| UNDP-UNEP  Poverty-Environment Initiative 
 
 Division of Regional Cooperation  (DRC)United Nations Environment  Programme
 UN Gigiri Compound, United Nations Avenue
 P.O.Box 30552-00100, Nairobi, Kenya
 
 Contact:           John  Horberry, Manager, UNPEI
 Tel:                   +254 20 762  4903
 Fax:                 +254 20 762 43 24
 Email:               john.horberry@unpei.org
 Website:           www.unpei.org
 
 About the Poverty-Environment  Initiative
 
 The UNDP-UNEP Poverty  Environment Initiative  is a joint programme to help countries develop  their capacity to “mainstream” poverty-environment linkages into national  development planning processes, such as PRSP’s and MDG Achievement Strategies.  Based on experience and lessons learned over the past few years of assisting 9  countries in Africa and Asia to launch and sustain poverty-environment  mainstreaming programmes, UNDP and UNEP have launched an effort to scale-up the  PEI significantly and to work closely with key donors and other partners to  expand the effort to other countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America. The aim  is to strengthen UNDP-UNEP support capacity in the different regions and to  launch an increased number of country programmes over the coming years.
 
 About  the Poverty-Environment Facility
 
 In order to  coordinate and support the scale-up of the PEI, UNDP and UNEP have decided to set up a joint  Facility based in Nairobi.  This effectively makes the partnership between  the two organisations operational. The role of the Facility will be to provide  strategic direction for the PEI scale-up, to coordinate relations with the  donors providing funds, to expand technical support and access to knowledge on  poverty-environment mainstreaming to the UNDP-UNEP regional teams and the  participating countries and to provide a hub for a range of partnerships.   The Facility was formally established in May 2007.
 
 About  Poverty-Environment Mainstreaming
 
 Poverty-environment  mainstreaming is defined as integrating poverty-environment linkages into  national development planning processes for poverty reduction and pro-poor  growth – such as  PRSPs, MDG or growth strategies.  It involves  establishing the links between environment and poverty and identifying the  policies and programmes to bring about better pro-poor environmental management.   It is targeted at influencing national plans, budget processes, sector  strategies and local level implementation - reflecting the need to integrate  the valuable contribution of environmental management to improved livelihoods,  increased economic security and income opportunities for the poor which is  largely overlooked in government policy making processes and in the wider  debate about development priorities.
 
 
 
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