Are government incentives effective for avoided deforestation in the tropical Andean forest?

In order to ensure the provision of goods and services from forests, many governments have promoted less-traditional conservation initiatives such as programs of payments for ecosystem services called, more broadly, direct payments for conservation. The Socio Bosque Program (SBP) is a governmental p...

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Main Authors: Cuenca, Pablo, Robalino, Juan, Arriagada, Rodrigo, Echeverría, Cristian
Format: Artículo
Language:Inglés
Published: Asim Zia, University of Vermont, (Estados Unidos) 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0203545
https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/9493
id RepoCATIE9493
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spelling RepoCATIE94932021-12-22T19:15:24Z Are government incentives effective for avoided deforestation in the tropical Andean forest? Cuenca, Pablo Robalino, Juan Arriagada, Rodrigo Echeverría, Cristian ECUADOR PROTECCION FORESTAL CONSERVACION DE BOSQUES INCENTIVOS FINANCIEROS EVALUACION DE IMPACTO DEFORESTACIÓN BOSQUE TROPICAL GASES DE EFECTO INVERNADERO EVALUACION DEL IMPACTO ECOSISTEMA In order to ensure the provision of goods and services from forests, many governments have promoted less-traditional conservation initiatives such as programs of payments for ecosystem services called, more broadly, direct payments for conservation. The Socio Bosque Program (SBP) is a governmental program in Ecuador that directly provides economic incentives to rural families and local and indigenous communities who have voluntarily agreed to comply with some conservation activities. An impact evaluation method (matching) was used to assess the impact of the SBP between 2008 and 2014. This study revealed that on average, the SBP reduced deforestation by 1.5% in those forests that received the SBP's direct payment. These forests would have been deforested if the SBP had not been implemented. Assessment of the impact of the SBP on individual and collective contracts, using the matching method, revealed that 3.4% and roughly 1% of the forest would have been deforested in the absence of the program, respectively. In other words, the protected area in the collective SBP was 1,247,500 ha and, if the SBP had not been implemented, an area of 11,227 ha would have been lost between 2008 and 2014. The 65,700 ha protected by the individual SBP, it was estimated that 5,733 ha were not deforested due to the implementation of the conservation program. Conventional estimates of the impact of the SBP tend to overestimate avoided deforestation because they do not control for observable covariates that correlate with or affect both SBP participation and deforestation. The conclusions are robust, even given potential hidden biases. 2020-08-20T20:58:25Z 2020-08-20T20:58:25Z 2018 Artículo https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0203545 https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/9493 en Plos One Volumen 13, Number 9 (September 2018), pages 1-14 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess application/pdf Asim Zia, University of Vermont, (Estados Unidos)
institution Centro Agronómico Tropical de Investigación y Enseñanza
collection Repositorio CATIE
language Inglés
topic ECUADOR
PROTECCION FORESTAL
CONSERVACION DE BOSQUES
INCENTIVOS FINANCIEROS
EVALUACION DE IMPACTO
DEFORESTACIÓN
BOSQUE TROPICAL
GASES DE EFECTO INVERNADERO
EVALUACION DEL IMPACTO
ECOSISTEMA
spellingShingle ECUADOR
PROTECCION FORESTAL
CONSERVACION DE BOSQUES
INCENTIVOS FINANCIEROS
EVALUACION DE IMPACTO
DEFORESTACIÓN
BOSQUE TROPICAL
GASES DE EFECTO INVERNADERO
EVALUACION DEL IMPACTO
ECOSISTEMA
Cuenca, Pablo
Robalino, Juan
Arriagada, Rodrigo
Echeverría, Cristian
Are government incentives effective for avoided deforestation in the tropical Andean forest?
description In order to ensure the provision of goods and services from forests, many governments have promoted less-traditional conservation initiatives such as programs of payments for ecosystem services called, more broadly, direct payments for conservation. The Socio Bosque Program (SBP) is a governmental program in Ecuador that directly provides economic incentives to rural families and local and indigenous communities who have voluntarily agreed to comply with some conservation activities. An impact evaluation method (matching) was used to assess the impact of the SBP between 2008 and 2014. This study revealed that on average, the SBP reduced deforestation by 1.5% in those forests that received the SBP's direct payment. These forests would have been deforested if the SBP had not been implemented. Assessment of the impact of the SBP on individual and collective contracts, using the matching method, revealed that 3.4% and roughly 1% of the forest would have been deforested in the absence of the program, respectively. In other words, the protected area in the collective SBP was 1,247,500 ha and, if the SBP had not been implemented, an area of 11,227 ha would have been lost between 2008 and 2014. The 65,700 ha protected by the individual SBP, it was estimated that 5,733 ha were not deforested due to the implementation of the conservation program. Conventional estimates of the impact of the SBP tend to overestimate avoided deforestation because they do not control for observable covariates that correlate with or affect both SBP participation and deforestation. The conclusions are robust, even given potential hidden biases.
format Artículo
author Cuenca, Pablo
Robalino, Juan
Arriagada, Rodrigo
Echeverría, Cristian
author_facet Cuenca, Pablo
Robalino, Juan
Arriagada, Rodrigo
Echeverría, Cristian
author_sort Cuenca, Pablo
title Are government incentives effective for avoided deforestation in the tropical Andean forest?
title_short Are government incentives effective for avoided deforestation in the tropical Andean forest?
title_full Are government incentives effective for avoided deforestation in the tropical Andean forest?
title_fullStr Are government incentives effective for avoided deforestation in the tropical Andean forest?
title_full_unstemmed Are government incentives effective for avoided deforestation in the tropical Andean forest?
title_sort are government incentives effective for avoided deforestation in the tropical andean forest?
publisher Asim Zia, University of Vermont, (Estados Unidos)
publishDate 2020
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0203545
https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/9493
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