Expected result 1: 50 civil society groups (CSOs), 90 domestic timber producer groups and traders, 30 media houses and 25 private timber companies are effectively engaged in national FLEGT/VPA negotiation and implementation processes. Below are the activities implemented to achieve result 1.
Activity 1.1: Training for industry, timber trade associations, media and NGOs to support SMEs in complying with VPA Timber Legality Assurance System requirements
A range of forest management stakeholders including ClientEarth, the Ghana Timber Association (GTA), Domestic Lumber Traders Association (DOLTA), Timber Industry Development Division (TIDD), National Editors Forum-Ghana, the Standardised Independent Observation System (SYNOIE-Cameroon) and Réseau Recherches Actions Concertées Pygmées (RACOPY, the civil society platform that protects and defends indigenous rights in Cameroon) collaborated to build the capacity of domestic timber producers and and Cote d’Ivoire. Topics included: forest law, illegal logging, Chain of Custody (CoC) procedures, documentation, Legality Assurance System (LAS) requirements, Legality matrix, and timber traceability processes
GHANA
CAMEROON
DRC
Côte d’Ivoire
Activity 1.2: Support development, standardisation and testing of monitoring protocols for forest governance
Existing monitoring systems and protocols for Ghana have been reviewed, and CSO training workshops, stakeholder consultations, and national stakeholder workshops facilitated. A Social Responsibility Agreement (SRA) checklist and an Illegality Grid have been developed in consultation with the Ghana government, the private sector and civil society. In the DRC, the project supported the Resource Extraction Monitoring’s (REM) independent observation process, and a workshop that facilitated dialogue towards implementation of the civil society strategy on independent forest monitoring.
Activity 1.3: Support the functioning of multi-stakeholder consultations within FLEGT/VPA negotiation and implementation across governments, civil society organisations and industry
FLEGT Communication Contact Group Meetings were organised in Ghana with CSOs including Civic Response, Tropenbos International Ghana (TBI-Ghana), Working Group on Forest Certification, Nature and Development Foundation (NDF) and the International Centre for Enterprise and Sustainable Development (ICED). Meetings with the media discussed forest governance, outstanding FLEGT policy issues, implementation challenges, and the media’s role in ensuring information on good forest governance and FLEGT/VPA is shared widely. In Côte d’Ivoire, CSOs met with the Technical Negotiation Committee to learn about the VPA process and discuss integration of civil society concerns into the Forestry Code regulations and the legality matrix. In DRC, a meeting on the FLEGT VPA discussed the role of CSOs in the FLEGT.
Activity 1.4: Deliver training for community and civil society-led Independent Monitoring of Forest Law Enforcement and Governance (IM-FLEG) to nest into national monitoring systems for VPA and REDD+
In DRC, CSOs were trained in independent monitoring (IM) and legal compliance audits. The participants also used the legality matrix indicators for industrial logging to conduct an analysis and verification of legal compliance. In Cameroon, the project partnered with the Independent External Observation Project 2 (EO-2 FLEGT) to train CSOs and forest community groups in independent forest monitoring and the National External Independent Observation System. Technical support to the “Congo Basin VPA Implementation” project was also given. In Ghana, civil society and community groups were trained in independent monitoring of forest governance, including forest sector legislation, illegal activities, and reporting unusual observations from the field.
Activity 1.5: Build advocacy and interest-based negotiation capacity among small and medium-size operators and traders, forest dependent communities and NGOs
Training workshops were facilitated for timber industry stakeholders and civil society using modules such as the SRA checklist and forest legality grids to improve advocacy towards the timely and transparent implementation of FLEGT VPAs. Communities and commercial operators were trained in advocacy strategies, mobilisation, and Interest Based Negotiations (IBN). The skills are intended for use towards: policy change in the forest sectors, SRA negotiation and implementation, good forest governance, and negotiation and decision making in the VPA process. In DRC, copies of real and dubious contracts signed between contractors and the Congolese government were shared, giving CSOs and communities an idea of how to identify fake contracts.
Activities for expected result 2 towards sharing information and experiences on forest governance to strengthen FLEGT VPA negotiation and implementation
Activities for expected result 3 towards improved public awareness and transparency in forest sector governance
Activities for expected result 4 towards increased visibility of and demand for legal timber by timber producers, traders and consumers