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Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor-Contributing to the Milennium Development Goals IFAD Governing Council Side Event 20 February 2004 Some experiences from Latin America
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Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

Jan 05, 2016

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Page 1: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor

Maryanne Grieg-Gran

Environmental Service Payments for the Poor-Contributing to the Milennium Development Goals

IFAD Governing Council Side Event

20 February 2004

Some experiences from Latin America

Page 2: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

Outline

• How payments for environmental services might reduce poverty

• The constraints • Some positive examples from Latin America

– Watershed services• Pimampiro, Ecuador

– Carbon sequestration• Northern region, Costa Rica

– Biodiversity conservation• ICMS ecologico, Brazil

Page 3: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

How PES might reduce poverty

• Direct– Payments increase household income

• Other more indirect channels– Generation of new productive activities and

employment – Reducing the cost for the poor of meeting basic

needs– Increasing the asset base of the poor – natural,

social, human, physical capital– Reducing vulnerability– Increasing government revenue for expenditure on

the poor

Page 4: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

The Constraints

• Insecure land and resource tenure – May affect eligibility– Pressures for expropriation

• Small and dispersed producers– High transaction costs– Little bargaining power

• Market access– Lack of skills, education, finance, information

• Little voice in the formulation of rules

Page 5: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

Whether environmental service payments reduce poverty depends on:

•The context in which they are introduced

•The driving motivation behind them

•How they are designed

•The package of accompanying measures

Page 6: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

Ecuador: Pimampiro

Page 7: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

Pimampiro

Page 8: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.
Page 9: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

Pimampiro Municipality• Population of 17,000 - 6,000 live in town• Motivations for the Payment Scheme:

– Problems of water shortages for town supply– Estimated 13,000ha of forests lost since 1985– Decentralisation of environmental management

• Pilot scheme: Nueva America Association – 27 families with an average of 2-3 ha of

agricultural land and 20 ha of forest or paramo

• Aim: protect forest in the headwaters of the municipality´s water system

Page 10: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

Payment Mechanism

PES

FUND

20% increase in water

price

Seed capital

US$15,000 USD UMAT

CEDERENA

Payment to Nueva

America Association

Page 11: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

Payment Categories

0Degraded Land

0Agriculture and Livestock

0.50New Secondary Forest

0.75Old Secondary Forest

0.50Intervened Primary Forest

1.00Primary Forest

0.50Intervened Paramo

1.00Primary Paramo and Forest

Payment ($/month/ha)Payment Categories

Page 12: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

PES and poverty reduction in Pimampiro

• Mainly through raising income– Mean payment of US$21 per family per month

• Equivalent to 30% of monthly household expenditure

• Benefits from projects accompanying PES– Formalisation of land tenure– Technical assistance and training

• Agricultural productivity

– Improved access to NTFP markets• eg:medicinal plants

Page 13: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

Some key issues

• Early to judge success – Payments started in 2001

• Institutional sustainability– Supporting project will finish soon

• Improvements to water supply infrastructure helped acceptability

Page 14: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

Northern RegionCosta Rica

Pre-1980 deforestationto create large farms

1980s: Land invasionsand land reform

1990s: promotion of forestry and PES

Page 15: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.
Page 16: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

FONAFIFO/ Ministry of Environment

PooledDEMAND

SUPPLY

Carbon SalesHydrological services

Biodiversity Landscape beauty

Forest owners: public and private(payments per ha for 5 years contract)•$200 conservation•$500 reforestation•$300 forest management

Transfer Payments: FONAFIFO

IndependentMonitoring

Page 17: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

PES and Poverty Reduction in Northern Region

• Mainly through making a new activity viable:– Main benefit is from sale of thinnings and timber

• Other benefits– Employment creation in wood processing– Human capital

• forestry skills, intermediary skills (monitoring, training, support, etc)

– Social capital • encouraged the creation and strengthening of

community associations

Page 18: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

Room for improvement• Inadequate returns for some farmers

– Lack of information about costs involved • Considerable “learning-by-doing”

– Losses for early participants discredited the system. • Restriction of access to other public funds

– PES participants not eligible for housing bonus or bank credit until recently

• Lack of government coordination– Land reform beneficiaries ineligible for PES

• Physical capital adversely affected– roads are deteriorating through increased use

Page 19: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

ICMS Ecologico Brazil

• Sharing of state sales tax revenue • Criteria for distribution between local

governments typically:– Favours LGs with high economic production– Discriminates against LGs with protected areas

• Paraná introduced an ecological criterion– area, status and quality of management of

conservation units

• 10 other states in Brazil have followed.

Page 20: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

ICMS and Poverty Reduction

• Increased revenue for some poor municipalities– Marlieria (Minas Gerais) had 2000% increase in

share of ICMS revenues 1995-1998

• Enables increased expenditure on basic services – eg: Alto Caparão (MG)- electrification

• Enables support to communities living in and around conservation units– Eg: NW Paraná –well-drilling, tractors

Page 21: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

Room for improvement

• Effect on distribution depends on which other criteria are reduced– 40% of counties with conservation units

in Rondonia were worse off with the ICMS

• Revenue may not benefit those most affected by land use restrictions

Page 22: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

Conclusions

• PES can benefit the poor if:– They are designed for this purpose– The context is favourable or effort is made to

overcome constraints

• Many PES schemes are being introduced in Latin America eg: Mexico

• It is important to ensure that these emerging schemes do not exacerbate poverty

Page 23: Making Environmental Service Payments Work for the Poor Maryanne Grieg-Gran Environmental Service Payments for the Poor- Contributing to the Milennium.

For more information on IIED’s case studies on environmental servicessee www.iied.org/eep or write [email protected]