A/HRC/54/31
biodiversity finance mechanisms 14 and increasingly the private sector (including large
conservation organizations) 15 and public-private partnerships. International development
finance institutions occupy an intermediary space between public aid and private investment.
They are distinct from aid agencies through their focus on profitable investment and
operations according to market rules but share a common focus on fostering economic growth
and sustainable development. 16 In Africa, development finance plays a critical role in
financing private enterprises and acts as a complement to overseas aid.
14.
The complexity of green finance, as it relates to potential human rights violations, lies
in the fact that it encompasses a variety of financial acts and objectives, including grants,
loans, lucrative investments and speculation. It is often the product of interaction between
multiple actors (States, international organizations, international development finance
institutions and public and private banks), intermediaries (national development agencies or
other national ministries, non-profit organizations and private entities) and the final recipients
of the funding, as well as the interface of the project proponents with local populations. In
addition, green finance can be official and public when loans are issued by States or
international development finance institutions, or fully private (private banking investments,
investments or purchases of carbon credits by private companies, conservation organizations)
and is increasingly the product of public-private partnerships. In the midst of complex and
sometimes undisclosed lines of funding, rights holders, such as Indigenous Peoples, have
found it extremely difficult to challenge projects and hold actors accountable for the human
rights violations they have experienced.
15.
Host States, whether as borrower, co-financer or recipient of development aid, bear
the primary responsibility for establishing appropriate institutional mechanisms and legal
frameworks for protecting the rights of Indigenous Peoples in the development of green
projects, even when international development finance institutions have safeguarding
policies. Where host States do not recognize the status of Indigenous Peoples, or where
national protection mechanisms or legal frameworks are not operational, other funders and
donors will need to take additional precautionary measures to ensure that Indigenous Peoples
are not negatively impacted by projects and ensure robust enforcement of their own
safeguarding policies. In such cases, Indigenous Peoples may have to rely exclusively on the
safeguarding policies of international finance institutions to seek redress.
16.
States regulate the activities of private conservation organizations by requiring
registration, regular reporting and monitoring, and compliance with relevant laws and
regulations. In addition to regulatory oversight, States may also provide funding or other
support to private conservation organizations in the form of grants, tax incentives or other
financial incentives to support conservation efforts. Some countries have adopted national
action plans on business and human rights to assist in the implementation of the Guiding
Principles on Business and Human Rights and ensure that businesses, whether private or
State-owned, respect human rights.17
17.
States are also likely to become buyers of carbon credits in the voluntary market; for
example, Norway, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the United
States of America are part of the Lowering Emissions by Accelerating Forest finance
coalition, a public-private partnership. States are responsible for establishing the rules
defining who the carbon rights holders will be, whether such rights will acknowledge the
forest and land ownership of Indigenous Peoples and how benefit-sharing will be arranged.
18.
International development finance institutions are the financial actors that have
received the most scrutiny for the impact of their projects on human rights, and on those of
Indigenous Peoples in particular. As a result, they developed, early on, internal frameworks
and policies for socially and environmentally responsible investment. However, efforts are
still needed to secure greater participation of Indigenous Peoples in the design of policies and
14
15
16
17
GE.23-13366
The Global Environment Facility.
The World Wildlife Fund, Wildlife Conservation Society, Conservation International Foundation and
Nature Conservancy.
Thomas Dickinson, “Development finance institutions: profitability promoting development”,
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (2019).
Submission by the Indigenous Peoples of Africa Co-ordinating Committee.
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