A review of the Low Carbon Development Strategy – Part 2

Introduction
We continue today with part two of the LCDS which President Jagdeo launched on June 8 and which is out for consultation up to the end of September, the timeline driven mainly by the need that it should be ready for the Copenhagen Conference in December of this year. That is when the world will be meeting to discuss a successor to Kyoto, the environmental treaty. The principle of the LCDS is simple enough. Rich countries, the thinking goes, have been destroying the environment at an alarming rate. And in its efforts to meet the demands of its people and not unusually the greed of illegal loggers, developing countries are unwittingly contributing to the impending crisis by the exploitation of their rainforests and eventual deforestation. Time is running out and there are few easy, inexpensive or quick solutions.
Cutting down the forests accounts for 20% of the world’s emission of greenhouse gases. The world then has an interest not only in halting but in reversing the trend of deforestation. To do so would be less expensive and faster than it would be to transform the world’s economies to make them more eco-friendly. In comes REDD – the acronym for “reduction of emissions from deforestation and degradation.” The basic outlines of REDD are clear. Rich countries will pay poor ones to keep their forests intact. In return, the rich will get credits that they can put towards their emissions-reduction targets under the proposed new climate treaty.

The promise
That on paper is simple and straightforward enough. As the Economist puts it, rainforest countries are being told “lay down your axe and you will get cash.” But it is far less simple than this or what the Government’s Frequently Asked Questions Booklet (FAQ) makes of it. In fact, that booklet along with the propaganda style of the consultations and public information programmes that are taking place to sell the LCDS do a disservice to the case, leaving serious and fundamental issues unaddressed which might not otherwise cause controversy. Which Guyanese would argue against higher and free revenue inflows, the preservation of our forests that help to protect the iconic Kaieteur Falls or, more mundanely, cheaper electricity? And who would oppose the promise of good governance, reduction of corruption, better delivery of education, health, water and housing?

If the LCDS promises holds true and the McKinsey arithmetic is more realistic than it appears, when the “money starts to flow” we will have the same level of public services, all capable of being financed not by taxes but from rich countries. The government will be able to charge a more honest rate of VAT and a reasonable rate of income tax. Our education system will offer many more QCs and Bishops’ and we will be able to afford a more functional and productive university. It must also be a huge incentive for the Guyanese public to support.

Cynicism
Yet the public has not warmed to the idea and even in areas where there are captive audiences, the average attendance to the consultation is, generously, less than 20. Despite the huge and expensive PR campaign the public is not engaging and is at best cynical. There are concerns about what the country has to give in return, the secret commitments the President has made to the world and the secrecy and apparent conflict between what he tells the world and what he says at home. The LCDS assures us that our sovereignty is not at stake, yet the President has committed the country and future governments to cede to the world the stewardship of the country’s entire forest by outsiders. That is according to the same Economist which has on more than one occasion spoken with admiration of Guyana and the President’s initiative. The consultations need to point out that no government can bind its successors and need to ask about any opt-out clauses under REDD. Would we have to pay back any money we receive as one country has been bound to under a bilateral arrangement, and are there going to be non-financial consequences as well?

The public is cynical too that President Jagdeo is already showing signs that his commitment to the environment is not guaranteed and only this week he issued a threat to continue forestry exploitation unless the rich countries put up the money to pay rainforest countries to keep their forests. The cynicism has been fed too by Mr Jagdeo’s fickle and inconsistent loyalty to strategies.

This is not the first strategy that the President has embraced. He effectively abandoned both versions of the National Development Strategy (NDS) when he realised that a debt-write off strategy was more lucrative and then jumped on the Poverty Reduction Strategy with its promise of more donor funds. Next has come the National Competitiveness Strategy that offers substantial funds from the Millennium Challenge Account sponsored and financed by the United States. Would Jagdeo’s successor – from whichever party – be as committed to the LCDS that he is now single-handedly offering? Or as some cynics see it, is the LCDS the case for a third term?

The LCDS and the NDS
Those who have pulled out their NDS to make comparisons with the LCDS are struck at the comparative absence of detail and the narrowness of the LCDS. By the standard of the NDS, the LCDS is a mini-sector strategy, and it is surprising that none of the 3,000 persons who have attended the consultations has asked about NDS 2 which covers the ten years 2001-10. How committed is the ruling party to the LCDS and does it know and agree with the ceding of control of three-quarters of the country to foreign control?

The LCDS seems extremely short on imagination and ignores any incentives to consumers in preference to investors. Why is there no incentive for solar heating or disincentives for those who contribute in no small measure to the huge fuel bill and non-friendly imports? As one colleague said to me, the owners of the Prados and Tundras that are allowed in daily under duty and tax concessions should give him a credit for driving a small vehicle. The LCDS leans to large-scale agriculture without recognising the role of the small operator or the damaging effect of illegal cross-border operators which is likely to worsen as the road to Brazil makes it easier for those operators to come, do and go as they please. With LCDS milk and honey flowing will Guyanese still have to bear one of the highest tax burdens in the world and would the President finally correct the VAT rate to what it should be?

Seeing REDD
A doubling of any country’s annual budget is not a small matter. The economy and the society can be transformed by simply doing nothing. That must be a huge incentive for any government. Not that that is how the government intends to spend the money. Under the strategy the government will set up new institutions in the Office of the President to drive major low-carbon programme priorities and manage and direct the use of the money coming in under REDD. It is of course hardly reassuring that the money will be placed not in some trust or the Consolidated Fund, but under the watchful eyes of the Office of the President which also currently controls the Lotto Funds in breach of the constitution. Since the President’s embrace of a low carbon economy is a new development, which fund did the money come from to pay McKinsey for its dazzling mathematics to show the worth of our forests? REDD on the other hand is premised on good governance, accountability and transparency which have been endangered by Jagdeo’s disregard for the constitution and the law.

Nor is it clear how the international community putting all this money into Guyana will view the two-tier approach of the LCDS, which provides for the forests under Amerindian control to be an opt-in arrangement. Effectively the country is committed to ceding the vast portion of the country to the international community, but not the Amerindian-controlled forests which that community would be at liberty to manage and/or exploit if it so chooses. While they have a historical and cultural interest in the forests’ preservation, if the Amerindians choose not to be part of the LCDS would they be excluded from LCDS funds or would they get the best of both worlds? And how does Jagdeo’s proposal to deal with LCDS funds fit in with Article 77 of the constitution?

The PPP/C government under President Jagdeo has allowed some Asian operators in the forest sector free rein to extract and export forest products under some of the most glaring transfer-pricing arrangements, with minimal returns to Guyana. Yet, the LCDS cannot be a legally acceptable excuse for breaking a binding agreement as the LCDS seems to assume. The same is true in mining which is probably doing as much immediate harm to the Guyana environment as forestry can do.

Image
Internationally Guyana has established quite a leadership role in forestry preservation due to the Iwokrama project, established under President Hoyte, whose foresight in all of this goes unacknowledged. With President Jagdeo’s promise to the world of what amounts to several more Iwokramas, our international image has been enhanced. But image is not enough. Clout is, and that would have come from the combined efforts of the six or eleven countries with rainforests, depending on definition. Brazil’s is infinitely larger than Guyana’s and surely it would have been to our advantage to team up at least with our neighbour and others in the hemisphere. Assuming there are funds for REDD which would be necessarily limited, criteria for entitlement will have to be established and instead of Guyana and Brazil being on the same side, they may be competing for the same funds.

The difficult questions
Nor is the REDD to be taken for granted, and while there is a recognition that rainforest countries should be rewarded for preserving their forests, the how, the how much, who receives and who pays and whether under a multilateral facility through the UN, or by way of bilateral arrangements as Guyana seems to be working towards with Norway, are still to be decided. Many European countries other than Norway have already entered into arrangements with developing countries. There is Plan Vivo under which donors channel money to Mexico, Mozambique and Uganda to protect forests and plant trees. External inspectors verify the results and issue credits which the UN has chosen not to recognise. Combining these into a ‘Kyoto 2’ will not be easy nor will an agreement be helped by reported corruption in the Office of Climate Change in Papua New Guinea.

Who pays and who benefits are also unresolved questions with one side effectively arguing in Guyana’s favour that those who have a good track record of forest management should be rewarded ahead of those who exploited and now want to re-forest. But the ‘who pays’ is even more controversial. China and India, despite their economies growing at a rapid rate and creating emissions in the process, consider themselves as developing countries and argue that they are not really ready to forgo development for the environment. Why not America? they ask, but America’s own recent climate change legislation shows that while preserving the environment is a universal issue, domestic politics dictate what can be agreed and delivered. And is Canada a special case for its vulnerability arising from the melting of the ice? To crown it all, the conference will be taking place in the year of the world’s worst economic crisis since WW 2.

For me the biggest question mark about the LCDS is its failure to consider a Plan B which hopefully is not the threat that President Jagdeo issued a couple of days ago – let’s continue cutting our forests under the prevailing lopsided arrangements with the Malaysian and Chinese operators who just could not give a damn about Guyana. One thing is for sure: the money he hopes to receive under REDD is several times more than the country currently earns from the sector.

Next week we take a break from the LCDS to cover some topical financial issues and return with a concluding part the following week.

A review of the Low Carbon Development Strategy – Part 1

Introduction
To all Guyanese, from Cabinet to Canal # 1, the announcement that the people of Guyana are willing to act in placing our rainforests under “globally-verified forest and other land use governance standards and transparent, accountable deployment of forest payments” must have come as a great surprise, if not a shock. Under what the government calls a Low Carbon Development Strategy (LCDS), the economy will take a new direction in which national development and combating climate change are complementary and not competing objectives. The strategy is premised on Guyana receiving huge annual sums from the international community for preserving its forests, sums in excess of what we now pay in taxes and also in the amounts of debt relief we have received in recent years. If the principle is accepted, not here in Guyana but in Copenhagen in December of this year when the United Nations convenes a conference to decide a replacement for the international treaty on the environment called the Kyoto Protocol, and if the strategy is properly implemented by Guyana, the LCDS can have a transformative effect on the country. It would be like the country discovering oil or gold from a non-exhaustible source, to last in perpetuity – economic nirvana. These are major ifs that have hardly been mentioned in all the exchanges witnessed so far in the public debate in Guyana.

Business Page will review the LCDS and engage in a reasoned assessment of the strategy, its perceived benefits, its practicability, weaknesses and chances of success. I will start by setting out and reproducing extensively from the Office of the President’s LCDS Draft for Consultation and its accompanying glossy Frequently Asked Questions, also described as a ‘Draft for Consultation.’ This will be followed by a discussion of the advantages and benefits to Guyana of the strategy, a critique of it and conclude with this columnist’s own views and recommendations. The series will try to avoid the unquestioning, simplistic and naïve attitude of those who are captivated by romantic notions about our forests or taken in by the consultations and commitments by President Jagdeo. Equally, it will avoid the dismissive reaction of those who decide that the messenger (President Jagdeo) could not in any circumstances deliver a good message. We will consider too whether and what the Plan B is or ought to be if Copenhagen does not accept or undertake to finance the fundamental assumptions and effect of the LCDS.

Background
Guyana is fortunate that it is one of the world’s last remaining rainforests with almost 80% of our territory still in its pristine state. This pleasant situation is the result of a combination of factors including the nature of our forests that does not allow for the extensive felling of trees, the preservation of the forests by our First People, mostly strong forest management by the regulator going back to fifty years and more, and the objection to the practices by some operators that generated the collective abhorrence of Guyanese of the exploitative practices of some of the recent entrants into the forestry sector.

According to the consultation document, Guyana’s pristine forests are its most valuable asset – the majority of its 15 million hectare (58,000 square miles) rainforest being suitable for timber extraction and post-harvest agriculture and estimated to contain significant mineral deposits below its surface. International Consultants, McKinsey & Company, appointed under a contract of which no Guyanese knew until recently, estimates the value of this forest – known as Economic Value to the Nation or EVN – to be the equivalent of an annual payment of US$580 million. According to the Office of the President, generating this EVN, while economically rational for Guyana, would have significant negative consequences for the world. The deforestation that would accompany this development path would reduce the critical environmental services that Guyana’s forests provide to the world – such as bio-diversity, water regulation and carbon sequestration. The draft states that conservative valuations of the Economic Value to the World (EVW) provided by Guyana’s forests suggest that, left standing, they contribute US$40 billion to the global economy each year.

Essentially the LCDS is arguing that since the world benefits by US$40 billion dollars per year from the conservation of our forests, and since to Guyana the annual worth of the forest in economic terms is US$580 million, then the world must pay us that sum. Unfortunately the basis on which the Office of the President has come up with these numbers is only summarised in the consultation draft. A more serious review of those numbers requires those studies being made available to those with the necessary skills to analyse such technical analysis, modelling techniques and econometrics.

Self-interest
But economics is only one of the reasons why Guyana should be willing to play its part in the preservation of its rainforest. Self-interest is another. We are dangerously vulnerable to and conscious of deteriorating and irreversible weather patterns placing us among the high-risk countries threatened by climate change. Much of the population and economic activity in Guyana exist at or below sea-level, and according to the draft, in-land flooding represents a significant and growing risk to investors. Major floods in 2005 were reported to have caused damage equivalent to 60 per cent of GDP.

One of the obvious consequences of climate change which only a handful of eccentrics are still prepared to dispute, is that sea levels will rise and more than likely at a faster rate than had been originally predicted. For example, researchers applying the possible scenarios outlined by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) found that in 2100 sea levels would be 0.5-1.4m above 1990 levels, much greater than the 9-88cm forecast made by the IPCC itself in its Third Assessment Report, published in 2001. That would be devastating to coastlanders who would have to abandon everything and move scores of miles inland (or out).

The discussion draft notes the increasing global recognition that protecting forests is essential to the fight against climate change – forestry causes about 17% of global greenhouse gas emissions. Adding that the movement from recognising the need for action to actual action continues to be too slow, the discussion draft promotes the LCDS as seeking to provide insights on how to stimulate the creation of a low-deforestation, low-carbon, climate-resilient economy.

Epiphany
Even by his own admission President Jagdeo is a new convert to climate change and global warming and it was only as recently as December 2008 that he seems to have recognised the importance of these issues to Guyana. He has moved fast since then. In February 2009, he and the Prime Minister of Norway, Jens Stoltenberg, announced a partnership agreement designed to support a low-carbon strategy that includes employment and investment-creation opportunities in Guyana and sustained efforts to avoid deforestation and forest degradation. The consultation draft refers to a joint statement by the Guyana President and the Norwegian Prime Minister, but that statement has not been released to the public and I could not find it in the website reference in the consultation draft. There hardly seems any compelling reason for that statement not being available on the LCDS website and made available to the public-sector dominated LCDS Steering Committee.

In fact, given the implications for the country of the adoption of the strategy, it would be useful for the several documents referred to in the consultation draft to be made available to the nation. That will contribute enormously to an informed public and meaningful discussion. As we shall see many of the actions to be taken under the strategy would require substantial concessions and valuable incentives which will have to come either from the money received under the international arrangement or from taxation.

The four phases of the LCDS
The proposed LCDS will be introduced in four phases beginning in 2009 and continuing indefinitely. The following are the four phases and the intended Payments to Guyana.

Phase 1 (2009) – No sum indicated but the document refers to interim payments to launch the LCDS and funding for Monitoring, Reporting and Verification (MRV).

Phase 2 (2010 – 2012) – US$60M to US$350M for capacity building, human capital development and the investment required to build a low carbon economy.

Phase 3 (2012 – 2020) – US$350M to US$580M annually for essentially the same purposes in Phase 2 and for payments to avoid deforestation and climate change adaptation.

Phase 4 (2020 and onwards) – Greater than US$580M providing incentives at or above the Economic Value to Guyana.

What the strategy will do
The strategy comes perhaps midway in the National Competitiveness Strategy, promoted by the government as the centrepiece of its medium-term strategy and praised by the private sector for its inclusivity.

The NCS prioritises the modernisation of the four sectors on which our economy has relied for centuries – sugar, rice, forestry, and mining – and identifies five additional sectors with the greatest opportunities for new growth and diversification: nontraditional agriculture, aquaculture, manufacturing, business process outsourcing/information technology, and tourism.

The LCDS has more than just subtle differences with the NCS but these the private sector has so far ignored, at least publicly. Under the LCDS Guyana will:

Invest in strategic low-carbon economic infrastructure, such as a hydro plant at Amaila Falls; improved access to unused, non-forested land; and improved fibre optic bandwidth to facilitate the development of low-carbon business activities.

Nurture investment in high-potential low-carbon sectors, such as fruits and vegetables, aquaculture, and sustainable forestry and wood processing.

Invest in other low-carbon business development opportunities such as business process outsourcing and ecotourism.

Expand access to services and new economic opportunity for indigenous peoples through improved social services (including health and education), low-carbon energy sources, clean water and employment which does not threaten the forest.

Improve services to the broader Guyana citizenry, including improving and expanding job prospects, promoting private sector entrepreneurship, and improving social services with a particular focus on health and education.

Undertakings
To win support for the LCDS, the government is prepared to offer a number of undertakings to enhance operational efficiency, transparency and accountability for the execution of the LCDS. The principal new organisational units and systems include an Office of Climate Change (to coordinate all climate-related activities for the nation), a Low Carbon Strategy Project Management Office (to drive major low-carbon programme priorities), and a Guyana Low-Carbon Finance Authority (to manage forest payments and related investment flows into the country and promote investment efficiency to the benefit of Guyana’s economy). The first two of these will operate within the Office of the President.

And as mentioned in paragraph one, the government says it is prepared to subject the rainforests to globally-verified forest and other land use governance standards and transparent, accountable deployment of forest payments.