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7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons-learned in Watershed Management in the U.S. and Central Asia Simon Charré and Mariya Genina
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7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

Dec 31, 2015

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Page 1: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

7-8 October, 2010

Workshop-seminarPayment for Ecosystems Services in

Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons-learned in Watershed

Management in the U.S. and Central Asia

Simon Charré and Mariya Genina

Page 2: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

I) What are Payments for Ecosystem Services?

Page 3: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

Payment for Ecosystem Services is based on the concept of

Ecosystem Services

• Definition of the United Nations: “ES are the benefits that ecosystems provide to humans”.

• 4 types of ES have been identified, they concern:– provision (production of food and water)– regulation (control of climate and disease)– Support (nutrient cycles and crop pollination)– Culture (spiritual and recreational benefits)

Page 4: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

Forests

Agricultural lands

What are the ES provided in the case of water resources?

Upstream land uses can be: • agriculture • Industry• forestryThey affect the quantity, quality, and timing

of water flows.

Downstream beneficiaries can be:

• Domestic water use• Irrigated agriculture• Fisheries• Recreation• Downstream ecosystems

Page 5: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

Outcomes of this situation:• Upstream land are beneficiaries

from the situation. Their practices are not sustainable but they are the

less expensive for them.

• Downstream population face problems with water resources, which impacts their standard of living.

Benefits to land users

Costs to downstream populations

Current situation New practices

→ A change in practices affects positively downstream populations, but decrease the benefits of upstream land users, that’s the reason why they are often not really willing to change without incentive.

Page 6: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

How to solve this situation?

The Payment for Ecosystem Services mechanism is a win-win answer to this

situation. A financial relation between ES providers (sellers) and beneficiaries (buyers) is

developed on a voluntary basis:

Buyers pay an incentive to the sellers if they commit themselves to change their practices toward more sustainable ones.

Page 7: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

Upstream land users = Ecosystem Services sellers

Downstream water users = Ecosystem Services buyers

Ecosystem Services flow

Ecosystem Services flow

Payment flow

Payment flow

Agricultural landsForests

Page 8: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

The Payment of the PES can have different natures according to the situation: mainly cash or in-kind. In any case, to be sustainable, it must:• Be affordable for the buyer• Covers the cost of changing practices and provide an incentive for the seller• Be repeated every year, as long as the Ecosystem Services are provided

Benefits to land users

(sellers)

Costs to downstream populations

(buyers)

Current situationNew practices +

payment

Payment

Page 9: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

Who are the stakeholders involved in the PES?

Page 10: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

…and those involved in the mechanism itself, i.e. buyers, sellers and the intermediate organization

can be:• Governmental bodies• Private companies• The population, from small farmers to inhabitants

of important cities

The stakeholders designing and implementing the PES scheme can be…

• Non-governmental organizations such as NGOs or associations

• Governmental bodies, at the local or national level

• Private companies

Page 11: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

Types of PES

Depending on the stakeholders involved as buyers and sellers, the PES is considered as:

• Public-Publice.g., a state-owned hydropower plant pays the national forest

agency to increase reforestation in a watershed;

• Public-Privatee.g., a city administration pays farmers to adopt environmentally

friendly practices in order to ensure a good quality of water;

• Private-Privatee.g., a private company that needs clean water pays private land

users to encourage them to change their practices.

Page 12: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

The essential role of governmental bodies

To be implemented and work efficiently, the PES needs to be developed in a favorable institutional framework. Thus, governmental bodies have to act at global or local level in order to:

• Allow the creation of a fund thanks to the money collected among sellers

• Allow the financial transaction buyers/sellers• Allow the establishment of a contract

between public and private stakeholders

Page 13: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

Necessary conditions for the sustainability of PES schemes:

Page 14: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

– The institutional framework allows this type of mechanism

– The payment is affordable for buyers and covers sellers expenses (opportunity cost): need to conduct scientific assessments

– Transaction costs are as low as possible– The financial support is mainly provided by buyers and

other local organizations and not by NGOs or external donors

– The conditions of the PES are established after a multi-stakeholders negotiation and are written down in a formal contract

– Capacity building and awareness raising for stakeholders

These conditions must be met to ensure the sustainability of the PES scheme.

Page 15: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

II) Key steps of design and implementation of a PES

scheme:

Page 16: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

STEP 1

• Identification of a pilot territory where:– The geographic situation allow the

implementation of this kind of mechanism– Local authorities are involved in the local

development – Economic activities are highly dependent

of the furniture of one or several ES – Populations are willing to pay for the

provision of ES

Page 17: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

STEP 2

• First discussions with local stakeholders:– Presentation and clarification of the concept of

PES– Discussions on the interest of the mechanism in

the territory– Creation of a coordination committee to lead the

design of the PES

The awareness of local stakeholders and their willingness to be involved in the scheme is crucial for having positive results

Page 18: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

STEP 3: Identifying Ecosystem Services

ES Demand:• What specific services? • Type of measurement?• Who benefits from these services?• How much benefit do they receive?

ES Supply:• How are these services generated?

• How much more or less of these services would they receive if land use changed?

• Who generates these services?

Need a multidisciplinary work

Page 19: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

ES have to be evaluated at several levels

• What is the influence of the land uses on water resources?

• What is the link between water resources and the welfare of downstream population?

• What new land use practices could improve the welfare of downstream population?

The answers to these questions need the intervention of specialists in: biology, hydrology, economy, sociology

These assessments, because they are objective, strengthen the trust of local stakeholders in the scheme

Page 20: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

Finally, scientific assessments have to show the two limits of the possible payment:

Benefits to land users

Costs to downstream populations

Current situation

New practices New practices + payment

PaymentMinimum payment

Maximum payment

• The Opportunity Cost (minimum acceptable payment for sellers)

• The Value of Benefits (maximum acceptable payment for buyers)

Page 21: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

The monitoring has two impacts on the PES operation:

• Ensures confidence in the system• Allows to adjust the scheme if the

environmental situation or the relation between buyers and sellers change

This monitoring is a key point for the sustainability of the system and has to be

elaborated before the implementation of the scheme, in consultation with all the

participants.

Page 22: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

STEP 4

• Training activities:– Disseminate new practices and monitoring

among the upstream land users– Give them important information for the next

activity, i.e. the negotiation of the contract (price of change of practices, different natures for the payment)

Example: Training to disseminate new pasture use practices among farmers.

Page 23: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

STEP 5

• Negotiation of the contract:This step establishes the relation

between buyers and sellers (conditionality, payment, monitoring)– It brings together buyers, sellers

and the intermediate organization– The output is the agreement and

signature of the PES contract

Page 24: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

Content of the PES contract

• Nature, amount and recurrence of the payment

• Conditionality of the payment

• Nature and recurrence of the monitoring

• Conditions for the extension or renegotiation of the contract

Page 25: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

STEP 6

• Monitoring:The monitoring, realized by independent

experts, aims to:

– Show the effectiveness of the chosen practices: Do changes in land use generate the desired services?

– Show the Impact on participants: is the welfare of participants improved?

– Verify that ES sellers are following the conditional practices

Page 26: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

STEP 7

• Extension or reevaluation of the contracts:

– The monitoring shows whether the characteristics of the contract are adapted to the local situation

– After the end of each contract, a meeting present the results of the monitoring

– During this meeting, according to the results of the monitoring and the remarks of the participants, the contract can be amended

– Contracts can be extended as long as ES are provided

Page 27: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

Conclusion

• The PES tool is adaptable to a large range of natural, economic and social contexts

• It deals both with nature protection and development of economic activities

• It ensures a long term provision of Ecosystem Services beneficial for buyers

• It ensures long-term incomes for sellers

• It relies on multistakeholder cooperation

The PES tool is therefore an interesting opportunity for Central Asia to protect natural resources and

support rural development

Page 28: 7-8 October, 2010 Workshop-seminar Payment for Ecosystems Services in Kazakhstan: Best Practices and Lessons- learned in Watershed Management in the U.S.

References

• The figures were taken from the presentation of Mr. S. Pagiola “PES for Dummies”