI accomplishments against the indicators established for the pro-gramme. Representative and exemplary achieve-ments are briefly presented on pages 6 and 7.
Country level• The contribution of environmental sustainabil-
ity to development has been systematically integrated into poverty reduction strate-gies through poverty-environment linkages and indicators and the application of eco-nomic tools to improve interministerial infor-mation and knowledge sharing.
Woman transporting fodder for rabbits, Rwanda (PEI Rwanda).
PEI Annual Progress Report 2010: Executive Summary • 5
• Governments and UNDP Country Offices are applying the PEI programmatic approach more broadly. They are also seeking out PEI input on a wide range of sustainable devel-opment issues including climate change and, more recently, “green” economy.
• The PEI country programmes are aligned with and, in most cases, integrated into several important UN initiatives. These include UNDP Millennium Development Goals support activities, the integration of economic, scientific and social aspects in UN Development Assistance Frameworks and various UN reform modalities. In this context, UN Resident Coordinator buy-in regarding PEI experience and value added is a major factor in creating an opportunity for country engagement, in line with Delivering as One best practice.
Regional level• Building on the lessons learned and recom-
mendations from previous evaluations, the PEI has streamlined a coherent and adaptive programmatic phased approach to country-led poverty-environment mainstreaming. The PEI approach has proved to be adaptive to the different contexts of the three new regions in which the scale-up has taken place. These regional approaches have in turn allowed the contextual variation of each country to be reflected in regional PEI joint teams provid-ing appropriate policy services to developing countries.
• There is deepening recognition of the PEI as a hub for poverty-environment mainstream-ing and related implementation activities. This is demonstrated by increasing requests for support and establishment of country pro-grammes—and by a growing number of gov-ernments and UNDP Country Offices applying the PEI model more broadly.
• In this context, the PEI Africa team held an Economic Forum workshop in 2010 that pro-vided government partners with the oppor-tunity to consolidate lessons learned on the
application of economic tools and approaches such as economic valuation studies, public environmental expenditure reviews, green budgeting efforts and environmental fiscal measures undertaken throughout the PEI Africa countries. These measures were rec-ognized as a clear value added of the PEI by governments and donors. Selected regional institutions benefited from this in-depth, cross-regional knowledge sharing.
• Strong regional cooperation exists between UNDP and UNEP, particularly in Asia and the Pacific and Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States. In the latter region, joint programming has turned into a poverty-envi-ronment nexus cross-practice success story in bringing together UNDP poverty and environ-ment specialists at the regional and country levels, demonstrating a high level of owner-ship towards the PEI.
• Follow-on programme phases have been fully implemented in several countries in the Africa portfolio, and there are new country programmes in full implementation in Asia and the Pacific, Europe and the Common-wealth of Independent States, and Latin Amer-ica and the Caribbean (see map on pages 8 and 9).
Reforestation in Lao PDR (PEI Lao PDR).
6 • PEI Annual Progress Report 2010: Executive Summary
Government ownership makes a big difference
Bhutan’s former planning commission, the Gross
National Happiness Commission (GNHC), has gotten
behind a number of “outside-the-box” initiatives
in advancing the country’s poverty-environment
mainstreaming agenda, thereby demonstrating
strong government ownership of that agenda and
making it a true poverty-environment champion.
GNHC fostered the establishment of an intera-
gency help desk to assist sectors in mainstream-
ing environmental sustainability. This is an inno-
vative example of how central planning units can
support improved intersectoral coordination and
combine subnational- and national-level exper-
tise. Through 2010, the PEI provided capacity
development support, which helped increase the
engagement of sectors in addressing poverty-
environment linkages. Sectoral involvement in
the development of ongoing projects on the
sustainability of farm roads, rural electrification
and renewable natural resource programmes,
and integrating conservation and development
in managing national parks bear witness to such
positive developments.
Bhutan’s Five-Year Plan for 2008–2013 integrated
environmental sustainability as a cross-cutting
issue. Consequently, all sectors, agencies and
districts are mandated to mainstream environ-
mental sustainability issues into all their policies,
plans, programmes and projects.
The PEI helped GNHC raise funds for Phase II of the
Rural Support Programme in Bhutan, as a spin-off of
our support to the assessment of the programme’s
first phase in 2008/09. As a result, GNHC has secured
$545,000 from the secretariat for interventions
currently under way in eight villages. Also in 2010,
various sectors in Bhutan agreed to put forward
strong justifications through case studies to gener-
ate additional resources from the government; this
was based on findings from PEI-supported studies
that had shown that current saving practices will
compromise the long-term benefits of investing in
environmentally friendly road construction.
In Bhutan, we have seen a gradual shift towards
poverty-environment–related proposals being
submitted for government and donor financing. For
example, the National Statistical Bureau is currently
developing a proposal for “green accounting” to
secure funding through the Danish Ministry of For-
eign Affairs (DANIDA). The PEI will ensure synergies
through the findings from our current support to the
country’s public environment expenditure review.
Economics catalyse action
In 2010, we supported Malawi’s Ministry of Devel-
opment Planning and Cooperation in conducting
an economic analysis of the country’s management
of its natural resources. Its findings highlighted
estimates that 1.88 million people would remain in
poverty over 2005–2015 due to the impact of soil
erosion on agricultural productivity. It also project-
ed an annual loss of 5.3 percent in gross domestic
product due to unsustainable resource manage-
ment. These findings were strategically and broadly
communicated and have stirred much debate in
the media. More importantly, the report and related
PEI activities have been influential in the govern-
ment’s increasing the priority attached to pro-poor
environmental sustainability in its PRSP and sector
plans. We anticipate that this achievement—along
with other PEI outputs, such as the integration of
subchapters on climate change, the environment
and natural resources and social development as
new priority areas in Malawi’s Growth and Develop-
ment Strategy—will contribute to a longer-term
commitment in pro-poor environmental sustain-
ability in Malawi, with a likely impact on budget
allocations.
Better results come from reaching across sectors
In Mauritania, we identified two potential entry
points for the PEI: the country’s formulation of its
PEI Annual Progress Report 2010: Executive Summary • 7
latest PRSP (for 2011–2015) and the Environment
Sector Working Group. The latter brought together
the Ministries of Agriculture, Mines, Economy, Fish-
eries, Water, Environment, Education and Health,
as well as civil society and the private sector. It was
established by the Ministry of Economy in order to
assist in PRSP formulation with a specific focus on
environmental sustainability. Strong leadership by
the working group chair—and PEI champion—the
director of the Ministry of Economy, proved help-
ful in prioritizing poverty-environment actions.
Consequently, poverty-environment linkages were
successfully mainstreamed as a cross-cutting sector
and into the economic growth and good govern-
ance pillars of the new PRSP. The working group
also formulated a strategy for the future develop-
ment of the environmental sector. And, as a result
of a PEI-supported gap analysis assessment, the
Government of Mauritania revised its environmen-
tal framework law to now incorporate poverty-envi-
ronment linkages.
Strong collaborations and coordination improve understanding
The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment Follow-
Up, a subglobal integrated ecosystem assessment
supported by the PEI in three pilot provinces—Nan,
Khon Kaen and Samut Songkram—has proved to
be an effective mechanism for improving gen-
eral understanding in Thailand on the linkages
between ecosystem services and human well-being.
Moreover, the effort has improved longer-term
collaboration through coordination mechanisms
between central government, subnational authori-
ties and non-state actors. Core working teams have
been established; these include the Mae Klong Civil
Society Network, Hak Muang Nan Network and
Nam Phong Network and academic institutions
as an innovative measure to sustain collaboration.
More systematic involvement with the Samut Song-
kram Chamber of Commerce was also achieved in
2010.
As a result of PEI Thailand’s proactive engagement,
the government has taken actions to improve col-
laboration between the national and subnational
levels—specifically, between the Ministries of
Interior and Natural Resources and Environment,
the National Economic and Social Development
Board, and the Office of Public Sector Development
Commission and subnational counterparts and
stakeholders.
Open dialogue and sharing of knowledge make things happen
Since the beginning of our preparatory work in
Uruguay in 2009, the PEI has contributed to the
improved understanding among government
counterparts of the contribution of environmental
sustainability to economic development and well-
being. This is reflected, for example, in the collabo-
ration among government partners in designing
and implementing “making the case” activities,
with technical staff and high-level decision makers
engaging in a sustained exchange on poverty-
environment issues, each participant bringing his
or her own training and sectoral priorities to the
table.
This improved understanding among decision mak-
ers, together with timely provision of capacity build-
ing support among key planning and budgeting
actors, has directly translated into increased govern-
ment allocations to the PEI thematic areas of work.
Specifically, the Ministry of Social Development—
our main implementing partner—has increased
the budgetary allocation for PEI sectors (poverty,
environment and waste management) sixfold. The
budget has been increased from $350,000 for 2010
to $2.15 million for 2014.
The leadership of true PEI champions—such as the
national director for social policy in the Ministry
of Social Development and lead personnel in the
Budget and Planning Agency and the Ministry
of Environment—has been a vital factor in this
achievement.
MaliLeading the PRSP
“greening” process
BotswanaPoverty-environment
mainstreaming to help in planning for sustainable economic diversification
MalawiCross-government
coordination: climate, natural resources and the
environment
MozambiqueImproved sectoral
integration of environmental sustainability through
enhanced planning activities
Nigeria
The PEI around the globe: country programmes and their focus Fully fledged PEI programme
Technical assistance
Preparatory phase
Government/UNDP country office request for support in general mainstreaming and regional lesson learning and referrals
RwandaOperationalize PRSP in
key sectors and mobilize sustainability investments
BurundiUse PEI programmatic
approach for UNDP project on poverty-environment
mainstreaming
UruguayWaste management related to health and income generation
Dominican RepublicIncrease resilience of poor households to
climate-induced shocks
GuatemalaIncrease food security in
the Dry Corridor
ColombiaMauritania
Mainstreaming as a sectoral and cross-
cutting issue; ; continued successful joint MDG-F
programming joint MDG-F programming
Burkina FasoIntegrating poverty-
environment linkages in country economic growth
investment plan
UgandaSubnational poverty-
environment mainstreaming
LiberiaMainstream
environmental sustainability in PRSP implementation and
monitoring
KenyaSector operationalization of poverty-environment
objectives
NigeriaEthiopia
Zambia
LesothoNamibia
TanzaniaAccelerate
implementation of national poverty-
environment objectives in key sectors
TajikistanPro-poor development
planning and budgeting at national and
subnational levels
ArmeniaMainstreaming poverty-
environment linkages in revision of national
development plan
Kosovo
KyrgyzstanSustainable pasture
management for poverty reduction
Mongolia
Sri LankaSupport design and
implementation of UN Development Account
project on mainstreaming environmental sustainability
BhutanGross National
Happiness Commission’s integration of climate and environment in sectoral/local plans and budgets
Papua New GuineaPromote environmentally
sustainable economic growth
BangladeshPlanning Commission’s integration of climate in planning and budgeting
ThailandMinistry of Interior’s inclusion of natural
resource management in provincial planning
NepalPromotion of natural
resource management in decentralized planning
Lao PDRMinistry of Planning
and Investment’s attraction and
management of quality investments
Afghanistan
Timor LesteBuild advocacy for and
capacity in natural resource management to
reduce poverty
PhilippinesUse PEI programmatic
approach for UNDP project on poverty-
environment mainstreaming
Viet NamUse PEI programmatic
approach for UNDP project on poverty-
environment mainstreaming
10 • PEI Annual Progress Report 2010: Executive Summary
• There has been a continuous increase in gov-ernment and UNDP Country Office requests for support, providing strong evidence of progress in the poverty-environment main-streaming agenda. Overall, 37 requests for support have been received so far. Taking into consideration the PEI’s current financial situa-tion, the PEI has responded by:
– establishing or continuing 18 fully fledged country programmes,
– undertaking preparatory phases in 3 countries (this effort is currently on hold because of funding issues),
– providing technical assistance to 7 coun-tries, and
– placing a further 8 countries in the pipe-line for support subject to mobilizing resources.
Global level• An agreement was implemented between
UNDP and UNEP on joint programme man-agement. The PEI’s joint programming model
has facilitated the achievements outlined above and is an innovative precedent entailing fully pooled funding and joint programming arrangements. A number of member states of UNDP’s Executive Board and UNEP’s Governing Council have publicly expressed their support for these joint management arrangements tar-geted at integrated poverty and environment development policy responses.
• The PEI has sustained increased expenditures since the beginning of the scale-up. Total expenditures are estimated at $10.1 million for 2010, bringing total PEI expenditures for the 2002–2010 period (including the PEI Africa pilot phase) to over $38 million.
• The PEI is a priority for the two host organi-zations and is increasingly being integrated into their mainstreaming work. In 2010 the UNDP Poverty Group (Bureau for Development Policy) formally became part of the Joint Man-agement Board to strengthen the poverty alle-viation work of the PEI, and UNEP changed the management arrangements. It now engages two of its divisions, Environmental Policy
A paper company in Khon Kaen Province uses water from the Nam Pong River (PEI Thailand).
PEI Annual Progress Report 2010: Executive Summary • 11
Implementation (lead) and Regional Coopera-tion, in support of the PEI.
• The PEI contributes to the wider UNEP main-streaming agenda by providing informa-tion about its experience so other elements of UNEP can better include PEI mainstreaming lessons in their work. For example, the PEI is engaged with such UNEP subprogrammes as the Green Economy Initiative as well as those involved with ecosystem management and cli-mate change adaptation.
• In 2010, the PEI interacted and collaborated with numerous peer and expert practition-ers and entities on a variety of initiatives. For example, we reconvened the Technical Advi-sory Group, which includes key stakeholders. We also worked closely with the UK Depart-ment for International Development (DFID), the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s Development Assistance Committee (OECD DAC), the Government of Malawi and UNDP Malawi to organize and host the Poverty and Environment Partner-ship’s 15th meeting in Malawi. Presentation of case studies and experiences by new PEI Africa countries led to deeper cooperation with OECD DAC on environmental mainstreaming in the context of aid effectiveness reform.
• The PEI made enhancements to our moni-toring and evaluation system to better reflect reporting from the country level against PEI scale-up global outcomes.
• Knowledge management support to regional and country PEI teams was firmly established, resulting in:
– an improved website and communication networks;
– development and dissemination of guid-ance materials such as primers—them-selves based on the collection of good practices and new lessons—for managing private investments, managing adaptation to climate change and enabling local suc-cess, among others; and
– cross- and interregional experience sharing.
Key challenges arising in 2010
While the design of the scale-up phase has dem-onstrated a variety of programming strengths at the global, regional and country levels, several challenges have also emerged. These include the suspension of disbursements against signed donor commitments as a consequence of the international financial crisis, and vacancies in the Poverty-Environment Facility’s top two senior management positions since April and May 2010, respectively. These circumstances are increasingly affecting the PEI’s ability to deliver in accordance with the PEI scale-up programme document.
Manual water pump being used in Malawi (PEI Malawi).
12 • PEI Annual Progress Report 2010: Executive Summary
Accordingly, our targets and budget for 2011 have been down-scaled to ensure delivery on our commitments to the 18 fully fledged country programmes. Nonetheless, these two factors are having serious consequences during the remain-ing period of implementation for the scale-up in terms of funding planned programmes, which have instead remained in the preparatory phase in 2010, or of funding subsequent phases of country programmes despite the good progress they have made.
An additional challenge is that in some countries it has taken longer than planned to get coun-try programmes developed and approved. On the one hand, taking time is essential to ensur-ing the necessary level of country ownership so that country partners can energetically focus on implementation. However, development and approval of PEI country programmes has been delayed at times due to complex in-coun-try government decision-making processes or to UNDP Country Office administrative delays. Other hold-ups are attributable to factors beyond the PEI’s control, such as the political turmoil in Kyrgyzstan.
During the scale-up, certain programmatic issues have arisen. By considering and addressing these thoughtfully and thoroughly, the PEI’s future effectiveness can be improved.
• Emphasize poverty reduction. The focus on the poverty side of poverty-environment mainstreaming has not always been as explicit as it should be. Therefore, the PEI is working to ensure a stronger emphasis on poverty reduc-tion. The expansion of the PEI Joint Manage-ment Board to include a representative of the UNDP Poverty Group is an important step towards this at the global and regional levels. The PEI is already seeing increased involve-ment of the UNDP poverty practice at the country level, particularly as we begin work in new countries.
• Focus on increasing funding for pro-poor environmental sustainability. The PEI out-comes refer to increasing investment targets and improving financing strategies for pov-erty-environment considerations. However, we acknowledge that a more explicit focus on increasing budget allocations would be
PEI workshop in Oudomxay, Lao PDR (PEI Lao PDR).
PEI Annual Progress Report 2010: Executive Summary • 13
preferable. In any new phase of the PEI, this objective should be reflected.
• Sustain poverty-environment main-streaming capacity at the country level. Capacity building is a long-term process, requiring substantial resources over a 10- to 20-plus-year time-frame. To be taken into account alongside this fact is the reality that, in many developing countries, staff turnover and vacancy rates are very high. The PEI needs to improve its engagement and coordination with in-country donors to mobilize sufficient resources and strongly focus on poverty-envi-ronment mainstreaming capacity develop-ment.
• Ensure full consistency between intended outcomes as envisioned at the PEI pro-gramme level and as implemented at the country level. Outcomes and outputs at the country, regional and global levels as stated In the joint PEI scale-up programme document do not always match the actuality experienced by the PEI country programmes. On occasion, trade-offs have to be made in the interests of ensuring appropriate Integration with exist-ing country processes, priorities and timeta-bles. This is one reason why the PEI monitoring and evaluation framework is being revised—to provide clearer guidance for PEI country design so that trade-offs will not significantly reduce achievement of the intended PEI out-come.
• Use country conditions and partnerships to mainstream the PEI. Engagement levels shift as the work of the PEI becomes more fully integrated into country processes over time. For example, circumstances in certain regions and countries have created opportuni-ties for less or more narrowly focused support to achieve a potentially higher value for the money expended. Such is the case in Nepal, where the PEI is coordinated with the Asian Development Bank, DFID, and the UNDP Coun-try Programme, demonstrating why only lim-ited funds are required to catalyse major policy change.
Thoughts for the future
The PEI scale-up is scheduled to end in 2012. But substantial and varied evidence suggests that there is a need for the PEI to continue to cata-lyse action and inspire practitioners and policy makers. There is much interest, for example, in the PEI approach as a model to be promoted in the Rio+20 context to operationalize the concept of sustainable development at the country level. In this regard, the UNDP Poverty and Environ-ment Nexus 2010 evaluation endorsed the PEI approach and recommended it as a best practice, noting that its wider applicability within UNDP would improve delivery on poverty-environment issues. And the UNEP Governing Council in early 2011 urged UNEP to use the PEI as a model for future collaboration with UNDP and other UN agencies where relevant; this assessment was echoed in the 2011 DFID Multilateral Aid Review.
We continue to receive an increasing number of requests for technical assistance and/or the establishment or continuation of PEI country programmes.
Another welcome development has been the deepening of our working relationship with sev-eral donors on specific initiatives of common interest. For example, Sweden (through the Swedish International Biodiversity Programme and the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency—SwedBio/Sida) and the UNEP Division of Environmental Policy Imple-mentation’s Millennium Assessment Follow-Up programme cooperated in applying the Millen-nium Ecosystem Assessment methodology at the subglobal level in Guatemala, Thailand and Uganda. This effort gives us all an opportunity to
“The joint UNDP-UNEP Poverty-Environment
Initiative is one of the best used examples
of how UN agencies can work positively in
partnership.” —DFID Multilateral Aid Review
2011
14 • PEI Annual Progress Report 2010: Executive Summary
enhance the method’s utility in poverty-environ-ment mainstreaming at the country level.
Looking ahead, we expect to carry out more work with the European Commission on environmen-tal fiscal reform. Also, the Government of Ireland has shown a strong interest in the PEI’s econom-ics work on the costs and benefits of unsustain-able and sustainable natural resource use.
Within our host institutions, the evolution of the UNDP-UNEP Memorandum of Understanding reflects an emphasis on synergy, recognizing the respective capacities of both UNDP and UNEP with respect to pro-poor environmental sustaina-bility mainstreaming, creating a role for the PEI as a source of knowledge, experience and lessons.
The PEI can continue to dialogue with donors about how it can assist the development commu-nity in supporting the pro-poor environmental
sustainability mainstreaming agenda. Part of this dialogue should be focused on what aspects of the current PEI programme should continue past 2012, including its role within the host institu-tions. The findings and recommendations of the mid-term review, to be finalized and presented to PEI stakeholders in 2011, will play a role in this discussion.
In numerous forums, our partners have observed that the lead-up to Rio+20 should benefit from the PEI experience. The PEI’s work in strength-ening environmental governance through the integration of environmental sustainability into development policy and planning for the ben-efit of the poor—as well as our use of economic assessment and valuation tools as green econ-omy building blocks—can help broaden and deepen the perspective of the environment community.
Steering Committee meeting in Mali (PEI Mali).
PEI Annual Progress Report 2010: Executive Summary • 15
Indicator/overview Achievements
1.1 Improved collaboration between environmental agencies, planning/finance agencies and key donors on identifying entry points and key actions for mainstreaming.
Almost all country programmes have, with PEI support, made substantive progress with this indicator; improved collaboration has, in turn, triggered progress and results across the other PEI output indicators.
• Bangladesh: An interministerial steering committee, with support from interdepartmental technical teams, formulated key strategies for mainstreaming poverty-environment-climate issues, with a focus on socio-economic issues and civil society participation.
• Bhutan: An interagency help desk, comprised of members of local government and the Ministry of Agriculture and Forests, provided an innovative example of how central planning units could support inter-sectoral coordination.
• Lao PDR and Nepal: Improved coordination among key government agencies and with donor projects at the national and subnational levels centred on strengthening agricultural investments, multidonor joint financing mechanisms and local government capacity building for rural development.
• Malawi: A cross-sectoral Working Group on Environment and Climate Change, chaired by the Ministry of Planning and supported by the Min-istry of Environment and Natural Resources, was created.
• Mauritania: The Ministry of Economy established an Environment Sec-tor Working Group to help integrate poverty-environment issues in the newest PRSP, particularly in the growth/poverty reduction and capacity development/good governance pillars.
1.2 Improved understanding of governance and capacity issues affecting potential for sustained, country-led poverty-environment mainstreaming
In numerous countries, the PEI supported studies—whether situation analysis, gap analysis, capacity needs assessment or capacity reviews of sectors, plans or processes including strategic environmental assessments—to make progress regarding this indicator.
• Bhutan: Sector reviews of the 10th Five-Year Plan resulted in the devel-opment of poverty-environment mainstreaming capacity development plans.
• Lao PDR: The government established new coordination working teams to support provincial-level strategic planning prioritizing invest-ment decisions based on addressing cross-cutting poverty-environ-ment issues.
• Mali: Objectives and methodologies for the PRSP “greening” process were endorsed, as well as planned strategic environmental assessment studies of key sectors.
• Mauritania: Based on a gap analysis assessment, the country’s en-vironmental framework law was revised and poverty-environment indicators developed.
• Tajikistan: The Ministry of Economic Development and Trade piloted new approaches to participatory and integrated local planning in 14 districts when a situation analysis highlighted uncoordinated plan-ning and budgeting processes.
• Thailand: Findings from a situation analysis led the government to establish core interagency working teams in each PEI pilot province to strengthen coordination with the aim of institutionalizing poverty-environment mainstreaming within existing integrated provincial committees.
• Uruguay: A capacity-strengthening programme for integrating poverty-environment issues in plans and budgets was put in place as a result of a capacity needs assessment.
Table: Highlights of PEI country-level achievements in 2010 The table presents sample accomplishments towards the nine country-level indicators on the results frame-work in the joint scale-up programme document. For a more comprehensive listing, see section 2 of the full PEI Annual Progress Report 2010 (www.unpei.org/PDF/PEI-annualprogress-report2010.pdf ).
16 • PEI Annual Progress Report 2010: Executive Summary
Indicator/overview Achievements
1.3 Improved understanding of contribution of environment to poverty reduction and growth within planning/finance, environment and sector ministries
Through stakeholder workshops, case studies, assessments and policy briefs, the PEI helped increase awareness of pro-poor environmental sustainability and the recognition of its importance as reflected in development plans and strategies. Studies detailing the economic value of environmentally sustainable natural resource management to the achievement of national economic development goals have had a significant impact.
• Bhutan: Improved understanding of the economic contribution of the environment was reflected in various sectors’ engagement in address-ing poverty-environment issues—including in the implementation of projects looking at farm road sustainability, renewable natural resource programmes and the integration of conservation and development in the management of national parks.
• Malawi: Findings from an economic analysis released by the Ministry of Development Planning and Cooperation that estimated an an-nual 5.3 percent loss in gross domestic product due to unsustainable resource management generated considerable debate in the national media and was influential in the government’s increasing the priority attached to environmental sustainability.
• Mali: The government’s commitment to greening Mali’s PRSP reflects a strong understanding and recognition of poverty-environment issues as they relate to sustainable development.
• Mauritania: The cumulative production of 19 strategic studies and policy notes contributed to the Ministry of Environment’s ability to suc-cessfully advocate for the integration of environmental sustainability as a cross-cutting sector in the country’s newest PRSP.
• Nepal: A national stakeholder workshop submitted policy recommen-dations on poverty-environment mainstreaming to the National Plan-ning Commission for inclusion in the next periodic plan.
• Thailand: Ecosystem and human well-being assessments in three pilot provinces have strengthened collaboration among various provincial-level stakeholders and enhanced their understanding of the impor-tance of ecosystem services in sustaining local livelihoods and eco-nomic development.
• Uganda: Radio and TV programmes have raised national awareness of the lessons learned and experiences gained by community organiza-tions in demonstrating poverty-environment linkages in microdevelop-ment projects in five districts.
1.4 Improved representation of environmental actors in key planning processes
Successes ranged from launching new environmental units in key planning authorities to integrating environmental authorities into committees, working groups or processes previously closed to environmental actors.
• Bhutan: Environmental actors have an expanded advisory role with regard to natural resource management in key development planning led by the Gross National Happiness Commission, Bhutan’s planning agency.
• Burkina Faso: An Environment Unit was created within the Ministry of Finance’s Division for Economic Planning. A PEI steering committee is part of the governmental steering committee for land degradation, and environmental sustainability has been integrated into the criteria for project approval.
• Rwanda: Environmental actors have become an integral part of devel-opment planning processes at the national and sectoral levels.
• Tajikistan: The main environmental authority was included on steer-ing committees for national and subnational economic development programmes.
• Uruguay: The director for environment advised public investment pro-cesses through the integration of environmental sustainability in social policies emanating from the Ministry for Social Development.
PEI Annual Progress Report 2010: Executive Summary • 17
Indicator/overview Achievements
1.5 Increased integration of poverty-environment issues in key planning frameworks for poverty reduction, growth and national MDG targets
Most countries integrated sustainability, poverty-environment and climate change issues into various national planning instruments.
• Bhutan, Burkina Faso, Lao PDR, Mozambique, Nepal, Thailand: Environmental sustainability has been integrated as a cross-cutting issue into PRSPs and other key planning documents; this was a major achievement of the PEI in 2010.
• Bangladesh, Botswana, Kenya, Mauritania, Mozambique, Ne-pal, Tanzania: Poverty-environment issues were integrated into the development and implementation of United Nations Development Assistance Frameworks and related plans.
• Bangladesh, Malawi, Mauritania, Tanzania: The PEI successfully contributed to the integration of climate change adaptation issues linked to poverty and environmental management. Adaptation to climate change is an increasingly important area of demand for the PEI, one that attracts growing attention from national counterparts as well as donors.
1.6 Improved institutional capacity for poverty-environment mainstreaming among planning/finance, environment and key sectoral agencies
In 2010, the PEI provided over 40 capacity-building activities as part of our support package to 18 countries; these were focused largely at the subnational level and on fiscal reform as country programmes take on the implementation challenge. Activities were prioritized with government counterparts in association with relevant subnational/regional and academic partners.
• Bhutan: Institutional capacity was strengthened through long-term support for the integration of financing tools for sectors and at the sub-national level on pro-poor environmental sustainability.
• Malawi: PEI capacity-strengthening programmes targeting budget submissions and the development of cross-government guidelines led to the engagement of key government officials in the mainstreaming of poverty-environment issues.
• Mali: Complementary initiatives in institutional strengthening on the application of strategic environmental assessments in relevant sectors and environmental fiscal reform were undertaken to prepare for PRSP greening.
• Nepal: The Administrative Staff College, working with the National Planning Commission, the Ministry of Environment and in-country do-nors, developed a comprehensive long-term package on institutional capacity for effective pro-poor environmental planning and budgeting processes at the national and subnational levels.
• Rwanda: PEI efforts ensured sustained capacity in moving towards financing tools such as environmental fiscal reform measures, public environmental expenditures and budgeting guidelines.
• Thailand: Key government officials were trained in integrated eco-system assessment and use and the application of economic, social and environmental indicators for field monitoring of investments; this enabled informed decision-making on pro-poor private investments in natural resources and strategic actions.
• Uruguay: PEI capacity-building support to the country’s Office for Budget and Planning resulted in the integration of poverty-environment linkages in national development programmes such as the public in-vestment system and the national housing plan.
18 • PEI Annual Progress Report 2010: Executive Summary
Indicator/overview Achievements
1.7 Environmental sustainability mainstreamed into relevant sectoral policies, plans and implementation processes
Particularly noteworthy have been achievements related to agriculture and water resource management—two sectors with very strong linkages to sustainable human development that have received considerable support from the PEI.
• Malawi: In collaboration with the World Bank, poverty-environment indicators were integrated into the Agriculture Sector-Wide Approach Monitoring and Evaluation Framework, and training was conducted in developing adequate baselines and targets.
• Rwanda: A key agricultural sustainability objective was included in the PRSP, leading to a major soil erosion control programme; sector indicators were developed and linked to PRSP economic development objectives.
• Tajikistan: In collaboration with the UK Department for International Development and the German International Development Coopera-tion (GIZ), poverty-environment issues were integrated into the Rural Economic Development Programme and 14 District Development Programmes, District Trust Funds and microfinance services were con-secutively developed.
• Uganda: Sustainable natural resource management and poverty-environment issues were successfully integrated into two village land use plans.
• Uruguay: The Ministry of Social Development redefined the objectives, criteria and scope of its sectoral programme on urban poverty and waste management. Poverty-environment issues have been integrated in the programme.
1.8 Increased macro and sectoral investment targets for longer-term investments to address priority poverty-environment concerns
and1.9 Improved financing strategy to meet investment targets through domestic resource mobilization and harmonized donor support
PEI support aimed at improving capacity for increased domestic resource mobilization, national budget allocations and public expenditure for pro-poor growth achieved good results in 2010.
• Bhutan: The Gross National Happiness Commission, Bhutan’s planning agency, secured $545,000 from the Secretariat of Rural Support Pro-gramme for a second phase of its successful PEI programme.
• Lao PDR: The country’s national investment strategy includes actions to achieve its sustainability goals framework, prioritizing key sustain-able investments for pilot provinces.
• Malawi: The Ministry of Finance developed guidelines for applying the integration of environmental and natural resource management into national budgeting processes so as to achieve increased macrolevel and sectoral investment targets.
• Rwanda: Improved conditions for internal resource allocation and donor support are expected as the government steps up its efforts to reorganize internal resource allocation and the mobilization of donor support for environmental sustainability through the National Fund for Environment and new budgetary guidelines.
• Tanzania: The prime minister issued a directive that local government authorities systematically allocate budgets for local public environmen-tal expenditure reviews.
• Uruguay: The Ministry of Social Development increased the budgetary allocation for PEI sectors (poverty, environment and waste manage-ment) sixfold—from $350,000 in 2010 to $2.15 million in 2014.
The Poverty-Environment Initiative (PEI) of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the United Nations Environ-ment Programme (UNEP) is a global UN effort that supports country-led efforts to mainstream poverty-environment linkages into national development planning. The PEI provides financial and technical assistance to government partners to set up institutional and capacity-strengthening programmes and carry out activities to address the particular poverty-environment context.
The PEI is funded by the Governments of Belgium, Denmark, Ireland, Norway, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom, the United States, and by the European Commission and with core funding of UNDP and UNEP.
First edition. Published 2011.© 2011 UNDP-UNEPProduced by the UNDP-UNEP Poverty-Environment Initiative
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PEI ANNUAL PROGRESS REPORT2010
Executive Summary
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