pro-poor pes-ces compensating the rural poor for ecosystem services: adapting communities or...
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Pro-Poor PES-CES
Compensating the Rural Poor for Ecosystem Services:
Adapting Communities or Adapting/Embedding PES-CES
Schemes?
Herman Rosa, Nelson Cuéllar, Susan Kandel, Barry Shelley
“Pro-poor payments for environmental services – implications for donor assistance”
Danish Institute for International Studies (DIIS)Copenhagen, October 13, 2006
PROGRAMA SALVADOREÑO DE INVESTIGACIÓN SOBRE DESARROLLO Y MEDIO AMBIENTE
SALVADORAN RESEARCH PROGRAM ON DEVELOPMENT AND ENVIRONMENT
Pro-Poor PES-CES
Proposed Questions for this Workshop
In what contexts pro-poor PES …
a) would be difficult to implement?
b) could be worth considering?
Pro-Poor PES-CES
Payment for Environmental Services (PES)
Not Always Welcomed • In May 2006 groups of indigenous, afro-ecuadoran and campesino origin demanded: “(...) the ANULMENT of all the contracts to sell environmental services from territories of indigenous, afro-ecuadoran and campesino peoples, nations and communities in Ecuador” (Puyo Declaration: http://www.wrm.org.uy/paises/Ecuador/Puyo.html)
• In Arenal (Costa Rica), some producers are unwilling to enter into the official PES scheme because they distrust the government and fear they will lose control over their lands (Porras y Hope, 2005)
Pro-Poor PES-CES
PES and Poor Rural Communities: Three Contrasting Perspectives
1. PES is only a conservation tool. Adding explicitly the objective of community involvement for poverty reduction will impede efficient functioning of PES schemes and reduce conservation benefits for all.
2. PES is a tool for poverty reduction and sustainable natural resource management, but requires addressing the constraints that poor communities face in existing PES schemes.
3. CES (Compensation for Ecosystem Services) is an empowering tool for poor rural communities. CES can improve their well-being while strengthening and drawing attention to their role in as stewards of the resource base.
Pro-Poor PES-CES
Choices of communities and their supporters before the contrasting
PES/CES perspectives1. ADOPT conservation focused PES schemes if they have
secure rights to natural resources at a significant scale and quality, as well as the technical and entrepreneurial capacities to gain successful entry into these markets.
2. ADAPT communities through capacity building so that they can enter into those schemes. Complementarily, seek to develop/shape/tailor PES schemes so that they take into account communities conditions and concerns.
3. EXPLORE alternative scenarios and complementary avenues until a CES strategy emerges that is contextually embedded and furthers community-defined goals.
Pro-Poor PES-CES
Conditions for successful adaptation of communities to PES schemes
1. Cultural values that do not resist commodification and market relations.
2. Secure control over natural resources so that PES initiatives are not perceived as undermining that control.
3. Adequate stock of human and social capital to ensure effective collective action and reduced transaction costs.
4. Supporting organizations and intermediaries that do not subordinate communities to their own goals or material gain.
Pro-Poor PES-CES
• Benefits provided by NATURAL Ecosystems (Gretchen Daly)
• Benefits provided by Ecosystems (Millenium Ecosystem Assessment)
Ecosystem Services: Contrasting Definitions
Provisioning Services
Food Crops Livestock Capture Fisheries Aquaculture Wild Foods
Fiber Timber Cotton, hemp, silk Wood Fuel
Genetic resources
Biochemicals
Freshwater
Goods produced or provided by ecosystems
Photo credit (top): Tran Thi Hoa (World Bank),
Regulating Services
Air Quality Regulation
Climate Regulation Global (CO2 sequestration)
Regional and local
Erosion regulation
Water purification
Disease regulation
Pest regulation
Pollination
Natural Hazard regulation
Benefits obtained from regulation of ecosystem processes
Cultural Services
Spiritual and Religious Values
Knowledge Systems
Educational values
Inspiration
Aesthetic Values
Social Relations
Sense of Place
Recreation and Ecotourism
Non-material benefits obtained from ecosystems
Photo credits ( top to bottom): W. Reid, Mary Frost, Staffan Widstrand, unknown.
Pro-Poor PES-CES
Exploring complementary avenues …
First things must come first• Poor rural communities depend heavily on the Poor rural communities depend heavily on the resource base and their management decisions resource base and their management decisions seek FIRST to guarantee their self-provisioning seek FIRST to guarantee their self-provisioning of food, water, fuel and spiritual well being.of food, water, fuel and spiritual well being.
• Communities welcome support to strengthen Communities welcome support to strengthen rights, improve practices, and strengthen rights, improve practices, and strengthen institutions to guarantee self-provisioning. institutions to guarantee self-provisioning.
1Practices for
Self-Provisioning(food, water, fuel,
spiritual well-being)
Pro-Poor PES-CES
Exploring complementary avenues …
Improving income generating activities
• Communities will welcome support to improve their EXISTING practices so that they can gain better entry into markets Communities will welcome support to improve their EXISTING practices so that they can gain better entry into markets thus increasing their income: thus increasing their income:
Technical assistance, Technical assistance,
Marketing support, Marketing support,
Infrastructure, Infrastructure,
Certification. Etc.Certification. Etc.
1.Practices for
Self-Provisioning(food, water, fuel,
spiritual well-being)
2. Practices for Income
Generations(agriculture, agro-forestry,
forestry, non-timber products, rural tourism, handicrafts)
Pro-Poor PES-CES
Obtaining compensations for ecosystem services of regional
and global interest Build on improved practices for self-Build on improved practices for self-provisioning and income generation, to provisioning and income generation, to explore explore territorial management schemes, practices territorial management schemes, practices and compensations for and compensations for ecosystem services of regional/global interestecosystem services of regional/global interest
3.Practices to Guarantee Ecosystem Services of
Regional / Global Interest(water quality and water regulation, biodiversity, carbon sequestration)
1.Practices for
Self-Provisioning(food, water, fuel,
spiritual well-being)
2. Practices for Income
Generation(agriculture, agro-forestry,
forestry, non-timber products, rural tourism, handicrafts)
Pro-Poor PES-CES
1.Practices for
Self-Provisioning(food, water, fuel,
spiritual well-being)
2. Practices for Income
Generations(agriculture, agro-forestry,
forestry, non-timber products, rural tourism, handicrafts)
3.Practices to Guarantee Ecosystem Services of
Regional / Global Interest(water quality and water regulation,
biodiversity, carbon sequestion)
Institutional Arrangements(community, local, micro-regional, regional, national, global)
Critical Issues for Equitable and
Efficient Schemes____________________
Defend, Expand and Innovate Rights
(access, extraction, management, tenure,
transfer)
Landscape Perspective that Values
Human Action(anthropogenic
components within landscape mosaics)
Strengthen Organizational Capacity
(for collective action, conflict resolution,
inclusion of women and the poorest, development
of external linkages)
Compensation Supporting
Improvements in the three-levels
____________________
Technical Assistance
Infrastructure / Investment Support
Marketing Support
Financial Compensation
Tenure Security Management Rights
Supporting Negotiating Platforms
Embedding CES: Putting it all together
www.prisma.org.sv
Pro-Poor PES-CES
Supporting PES/CES Schemes: 5 Lessons to Remember
1. PES/CES definitions, frameworks and rules are not politically neutral: They reflect the interests, relative power and learning of actors involved.
2. Without an expansion of the rights of the poor to the resource base, they will not benefit from PES/CES initiatives.
3. Pre-defined compensations and PES/CES schemes may be inadequate, or harmful. Negotiating platforms can better define schemes and compensation packages that are more appropriate to the local context.
4. CES schemes that focus on the rural poor should consider their two priorities: improving self-provisioning, as well as income generation in existing and well-known markets.
5. A broad CES perspective provides an important opportunity to empower rural communities and to promote changes in public policies recognizing the positive role of poor smallholders in managing the resource base.
Pro-Poor PES-CES
Implications for Donor Assistance1. Means are not outcomes: Make sure your grantees do not confuse the
means (setting up a PES/CES schemes) with the outcome (a process leading to poverty reduction and sustainable ecosystem management).
2. Context is critical: Make sure your grantees do not predetermine schemes, defer strategic decision-making to the communities and allow in their planning for no PES/CES scheme at all.
3. Demand critical thinking and learning from the processes you support: Make sure your grantees budget enough resources to critically reflect on the process so that they can change course in time
4. Support alternative and unorthodox approaches: Multilaterals and BINGOs already support traditional conservation and market driven approaches. Do not lock-in this path-dependence that crowd out alternative perspectives.
5. Support serious dialogue and mutual learning amongst competing perspectives: Closed knowledge and practice communities are always in danger of becoming sterile.
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