The two primary impacts expected from this project are:
Local people in developing countries are benefiting from
sustainable bioenergy development, planned and carried out
in such a way that it minimises negative impacts on local
livelihoods and the environment, and contributes to local income
generation, livelihood improvement and to global climate change
mitigation.
National governments, civil society organisations and
corporations in developing and developed countries having and are using better knowledge, information and tools for designing policies
and programmes for sustainable forest-based bioenergy development.
In addition, capacities of different stakeholders being built at
multiple levels through an ongoing process of research-policy
engagement. At the global level, the capacity of policy makers in
developing and developed countries to develop policies and instruments
for sustainable and equitable bioenergy development based on scientific
evidence being strengthened through strategic inputs into strategic
global fora (e.g. UNFCCC, EU, IPCC).
The capacity of policy makers in developed countries, particularly in
Europe, also being supported through scientific evidence on: (i) the
impacts of blending policies and sustainability criteria, (ii) local
social and ecological impacts, and how technologies and governance
arrangements shape these among their trade and investment partners.
At national and regional levels, an iterative process of research and
policy engagement (with joint analysis and scenario building) over the
course of the project will ensure scientific and policy communities,
civil society, and private sector actors provide inputs into research
design, internalise results and utilise results to plan. Each of these
groups contributes to a social learning process in which the
sharing of experiences and knowledge jointly contribute to a shared
understanding. Facilitated and periodic workshops and dialogues enable stakeholders to take stock of what
they have learnt, to reflect, explore possible future scenarios and take necessary actions.
Stakeholder engagement in the entire cycle of research will lead to
the emergence of a sense of ownership in research results, thereby – with
the help of facilitation and shared learning – ensuring a higher
likelihood of the ownership and application of findings. Through the
project, these stakeholders practice mechanisms for inclusive
processes of decision making, by supporting their efforts to capture and
assess trade-offs associated with diverse policy options and inputs from
diverse stakeholders, and develop socially-informed policies.
Local capacity is being built directly through local consultations and
feedback in the process of implementing research, and indirectly through
the sharing of knowledge products and the shaping of national
institutions and policies on biofuels. In select countries, the capacity
of local governments is also being strengthened through shared learning
and multi-stakeholder workshops, in which they are enhancing their
capacity to account for economic, environmental and social factors in
their planning processes, and gain skills in seeking and accepting input
from the community level. It is hoped that policy engagements at diverse
levels will result in longer term attitudinal and behavioural changes
that will facilitate continuing attention to sustainability concerns,
social impacts and community-level concerns in the future.
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