A/HRC/54/31
contracts written in English, with communities being pushed out of their lands for projects.63
Indigenous Peoples are seeking to train themselves in carbon market regulation, to better
understand the mechanics and avoid falling victim to carbon pirates. Forest-offsetting
schemes are often found on land belonging to Indigenous Peoples whose rights have not been
secured. The main protection against this trend is to recognize their right to land as part of
any carbon-offsetting agreements. Considering that Indigenous Peoples are the best stewards
for protecting forests, this fundamental safeguard can only serve the wider goal of greenhouse
gas emissions reduction.
49.
A 2021 study revealed that of the 31 countries that contain almost 70 per cent of the
world’s tropical forests, only around one quarter of them explicitly recognized the rights of
communities to govern and benefit from carbon rights. Just five countries have defined how
carbon and non-carbon benefits will be shared, with only Viet Nam having an operational
benefit-sharing scheme.64
50.
At the twenty-sixth Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change, countries agreed on regulations to enhance the
environmental integrity and transparency of market-based activities under article 6 of the
Paris Agreement. Article 6 (2) of the Paris Agreement allows countries to trade emissions
reductions and removals with one another through bilateral or multilateral agreements and
article 6 (4) creates a global carbon market to be overseen by a supervisory body designated
by the Conference of the Parties. At the twenty-seventh Conference of the Parties, Indigenous
Peoples discussed with States parties how to ensure that they did not bear the brunt of carbonoffsetting projects and instead benefited from increased direct financial flows for forest
protection, conservation and improved livelihood opportunities.
51.
Carbon finance stakeholders should adopt high-integrity, rights-based approaches to
secure the collective rights of Indigenous Peoples to their lands and resources, adopt human
rights safeguards, including free, prior and informed consent, and secure their participation
in projects from initial design to implementation, monitoring and reporting. Integrity should
include transparent information about the final buyer of credits, as in many cases credits are
used as offsets by companies whose activities are damaging the territories of Indigenous
Peoples. Additionally, they should provide accessible grievance redress mechanisms and
increase direct financing support for community-led initiatives.65
52.
Financial actors will rely heavily on the assessment of certifying entities before
directing funds towards a REDD-plus or other carbon-sinking project. Indigenous Peoples
and NGOs have expressed concerns over the lack of transparency and independence of the
entities in charge of certifying the carbon emission reduction units of carbon projects and the
lack of adequate, independent and accessible grievance mechanisms. 66 Additionally,
processes may not always include respect for the rights of Indigenous Peoples among the
criteria for certification, or as a framework to decide cases brought before their complaint
mechanisms. For instance, even where the REDD-plus environmental excellence standard
used by the certifier, Architecture for REDD+ Transition, recalls the Cancun safeguards, the
certifier’s complaint mechanism failed to apply an Indigenous Peoples human rights
framework to decide a recent case concerning Indigenous Peoples. 67
53.
Some States have strengthened the participation of Indigenous Peoples in the
regulation of carbon and biodiversity offset markets. In Canada, Indigenous Peoples have
participated in the development of federal offset protocols under the country’s greenhouse
gas offset credit system and the Government is working on free, prior and informed consent
mechanisms to develop federal offset protocols for land-based projects that will be applicable
63
64
65
66
67
GE.23-13366
See https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jan/21/amazon-indigenous-communitiescarbon-offsetting-pirates-aoe.
Rights and Resources Initiative and McGill University, “Status of legal recognition of Indigenous
Peoples’, local communities’ and Afro-descendant Peoples’ rights to carbon stored in tropical lands
and forests” (2021).
See https://www.energymonitor.ai/policy/carbon-markets/the-interwoven-fortunes-of-carbonmarkets-and-indigenous-communities/.
See https://www.elclip.org/resguardo-indigena-cumbal-bonos-de-carbono (in Spanish).
See https://www.artredd.org/complaints/.
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