Press Release

Embargoed until 00:00 UTC December 19, 2017

Bonn, Germany

IUCN Netherlands and EcoAgriculture Partners debut the Landscape Investment and Finance Toolkit (LIFT)

Toolkit uses participatory processdesigned to help landscapes connect their plans to achieve the SDGs with the finance and investment they need.

Finance plays a critical role in implementing the diverse investments required for a sustainable landscape. There has been a considerable uptick in analysis, programs and investors designed to support sustainable land management. However, most of these investors, innovative as they are, are not operating with landscape context or goals in mind. They largely pursue models that focus on a single environmental objective within a landscape (e.g. forest restoration or climate change mitigation) or a specific supply chain. They are not necessarily seeking to balance multiple agricultural, livelihoods and conservation objectives within an integrated landscape management framework. Furthermore, there are few efforts to coordinate finance within landscapes—to address inter-dependencies, conflicts, connectivity, or synergies needed to achieve landscape ambitions at scale.

The Landscape Investment and Finance Toolkit (LIFT)was created to help landscape partnerships, project developers and potential investors overcome this complexity so that they can all benefit from successful integrated landscape investments.

“There is a growing interest to invest in landscapes, but what to invest in, where and with whom?” says Omer van Renterghem, Thematic Expert Land, water & ecosystems with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands.“Tools are needed that can help link landscape partnerships withinvestors and LIFT is a tool that can help fill the gap between landscape implementing organizations and investors. At theMinistry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands we look forward to implementing this tool. We hope it will attract investments to realize SDGs at landscape level.”

Integrated landscape investments generate economic, environmental and social benefits; reflect spatial planning; and aim to link public, civic and private finance, but can be more complicated to finance than traditional investments. They rely on landscape stakeholders and investors working collaboratively. Organizing financing for integrated landscape investments requires different strategies and tools than investment in a single supply chain, commodity or asset. At the core of these investments is strategic coordination among landscape stakeholders that produces a landscape action plan that point the way towards integrated investment ideas. If a landscape partnership is robust, investors can benefit financially from being linked to the broader landscape investment strategy—through increased returns, reduced costs and/or reduced risks, and greater scope for meeting social and environmental objectives.

“In order for investments to be realised in inclusive, multi-stakeholder landscape initiatives, we have to help bring the financial sector and landscape actors more closely together,” says Jan William den Besten, Senior Expert Climate and Ecosystems, IUCN Netherlands, and a co-creator of LIFT.“The Landscape Investment and Finance Tool is designed to do that. We hope LIFT helps elevate landscape initiatives by enhancing financial expertise among their actors and linking public and private investors in order to foster inclusive, sustainable growth and the protection of ecosystems.”

"LIFT provides comprehensive guidance to landscape partnerships which are working to attract investment that is supportive of their vision. The sequence exercise and worksheets are designed to demystify the often-intimidating world of finance,” says Seth Shames, Director, Policy and Markets, EcoAgriculture Partners, and a co-creator of the toolkit.

Towards this end, LIFT consists of three Stages, conducted sequentially.

Stage 1: Assess financing needs of priority investments in the landscape

Stage 2: Scope potential sources of funding for landscape investments

Stage 3: Devise a finance mobilization strategy.

Each of the Stages is organized into a series of discrete Steps which guide the users through the LIFT process. The Steps require the users to undertake a range of activities including creating working groups, organizing workshops, developing business plans, engaging with potential investors, and creating a landscape finance plan. LIFT provides guidance for completing each of these Steps.

In August, the first testing of the tool began in the Cagayan de Oro, Philippines. A second trial of LIFT has now begun in partnership with Solidaridad on the Northern Caribbean Coast of Honduras. LIFT is by no means a finished product. Its developersexpect that early adopters will continue to provide feedback so it can be continually improved. Meanwhile they are recruiting partners for further detailed testing, with a team of software developers, designers, and financial experts ready to improve usability and effectiveness for the tool around the world. They are currently seeking financial partners to underwrite this effort.

For more information and to download the toolkit, visit liftkit.info.

Join us for Liftoff –Interview Opportunity

December 20th, 2017 – World Conference Centre, Bonn – Inclusive Landscapes Finance Pavilion

Attracting Investment to your Landscape: Introducing the Landscape Investment and Finance Toolkit

This session will bring together investors and landscape leaders to learn how the Landscapes Investment and Finance Toolkit (LIFT,liftkit.info) can help them to break ground in finding and engineering finance for landscape Initiatives. After Omer van Renterghem of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands introduces the tool, the examples of the two initial pilot trials, in Philippines and Honduras, will be presented. IUCN and Solidaridad are committed to test and further refine the tool in practice, and we are excited about the prospect of other partners for continued development. Come and learn more!

Speakers:

Omer van Renterghem, Theme expert Land, water and ecosystems at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Netherlands
Seth Shames, Director of Policy and Markets, EcoAgriculture Partners
Gerhard Mulder, Senior Expert Green Finance, IUCN NL
MichaelynBaur, Managing Director, Solidaridad Central America, Mexico and the Caribbean

For more information, please contact:

Louis Wertz, EcoAgriculture Partners ; or Jan Willem den Besten, IUCN Netherlands,

About EcoAgriculture Partners

EcoAgriculture Partners is a pioneering non-profit organization that advances the practice of integrated landscape management and the policies to support it. By facilitating shared leadership and collaborative decision-making by all stakeholders in a landscape, EcoAgriculture Partners empowers agricultural communities to manage their lands to enhance livelihoods, conserve biodiversity and ecosystem services, and sustainably produce crops, livestock, fish and fibre. From critical analysis of policies, markets, and land-use practices, EcoAgriculture generates innovative research, tools and methodologies that help landscape managers and policymakers create and sustain integrated landscapes worldwide. The organization serves as the Secretariat for the Global Landscapes for People, Food and Nature (LPFN) initiative. Visit ecoagriculture.org for more information.

About IUCN Netherlands

IUCN NL is the Dutch national committee of the International Union for Conservation of Nature, the world’s largest and most diverse environmental network. IUCN harnesses the experience, resources and reach of its 1,300 member organisations, uniquely composed of both government, civil society organisations and business, and the input of some 15,000 experts. IUCN is the global authority on the status of the natural world and the measures needed to safeguard it.

From our Amsterdam office, the staff behindIUCN NLworksonimplementing solutions to environmental challenges. Ourmissionis to influence, encourage and assist societies throughout the world to conserve the integrity and diversity of nature and to ensure that any use of natural resources is equitable and ecologically sustainable.

Visit to learn more about IUCN NL’s work.