PROJECT INFORMATION DOCUMENT (PID) APPRAISAL STAGE Report No.: PIDA2399 Public Disclosure Copy Project Name FIP - DECENTRALIZED FOREST AND WOODLAND MANAGEMENT PROJECT (P143993) Region AFRICA Country Burkina Faso Sector(s) Forestry (60%), General agriculture, fishing and forestry sector (20%), Other Renewable Energy (10%), Public administration- Agricul ture, fishing and forestry (10%) Theme(s) Climate change (40%), Land administration and management (20%), Other environment and natural resources management (20%), Micro, Sma ll and Medium Enterprise support (10%), Other rural development (10%) Lending Instrument Specific Investment Loan Project ID P143993 Borrower(s) Ministry of Economy and Finance Implementing Agency Ministere de l'Environnement et Developpement Durable Environmental Category B-Partial Assessment Date PID Prepared/Updated 21-Nov-2013 Date PID Approved/Disclosed 17-Dec-2013 Estimated Date of Appraisal 31-Oct-2013 Public Disclosure Copy Completion Estimated Date of Board 22-Jan-2014 Approval Decision I. Project Context Country Context Burkina Faso has achieved significant and sustained economic growth over the last decade, but continues to face many challenges. Average economic growth between 2003 and 2008 was over 5 percent per year, one of the highest in West Africa. However, this positive growth has not had a significant impact on poverty reduction or development outcomes. The country’s per capita income of US$430 represents less than half the sub-Saharan average. High population growth rates—3.1 percent, also one of the highest in Africa—are projected to result in a doubling of the population in one generation. The demographic trend accelerates environmental degradation which reinforces the cycle of poverty, especially for rural populations who depend on the natural environment for their livelihoods. Persistent levels of poverty remain a stubborn challenge. Despite political stability, a strong track Page 1 of 9 record of government decentralization, and steady economic growth in recent years, Burkina Faso remains one of the poorest countries in Africa. Nationally, the poverty rate for the country is estimated at 43.9 percent, with the country ranked 181th of 187 countries in the UNDP Human Public Disclosure Copy Development Index (2011). Rural populations remain largely dependent on agriculture and continue to experience higher rates of poverty—50.7 percent of the rural population lives below the poverty line as compared with 23.7 percent in urban areas. Despite favorable public expenditure trends, Burkina Faso is unlikely to meet most of the Millennium Development Goals (MDG), particularly those related to literacy, health and sanitation. Although expenditure in all three sectors has increased, the education, health, water and sanitation sectors remain adversely affected by a marked urban bias combined with regional and, in some cases, gender inequalities. The economy is susceptible to fluctuations in international markets and climate shocks. Burkina Faso’s economy relies heavily on the performance of the cotton sector (23 percent of exports in 2009, 32 percent in 2008) and gold mining (42 percent of exports in 2009 and 53 percent in 2010). Despite the increases observed in gold and cotton exports the economy remains susceptible to fluctuating gold and cotton prices as well as to the impact of climatic conditions. Agriculture is a fundamental source of livelihood for a large portion of the population, representing 40 percent of GDP, and remains highly dependent on variable weather patterns. However, less than 18 per cent of the land in Burkina is cultivable due to poor soil quality and recent droughts and desertification. In addition, the country has experienced deteriorating climatic conditions in recent years. The agricultural campaigns in 2008, 2009 and even 2010 were marked by significant flooding, followed by localized periods of drought which negatively affected the harvest and in turn resulted in an increase in basic food prices nationally. Agriculture (including livestock and agro-processing) remains the most obvious source of growth and poverty reduction in Burkina Faso. Between 2001 and 2008, while growth in agriculture exceeded the national average, productivity remained stagnant. With the exception of the cotton sector, agriculture in Burkina Faso is characterized by widespread subsistence farming, limited Public Disclosure Copy access of producers to both internal and external markets, and minimal involvement of agribusinesses. Rural agriculture development has traditionally relied upon unsustainable expansion of land area for cultivation (at a rate of 3 percent per year). In parallel, silvo-pastoral and agroforestry systems rely on well-functioning forest ecosystems for their health, productivity and existence. Local rural populations depend heavily upon the country’s steadily depleting soil, water and vegetation resources. Situated in the Sahel-Sahara region, Burkina Faso is particularly affected by soil erosion due to wind and water, loss of soil nutrients and bush fires. It is estimated that 34 percent of the territory has deteriorated as a result of anthropogenic factors, continuing at a rate of 105,000 to 250 000 hectares each year, while 74 percent of arid and semi-arid areas are affected by desertification or land degradation. Deforestation rate estimates range from about 0.2 percent per year to 1.5 percent per year. Deforestation is mainly caused by expansion of agricultural land, as well as grazing and over exploitation of forest resources (timber and non-timber products). The network of protected areas with endemic flora and fauna, covering about 14 percent of the territory, is also under pressure. Some areas, such as the PONASI ecosystem, seem to be facing pressure at a much faster rate than elsewhere (overgrazing, agribusiness); these protected areas are used for different purposes such as hunting areas and game ranch, national parks, and ecological corridors). Local populations are unequipped to deal with these climatic changes and, as demonstrated during the 2007 droughts and the 2009 floods, this has led to devastating damage and loss of life. Given Page 2 of 9 that scientists have observed a rapid increase in the occurrence of severe weather and erratic climatic conditions, adaptation to climate change will be an increasing priority. Public Disclosure Copy Sectoral and institutional Context Sustainable management of natural resources is a cornerstone of the national plan to accelerate growth and sustain development. After a comprehensive assessment of the ten-year implementation of the Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSP), Burkina Faso prepared a Strategy for Accelerated Growth and Sustainable Development (SCADD) through a participatory process that engaged a wide variety of stakeholders across the country. The strategy envisions the sustainable management of natural resources as a cornerstone of agricultural development, particularly through an increased pace of reforestation, exploitation of forest wealth and protection of wildlife resources. The National Rural Sector Program (PNSR) provides a cohesive framework for development objectives in rural areas to strengthen coherence and coordination among sectoral interventions in rural development. The PNSR specifically seeks to integrate livestock management, agriculture development and environment policies into a multi-sector programmatic approach to development. The PNSR is now the coordinating framework for programming and implementing the interventions in rural areas in Burkina Faso and therefore constitutes a clear institutional framework for the proposed interventions of this project. Forest resources are critical for livelihoods and the economy. Forest-based economic activities, including making charcoal and selling forest products make up and import part of some rural households—over 25 percent in some cases—as well as contributing 5.6 percent of GDP. In addition, forests and woodlands provide important environmental and social services in relation to soil fertility, erosion control, watershed protection, and biological diversity (animals for pollen/ seeds dissemination, etc.). Such services lead to indirect economic benefits and increase climate resilience at the landscape level. Forests and woodlands provide additional non-economic benefits to local populations (medicinal plants, hunting, fruits/mushrooms, etc) that can alleviate the impacts Public Disclosure Copy of drought and other climate related challenges. In particular, many tree species (shea tree, nere, gum arabic,…) that provide non timber products are traditionally preserved and exploited mainly by women, which underscores the important role that women have to play in any strategy aiming at preserving forest resources. Trends show that the most widespread forest areas face the greatest pressures and also hold significant potential for carbon sequestration through avoided degradation or restoration. Under the given definition nearly 12.9 million hectares (ha) are considered forest in Burkina Faso, roughly 43 percent of the territory, based on forest surveys from 2002. Nearly two-thirds ( ⅔) of this forest cover—over eight (8) million hectares—is shrubby and woody savanna, while only four (4) million hectares of the national territory are designated as “classified forest”—registered forests that are under State management. While the results from the IFN survey in 2012/2013 are being finalized, trends observed between 1992 and 2002, the years of two past forest inventories, provide an indication of trends in deforestation and especially forest degradation. Overall deforestation was estimated at approximately 107,000 ha/year (0.83 percent) and although it is difficult to assess, degradation was estimated to be at least 0.5 million ha/year. Over 70 percent of land cover change observed between ’92 and ’02 occurred in shrub savanna, primarily as a result of agricultural activities that led to over-harvesting and/or fallow areas that were not allowed enough time to regenerate. The result was land conversion and degradation to a point where land no longer naturally regenerated shrubs and trees that act as a more robust carbon sink. Page 3 of 9 In addition to local development benefits, multi-use landscapes hold significant potential as carbon sinks. The Forestry Code of Burkina Faso defines forests as areas occupied by trees and shrubs, Public Disclosure Copy except those dedicated to or resulting from agricultural activities. Reference to forests and woodlands includes a variety of land tenure units such as wooded savanna and gallery forests. The first unique forest inventory was conducted in 1980. The results of a new inventory of forest cover and carbon content carried out in 2013(IFN) by the government, with the support of the Government of Luxembourg, are being finalized and will provide a more accurate and up-to-date picture of the country’s current forest cover. Previous reforestation and anti-desertification campaigns have demonstrated that mixed-use forests and woodlands hold significant potential as a carbon sink in Burkina Faso (e.g., planted areas almost tripled between 1999 and 2007). Considering the potential of multi-use dryland landscapes to sequester carbon is in line with the theory of change that the FIP is promoting; shifting away from a narrow perspective on the link between sustainable land management practices and improving rural poverty to a more dynamic and integral vision of sustainably managing landscapes to increase the condition of the poor and combat climate change. This dynamic vision of dryland landscapes provides a greater opportunity for upscaling and expanding successful practices and shifting the country towards a “tipping point” of reduced GHG emissions. Carbon sequestration potential below ground as well as above ground. In Burkina Faso, soil organic carbon comprises a significant portion of the overall carbon sequestration potential of the vast areas of savanna and drylands. Research in similar dryland ecosystems indicates that carbon storage in litter and soils of dry forests can add up to nearly 1/3 of total system carbon (Vagen 2005). The experiences conducted in the Cerrado region in Brazil and the Miombo woodlands of Southern Africa have demonstrated that a landscape approach to natural resources management can significantly enhance the carbon sequestration potential of degraded rangelands and woodlands through integration of practices that include soil organic carbon. Carbon stock enhancement in the drylands and savannas of Burkina Faso will contribute further to climate change through financing Public Disclosure Copy community driven development activities that reinforce local development and GHG sequestration. There is a need to address direct and indirect drivers of forest and woodland degradation simultaneously. The continued loss of the country's forests results from a number of causes that can be classified as either direct or indirect drivers. Although these two categories are described separately, they are strongly interrelated and can only be effectively addressed through an integrated approach within the context of a broader development and climate change agenda that simultaneously addresses the direct (mostly at local level) and at the same time the indirect (at local and central level) drivers of deforestation. Direct drivers of deforestation and forest degradation correspond essentially to different types of encroachment on forested areas: • Livestock activities: cattle, goat and sheep husbandry; • Agricultural expansion: mostly cotton production and food production (subsistence agriculture combined with population growth); • Overharvesting of firewood due to increasing demand; • Overharvesting of non-timber forest products; • Bush fires; • Gold mining. Page 4 of 9 Indirect drivers of deforestation and forest degradation result from a complex interplay between socio-economic, political, technological, and cultural factors, which leads to an environment conducive to the emergence of one or more direct drivers. Indirect drivers are related to: Public Disclosure Copy • Economic and demographic factors: growth of impoverished rural populations who depend on forestry products for survival; • Land management: delays in implementing land tenure reforms, insufficient tools for sustainable land use planning and management, insufficient enforcement; Technical capacities and knowledge: lack of capitalizing on good forestry and sustainable land management practices, weak control, lack of resource knowledge; • Weak stakeholder capacity: at decentralized and central levels • Governance: difficulties in enforcing laws and regulations relating to the forestry sector; and • Weak access to markets which makes it difficult for farmers to intensify production and pushes them to clear forest areas for cultivation. The Forest Investment Program (FIP) of the Climate Investment Funds (CIF) and Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD+) program fill a critical gap in aligning forestry, climate change and national development plans. Burkina Faso is one the eight pilot countries currently eligible to benefit from the FIP, a multi-donor trust fund aiming to support developing countries’ efforts to reduce emissions from deforestation and forest degradation by providing financing for investments. Through the process of developing an Investment Plan for the FIP, Burkina Faso has started to assess the underlying causes of deforestation and forest degradation—a process also consistent with the approach promoted by the Forest Carbon Partnership Facility (FCPF)—and has defined the following pillars as the main axes for the national REDD+ strategy: • Land use planning (targeting indirect drivers)—Land use planning in order to facilitate the most appropriate land use for each of the many different activities that take place in a rural setting Public Disclosure Copy (farming, livestock, forestry, agro-silvo-pastoral activities, mining, etc.); • Security of land tenure (targeting indirect drivers)—re-enforcement of recent laws and regulations regarding the security of land tenure to provide an enabling environment for investments in improved land and forest management; • Management of agro-silvo-pastoral systems (targeting direct drivers)—for the sustainable management of crop farming, livestock farming, and forestry within a sustainable land-use management system; • Development of economic opportunities of non-timber forest products(targeting direct drivers), especially targeting women; and, • Knowledge sharing and capacity-building (targeting indirect drivers)—for relevant ministries, the private sector, civil society, and educational and research institutions, harmonization of policies, and promoting good governance of natural resources, and forests in particular. The FIP in Burkina Faso will support national REDD+-efforts following the strategic pillars mentioned above to address both the direct and indirect causes of deforestation and forest degradation as part of a broader climate change agenda. For that purpose, FIP resources will support two complementary projects that reinforce one another yet avoid duplication of effort: 1) this World Bank-executed project—Decentralized Forest and Woodland Management Project (PGDFEB) as well as; 2) the African Development Bank executed–Participatory Management of State Forests Project (PGFC/REDD+). This combined programmatic approach, as outlined in the Page 5 of 9 FIP Investment Plan, will help overcome barriers that have hindered past efforts to promote integrated natural resource management as it will allow the FIP program in Burkina Faso to invest at the same time (i) in institutional capacity and forest governance, (ii) in forest mitigation measures Public Disclosure Copy and (iii) in activities outside the forest sector necessary to reduce the pressure on forests. FIP provides funding that can help move towards sustainable forest and land management at the landscape level and enable the country to address many challenges with implementing a national REDD+ strategy. As outlined in the FIP investment Plan, FIP funding will allow Burkina Faso to move beyond pilot projects to implementation of a decentralized forest and woodland management program at a scale that has not yet been possible. The government’s commitment to the decentralization process ensures a process of sustainability, yet limited resources are spread among competing development priorities. In conjunction with the project implemented by the African Development Bank FIP financing provides the resources for natural resources management at the village level that could help tip the balance towards broad uptake of sustainable forest and land management practices that will reduce pressures on forest resources across targeted landscapes. The project will include activities consistent with the recommendations of the REDD+ readiness process through the implementation of the R-PP. FIP funding will allow Burkina Faso to engage in national level consultations that will ensure that interests and concerns of all relevant stakeholders are considered in any eventual REDD+ and/or climate change programs. This innovative approach has helped Burkina Faso leverage additional financial resources, in particular from European Union. As a result, the project is fully blended with EU funding that supports climate change mitigation through the promotion of sustainable development and sustainable forest resources management. The project will also build synergies with other development partners that have invested in climate change and forestry such as Luxembourg, Sweden and UNDP (see annex 9 for a list of on-going initiatives related to this sector). In complement to this project, the FIP Dedicated Grant Mechanism (DGM) will support Indigenous Public Disclosure Copy Peoples and Local Communities to become effective partners in the ongoing dialog about climate change and REDD+. The DGM is a program designed to be directly managed by a national committee consisting of representatives of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities in FIP pilot countries. The DGM program in Burkina Faso i s supported by a US$4.5 million (indicative) grant. The DGM will support Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities in various areas that increase their capacity to be active partners in national and international dialogues on REDD+, deforestation, forest degradation, climate change and other phenomena that threaten forest ecosystems. The DGM will be designed and implemented in a way that is consistent with and complementary to FIP investments. The World Bank has been an ongoing partner in forest resource management and rural development in Burkina Faso. The World Bank and Burkina Faso have built a strong partnership on issues related to the forest sector, rural development and decentralization. The PGDFEB will build on experience gained from the Community-Based Rural Development Project (PNGT) within the framework of the National Program for Decentralized Rural Development, which covers all rural regions of Burkina Faso and is currently launching a third phase. Activities are concentrated in 3000 villages in 26 provinces, comprising about one-third of the national territory. Most PNGT funds are transferred to village communities through a Local Investment Fund (FIL), for community investments, following a participatory approach, with small projects implemented and managed by local communities. The Decentralized Forest and Woodland Management Project will Page 6 of 9 build on the extended partnership between the World Bank and Burkina Faso in supporting the decentralization process with a concerted focus on strengthening land and forest management in the targeted intervention sites of this project. Public Disclosure Copy II. Proposed Development Objectives The project objective is to promote national development policies as well as to support the definition and implementation of community-based natural resource management processes in 32, mostly rural, communes in a way that strengthen sustainable local development practices and contributes to reducing GHG emissions from deforestation and woodland degradation. Specifically, this project aims to: (i) support climate change governance, particularly through the design of a national REDD+ strategy that is applied to institutional and legislative frameworks in different sectors and results in concrete investments in targeted zones; (ii) improve land use planning and economic activities around forest and woodland resources, with particular emphasis on the participation of women, who are the main actors in the exploitation of non-timber forest resources; and (iii) establish guidance, best practices and a structure of knowledge management around sustainable natural resource management as well as Climate Change mitigation and adaptation particularly through GHG emissions reduction. III. Project Description Component Name Component 1: Mainstreaming Climate Change and REDD+ into Sectoral Frameworks and Strategies Comments (optional) Component Name Component 2: Participatory Planning and Management of Forests and Woodlands Public Disclosure Copy Comments (optional) Component Name Component 3: Coordination and Information and Knowledge Sharing Comments (optional) IV. Financing (in USD Million) Total Project Cost: 26.26 Total Bank Financing: 0.00 Financing Gap: 0.00 For Loans/Credits/Others Amount Borrower 0.00 Strategic Climate Fund Grant 16.50 EC European Commission 9.76 Total 26.26 Page 7 of 9 V. Implementation Public Disclosure Copy VI. Safeguard Policies (including public consultation) Safeguard Policies Triggered by the Project Yes No Environmental Assessment OP/BP 4.01 ✖ Natural Habitats OP/BP 4.04 ✖ Forests OP/BP 4.36 ✖ Pest Management OP 4.09 ✖ Physical Cultural Resources OP/BP 4.11 ✖ Indigenous Peoples OP/BP 4.10 ✖ Involuntary Resettlement OP/BP 4.12 ✖ Safety of Dams OP/BP 4.37 ✖ Projects on International Waterways OP/BP 7.50 ✖ Projects in Disputed Areas OP/BP 7.60 ✖ Comments (optional) VII. Contact point World Bank Contact: Hocine Chalal Title: Lead Environmental Specialist Tel: 458-2153 Email: hchalal@worldbank.org Borrower/Client/Recipient Public Disclosure Copy Name: Ministry of Economy and Finance Contact: Mr. Lucien Marie Noel Bembamba Title: Minister Tel: 0022650312550 Email: dg.coop@finances.gov.bf Implementing Agencies Name: Ministere de l'Environnement et Developpement Durable Contact: Urbain Belemsobgo Title: FIP Program Coordinator Tel: 22670247804 Email: ubelemsobgo@yahoo.fr Page 8 of 9 VIII. For more information contact: The InfoShop The World Bank Public Disclosure Copy 1818 H Street, NW Washington, D.C. 20433 Telephone: (202) 458-4500 Fax: (202) 522-1500 Web: http://www.worldbank.org/infoshop Public Disclosure Copy Page 9 of 9