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PILOT USE OF RESPONSIBLE AGRICULTURAL INVESTMENT PRINCIPLES: A STATUS UPDATE Presentation by Will Speller 21 March 2017 Land and Poverty Conference, Washington D.C. 1 PREVIOUS UNCTAD AND WORLD BANK FIELD RESEARCH • 39 mature agribusinesses • Approaches to economic, social and environmental sustainability. • Community perceptions and impacts. • 360 interviews, involving 900 stakeholders. 2 MOTIVATION FOR PHASE 2 OF FIELD WORK • Many investors are struggling, financially and/or operationally... • …for reasons that could have been foreseen by better planning, screening and investor selection. • Enormous range of developmental, social and environmental outcomes of investments. • Most “mistakes” are made in the very early stages of investments, and are hard to subsequently rectify. • Investors, governments and communities want more detailed practical guidance on the how to implement principles of responsible agricultural investment. 3 PILOT USE OF PRINCIPLES GUIDING NEW INVESTMENTS IN AGRICULTURE • Field work at 8 early stage agricultural investors in Africa. • Objectives: • to infuse responsible investment principles into operations from the outset. • to learn and establish good practices in implementing responsible business practices in agriculture. • to develop tested instruments, methods, documents, processes and procedures which can be used in the early phases of future investments. • inform the work of development agencies, government bodies, investor groups, NGOs and other institutions that promote responsible investment in agriculture. 4 SAMPLE Figure 1.1 : Location of Investments Figure 1.2 Nationality of the main Investor 2.5 Senegal, 1 Uganda, 1 Ghana , 2 Tanzania, 1 2 Malawi, 1 1.5 Mozambique, 2 1 0.5 0 Dubai UK Japan Domestic Belgium Germany Figure 1.4: Years in Operation Figure 1.3: Size of Land Allocation (Hectares) 7 to 8 10,001-50,000 5 to 6 1001-10,000 3 to 4 101-1,000 1 to 2 <100 0 0 1 2 Figure 1.5: Principal Product Rice 3 1 2 3 4 4 Figure 1.6 : Share of Investments that employs outgrowers scheme NO 13% Maize Jatropha Fruits YES 87% Palm oil Eucalyptus 5 METHODOLOGY Investor selection and desk basedresearch Countryinception workshop Field visit Agreement of Action Plan Monitoring and follow up Dissemination of findings (late 2017) In partnership with FAO and IFAD 6 KEY OUTPUT: SERIES OF “KNOWLEDGE NOTES” • Purpose: to provide digestible, easy to use information, tools and guidance to governments, investors, communities and civil society for use in their pursuit of sustainable and responsible development in agriculture. • Contents: • Practical “how to” examples and implementable tools gleaned from UNCTAD-World Bank field work. • Cross-reference is existing tools and guidance documents. • List of relevant responsible investment principles. • 4-6 pages maximum! • Peer review and testing at further country workshops. 7 KEY OUTPUT: SERIES OF “KNOWLEDGE NOTES” • Issues covered are in development, depending on field work and where a meaningful contribution can be made. Master Class: Friday 9am • An indicative list of likely topics: MC-700 • Screening Prospective Investors • Alternative Business Models • Economic Linkages • Designing Mutually Beneficial Outgrower Schemes • Water Rights and Use • Women’s Empowerment • Community Engagement Strategies • Participation of Marginalised Groups • Training and Integrating Local Staff 8 SAMPLE CONTENTS FROM KNOWLEDGE NOTES • - Screening Prospective Investors Key aspects to cover in screening procedure. Schematic diagram of screening procedure. Quick fire desktop screening procedure. External advice to build screening capacity • - Economic linkages Evidence on types of links – positive and negative – created. Using the investment contract to maximise positive links. How to screen investors for linkage potential. How to nurture local entrepreneurship. • - Training and Integrating Local Staff Examples of successful training programs. Partnerships with Universities or training institutions. Overcoming administrative barriers to local employment. Embedding commitments in the contract. Master Class: Friday 9am MC-700 9 NEXT STEPS • Ongoing monitoring and follow up visits with 8 investors. • Peer review and testing of Knowledge Notes, including country workshops with FAO and IFAD. • Publication of Knowledge Notes and Overarching Report on the program, later in 2017. 10 THANK YOU!