4.3 Article

Payments for ecosystem services in an African protected area: exploring issues of legitimacy, fairness, equity and effectiveness

Journal

ORYX
Volume 46, Issue 1, Pages 24-33

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0030605311001372

Keywords

Biodiversity; conservation payments; economic valuation; ecosystem services; ICDPs; Nyungwe National Park; pro-poor conservation; Rwanda

Funding

  1. EU FP7 European Research Council

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We explore the potential for payments for ecosystem services (PES) to reconcile conservation and development goals, using a case study of an experimental PES intervention around the Nyungwe National Park in Rwanda. The scheme involves the purchase of biodiversity conservation services from local communities in four selected locations. Although a portion of the payment is awarded at the household level, it is the collective action of the community that determines the level of the payment. Contracts are negotiated annually and include performance indicators within each participating community. We examine the ability of PES to achieve conservation and development objectives, through three sub-questions: Is the PES scheme effective? Is it legitimate and fair? Is it equitable? Our findings indicate that the relationship between these evaluation criteria is complex, with both trade-offs and synergies. In this case study the effectiveness of PES is dependent on the equitable distribution of the payment, participants' belief and acceptance of the service being paid for, institutional histories that aid in the establishment of legitimacy and fairness, and the complementary nature of PES to more conventional enforcement methods.

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