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impacts of climate change and requests that this assessment be undertaken with the
full and effective participation of indigenous peoples around the world.
35. The Permanent Forum urges indigenous academics, scientists and traditional
knowledge holders to organize their own processes to consolidate their knowledge
and experiences in climate change science into a report that can feed into the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the Framework Convention on Climate
Change and the Permanent Forum.
Adaptation and mitigation
36. The Permanent Forum recommends that the Framework Convention on
Climate Change, in cooperation with States, provide adaptation funds to indigenous
peoples affected by climate change-related disasters. Indigenous peoples whose
lands have already disappeared or have become uninhabitable or spoilt due to
seawater rise, floods, droughts or erosion, and who have thus become environmental
refugees or displaced persons, should be provided with appropriate relocation with
the support of the international community.
37. The Permanent Forum recommends following the example of indigenous
peoples, who have been the stewards of the land and sea for millenniums. When
allocating research and development funding and setting the criteria for clean
development mechanism projects, policymakers at the State and multilateral levels
must look beyond the simple question of whether a particular form of alternative
energy or carbon absorption technique can provide a short-term reduction in
greenhouse gases. Policymakers should consider the long-term sustainability of any
mitigation policy they choose.
38. The Permanent Forum calls on all States that have not yet done so to
implement the 2005 Kyoto Protocol, the United Nations Framework Convention on
Climate Change and other international initiatives that address climate change and
biocultural diversity in conjunction with indigenous peoples, including indigenous
women, in a full and effective way. The Annex I countries should implement their
commitments to the Kyoto Protocol by doing all they can to shift their economic
systems towards low-carbon systems, instead of relying mainly on the purchase of
emission credits to offset their emissions. The fast-industrializing developing
countries should also undertake serious efforts to cut their emissions and develop
low-carbon energy systems.
39. The Permanent Forum recommends that States, the World Bank and other
multilateral and bilateral financial institutions consider alternative systems beyond
the perpetuation of highly centralized fossil fuel-based energy supplies and largescale bioenergy and hydropower dams and increase their support for renewable,
low-carbon and decentralized systems, taking into account the recommendations of
the World Commission on Dams. States should abandon old centralized electricity
grids, which are not suitable for the challenges of climate change.
40. The Permanent Forum recommends that the recommendations and proposals
that emerged from the consultations of indigenous peoples and the World Bank on
the Forest Carbon Partnership Facility and other carbon funds, such as the
BioCarbon Fund, be implemented by the Bank and other relevant agencies.
Indigenous peoples should be effectively involved in the design, implementation
and evaluation of the Forest Carbon Partnership Facility. Displacement and
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