Ghana has become the third country to sign a landmark
agreement with the World Bank that rewards community efforts to reduce carbon
emissions from deforestation and forest degradation.
Ghana’s five-year Emission Reductions Payment Agreement
(ERPA) with the Forest Carbon Partnership Facility (FCPF) Carbon Fund, which is
administered by the World Bank, unlocks performance-based payments of up to US$50
million for carbon emission reductions from the forest and land use
sectors.
Mozambique and the Democratic Republic of Congo have also
signed ERPAs over the past ten months, with other Carbon Fund countries
expected to sign similar agreements in the next year.
In Ghana, forest degradation and deforestation are driven
primarily by cocoa farm expansion, coupled with logging and a recent increase
in illegal mining.
Working in close partnership with the Forestry
Commission, Cocoa Board, and private sector, Ghana’s program with the FCPF Carbon
Fund seeks to reduce carbon emissions through the promotion of climate-smart
cocoa production.
“The program's two central goals – reducing carbon
emissions in the forestry sector and producing truly sustainable, climate-smart
cocoa beans – make it unique in Africa and the first of its kind in the cocoa
and forest sectors worldwide. This program is helping to secure the future of
Ghana’s forests while enhancing income and livelihood opportunities for farmers
and forest-dependent communities,” said Kwadwo Owusu Afriyie, Chief Executive
of Ghana’s Forestry Commission.
In Ghana’s ERPA, the FCPF Carbon Fund commits to making
initial results-based payments for reductions of 10 million tons of CO2
emissions (up to US$50 million). Ghana’s ERPA also specifies on carbon emission
baselines, price per ton of avoided CO2 emissions, and a
benefit-sharing mechanism that has been prepared based on extensive
consultations with local stakeholders and civil society organizations
throughout the country.
Ghana’s emission reductions program is anchored in the
country’s national strategy for reducing emissions from deforestation and
forest degradation (REDD+), and is well-aligned with relevant national policies
and strategies, including Ghana’s Shared Growth and Development Agenda, the
National Climate Change Policy, the National Forest and Wildlife Policy, the
National Gender Policy, and Ghana’s nationally-determined contributions to the
UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.
Ghana’s emission reductions program area, located in the
south of the country, covers almost 6 million hectares (ha) of the West Africa
Guinean Forest biodiversity hotspot. The wider program area covers 1.2 million
ha of forest reserves and national parks and is home to 12 million people.
An increase in cocoa production has historically meant
more forests are cut to accommodate new cocoa seedlings, but this trend could
be reversed to improve Ghana’s record as one of the highest deforestation rates
in Africa.
Through the program, the government will focus on
selected deforestation hotspot areas and help farmers and communities increase
cocoa production there using climate-smart approaches. More sustainable cocoa
farming will help avoid expansion of cocoa farms into forest lands and secure
more predictable income streams for communities. These combined actions will
help Ghana to meet its national climate commitments under the Paris Agreement.
This work leverages support from other initiatives,
including from World Bank programs focused on forest rehabilitation, social
inclusion, climate-smart agriculture, and sustainable land and water
management.
The program also works closely with the Cocoa and Forests
Initiative, which is an active commitment of top cocoa-producing countries with
leading chocolate and cocoa companies to end deforestation and restore forest
areas, through no further conversion of any forest land for cocoa production.
“It’s exciting to see the
level of stakeholder engagement Ghana has been able to achieve with its
emission reduction program, particularly with the private sector. Some of the
most important cocoa and chocolate companies in the world, including World
Cocoa Foundation members such as Mondelēz International, Olam, Touton and
others, as well as Ghana’s Cocoa Board have committed to participating in the
program,” said Pierre Frank Laporte, World Bank Country Director
for Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone.
More than 30 stakeholder consultations, meetings, and
workshops with over 40 institutions were conducted in the planning, design and
validation of the program. Part of this outreach included developing and
implementing a program-wide Gender Action Plan to sensitize stakeholders
regarding the key role women play in sustainable land use and their right to
benefit equally from results-based payments.
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