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  • Jun 12, 2009
  • Comments Off on Incentives to sustain forest ecosystem services: A Review and Lessons for REDD
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June 12th, 2009
Incentives to sustain forest ecosystem services: A Review and Lessons for REDD

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Paying people to protect forests can be an effective way to tackle deforestation and climate change but only if there is good governance of natural resources, claims this study funded by Norway’s Government. IIED, the World Resources Institute and the Center for International Forestry Research looked at existing efforts to pay people in developing nations to protect ecosystems in return for the services — such as fresh water, wild foods and climate control — they provide.

It aimed to see if such payments could be used to help tackle climate change by reducing greenhouse gas emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD). A review of 13 schemes that make payments for ecosystems services in Africa, South-East Asia and Latin America concluded that performance-based payments can be part of REDD but only if important preconditions are met.

http://www.iied.org/pubs/display.php?o=13555IIED