Institutional approaches for carbon financing in the forest sector: learning lessons for REDD+ from forest carbon projects in Uganda
Institutional approaches for carbon financing in the forest sector: learning lessons for REDD+ from forest carbon projects in Uganda
With momentum building around the implementation of REDD+ programmes and projects, questions surrounding the appropriate structuring of institutions are becoming increasingly important. We examine how the variations in the institutional arrangements related to the carbon finance aspects of projects affect the opportunities for poor rural producers involved, or those living in the vicinity of projects. Evidence is drawn from a review of three forest carbon projects in Uganda, based on qualitative stakeholder interviews and supported by policy documents and literature. Three aspects of project institutions are discussed; actors, rules and links to existing external institutions. The findings suggest that supporting such projects with carbon finance can have some positive impacts on opportunities through improved monitoring, but that considerable progress needs to be made in balancing the interests of project financers with those of the communities involved and improving policy coordination with existing institutions external to projects. We suggest that these lessons are particularly transferable to the growing number of REDD+ approaches that are strongly performance based or funded through carbon markets, and implemented through direct payment systems between buyers and local producer groups or individuals.
carbon forestry, development, agroforestry, collaborative forest management, rules
216-229
Peskett, Leo
21567b94-92a3-4564-8761-eb0aa7bb3219
Schreckenberg, Kathrin
d3fa344b-bf0d-4358-b12a-5547968f8a77
Brown, Jessica
fd5164eb-18bf-4de3-9061-a9089717e389
March 2011
Peskett, Leo
21567b94-92a3-4564-8761-eb0aa7bb3219
Schreckenberg, Kathrin
d3fa344b-bf0d-4358-b12a-5547968f8a77
Brown, Jessica
fd5164eb-18bf-4de3-9061-a9089717e389
Peskett, Leo, Schreckenberg, Kathrin and Brown, Jessica
(2011)
Institutional approaches for carbon financing in the forest sector: learning lessons for REDD+ from forest carbon projects in Uganda.
Environmental Science & Policy, 14 (2), .
(doi:10.1016/j.envsci.2010.10.004).
Abstract
With momentum building around the implementation of REDD+ programmes and projects, questions surrounding the appropriate structuring of institutions are becoming increasingly important. We examine how the variations in the institutional arrangements related to the carbon finance aspects of projects affect the opportunities for poor rural producers involved, or those living in the vicinity of projects. Evidence is drawn from a review of three forest carbon projects in Uganda, based on qualitative stakeholder interviews and supported by policy documents and literature. Three aspects of project institutions are discussed; actors, rules and links to existing external institutions. The findings suggest that supporting such projects with carbon finance can have some positive impacts on opportunities through improved monitoring, but that considerable progress needs to be made in balancing the interests of project financers with those of the communities involved and improving policy coordination with existing institutions external to projects. We suggest that these lessons are particularly transferable to the growing number of REDD+ approaches that are strongly performance based or funded through carbon markets, and implemented through direct payment systems between buyers and local producer groups or individuals.
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Published date: March 2011
Keywords:
carbon forestry, development, agroforestry, collaborative forest management, rules
Organisations:
Civil Engineering & the Environment
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Local EPrints ID: 184087
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/184087
PURE UUID: 1317470e-2500-46fc-967a-cf2f2c19e592
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Date deposited: 05 May 2011 08:45
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 03:06
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Author:
Leo Peskett
Author:
Kathrin Schreckenberg
Author:
Jessica Brown
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