Context
Cognizant that rain forest destruction is one of the greatest threats to biodiversity in the Amazon, Brazil has engaged in significant efforts to reduce deforestation and degradation.
Over the past few years, the Brazilian Government has developed a series of policies and programmes designed to promote the sustainable exploitation of the country’s socio-biodiversity product chains. These policies take account of socio-environmental factors that are unique to the Amazon region in a bid to generate income for the local population while promoting forest maintenance. Some of the key measures rolled out to date include the National Plan for the Promotion of Socio-Biodiversity Product Chains (PNPSB), the National Plan for Agroecology and Organic Production (Planapo), the National Plan for the Strengthening of Extractive and Riverine Communities and the Bolsa Verde Programme.
However, to date, these activities have still not managed to generate a sufficient impact. The reasons for this are manifold, but a fair share of responsibility can certainly be attributed to coordination difficulties within the different spheres of government.
Consequently, the technical support this project delivers to the Brazilian Ministry of the Environment (MMA) is geared to developing various levels of policy coordination that will facilitate the sustainable exploitation of the Amazon region’s socio-biodiversity product chains. Inputs include the introduction of instruments and indicators for monitoring, analysing and adapting the effective implementation of these policies.
Objective
The project's objective is to support the MMA’s role in coordinating value-added policies designed to promote the sustainable exploitation of socio-biodiversity product chains in the Amazon region.