forests and water: valuation and payments for forests ...€¦ · forests and water: valuation and...
Post on 10-May-2020
5 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
FORESTS
Forests and Water: Valuation and Payments for Forests Ecosystem Servicesa study paper
Presentation for the Workshop of the COST Action Payments for Ecosystem Services (Forests for Water)
Wednesday 18 October 2017, Opatija, Croatia
FFORESTS
Regional ScopeUNECE/FAO Forestry and Timber Section
3
The forest in the UNECE region has an extent of 1.89 billion ha which is more than 41% of the global total
FFORESTS
Objective: The forests-water connection as it is relevant for Payment for Ecosystem Services schemesCoverage1. Forest-water regulatory framework2. Valuation of and payment for water related forest
ecosystem services3. Database and exchange of experiences and best
practices in the UNECE region Pre-release of the database on forest-related PES schemes is published here: http://www.unece.org/forests/areas-of-work/policy-dialogue-and-advice/ecosystem-services/table-of-case-studies.html
Objectives and Coverageof the study paper
4
FFORESTS
Global2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and its 17 Sustainable Development GoalsUN Forum on Forests – Strategic Plan for Forests 2017-2030Shiga Declaration on Forests and WaterRamsar Convention; Conv. on Biological Diversity; UNECE Water Conv.
RegionalEU Water Framework DirectiveDanube/Rhine/Alpine Convention
NationalA selection of examples is described in the study paper
Regulative FrameworksIn the UNECE region, some examples
5
FFORESTS
Forest and Water interrelationsa mutual interdependency
6
Forest eco-hydrological functions
Retention
Stabilization
Nutrient cycle
FFORESTS
Payments for?Frequency of types of management practices among 68 Water Payments
schemes in EU
7
51%
49%
40%
38%
38%
31%
24%
19%
19%
18%
13%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60%
Improved farming practices
Chemical inputs restrictions
Reforestation
Farm capital works
Livestock limits
Improved forest management
Wetlands restoration - maintainance
Forest hydrology management practices
Water ways monitoring and cleaning
Organic certification
Water protection areas
31%
0%
%
%
Source: Leonardi, 2015.
Forest management
practices
FFORESTS
Database of case studies177 active water-related PFES schemes in 33 countries
8
Inventory of the 56 UNECE member States was carried out based on previous work by ETIFOR Srl (for European region) and Ecosystem Marketplace (for North America). Results
33 countries with a total of 238 schemes; these were further broken into two main categories; “Active” schemes and “Non-active” (including pilot, design phase, and unknown) > resulted in a total number of 177 active schemes23 member States have no reference to any forest and water ecosystem services schemes (Andorra, Belarus, Bosnia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Moldova, Monaco, Norway, Russia, San Marino, Slovakia, Turkmenistan and Vatican City)
FFORESTS
Database of case studies177 active water-related PFES schemes in 33 countries
9
101 68 0 5 2 0 10
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
North America EU Former SovietRepublics
EFTA countries Balkan Countries Western EuropeanMicrostates
Israel
Active Non-Active
FORESTS
WWhy are there no active water-related PFES sschemes in former Soviet countries?
10
FORESTSCommand and control policy
Authorities have limited interest for PES approaches and economic instruments in generalUnwillingness (especially on central levels of the governments) to institute separate financial flows that may lend themselves to corruption
limited willingness of various stakeholders and sectors to pay for ecosystem servicesLow political priority of environmental protection and weak institutions in limits the enforceability of legislationPublic ownership of forestsLack of integrated policy making in former Soviet Union
Weakly involved finance and tax authoritiesSeparation between policy making for forestry and water managementLack of formal frameworksWater management policies are generally weak
Limited understanding of the principles and practice of payment for ecosystem services
FFORESTS
Database of case studies177 active water-related PFES schemes in 33 countries
11
FFORESTS
Defining and measuring ecosystem servicesLegal and regulative frameworkEffective/efficient/equity payment mechanismsMonitoringCommoditizationCommunication
Challenges related to water-related PFESa selection
12
FFORESTS
Water related co-benefits are site and human specific > need for local research, monitoring and evaluationPayment schemes may help local partnership for forest-water win-win solutionsUnderstanding the wide range of values related to the water from forests is essential to promote responsible decision-makingThere is a growing interest to understand how new economic opportunities can emerge from ecosystem services PES schemes and new local ventures emerge and contribute to long term economic development and livelihoods in a particular area. This development is not only a problem of science but also of government and administration.More bottom-up initiatives and reflective governmental actions are needed in the face of entrepreneurial initiativesStrong need to spread best practices
Conclusions
13
European Environment Agency (EEA)Western UniversityEtiforEcosystem MarketplaceFAO Mountain and Watershed Team
CContributors
14
FFORESTS
FORESTS
Theresa Loeffler, theresa.loeffler@unece.orgUNECE/FAO Forestry and Timber Section, www.unece.org/forests18 October 2017
Thank you!
FFORESTS
1. Forest sedimentation control2. Recreation, swimming, fishing, camping
and water storage3. Hydroelectric station4. Municipal water supply5. City and industrial waste treatment plant6. Pump to equalizing reservoir for irrigation7. Diversion dam and lake8. High-level irrigation canal9. Flood control10. Erosion control: stream drams, contour
terracing and wetland restoration11. Regulating basin for irrigation12. Wildlife refugee13. Low level irrigation canal14. Agriculture irrigation15. Contour ploughing16. Sprinkler irrigation17. Community Water Treatment Plan18. Navigation: barge, trains, locks19. Re-regulating reservoir with locks20. Farm pond with pisciculture
Water-related Forest Servicessome examples
16Source: Smith et al., 2006.
top related