Mobilising internal finance: how forest and farm producer organisations upscale financial access
Detalles
| Access to finance for rural communities composed of smallholders, family farmers and indigenous peoples is very limited. Smallholder farmers and family farmers account for 90% of the world's farms and are estimated to be responsible for 80% of global food production. The funding gap makes it difficult for these rural communities to act effectively in relation to climate, nature, livelihoods and food security. This research report delves into the critical role that Forest and Agricultural Producer Organizations (OPFHs) play in mobilizing domestic funding to close this gap. By examining case studies from six countries, this report sheds light on how OPFH can effectively leverage domestic resources to provide financial services to their members, ultimately enabling sustainable development. It outlines a set of practical steps that FFPOs follow to establish internal financial mechanisms, such as savings groups and financial cooperatives. These are accessible, trust-based financial mechanisms that meet the diverse needs of members, strengthen solidarity, empower women, increase resilience to climate change, and finance sustainable and productive activities, often on a large scale. |
Recursos relacionados
Global Resources Outlook 2024. Implications for business
During the sixth United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA6), the flagship report of the Global Resources Outlook 2024 (GRO) was released,…
New Green Shoots 2024: Latest trends and innovations in nature finance
With nature and biodiversity declining at an unprecedented rate, and with developments such as the adoption of the Kunming-Montreal Global…
Assessing progress in monitoring and implementing the EU Biodiversity Strategy for 2030
This report presents the current situation and next steps in the development of a monitoring framework for the EU Biodiversity…