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Small-scale forest carbon projects: Adapting CDM to low-income communities
Institution:1. James Martin 21st Century School Fellow, Environmental Change Institute, Oxford University Centre for the Environment, Dyson Perrins Building, South Parks Road Oxford, OX1 3QY, UK;2. Anthropology Department, Graduate Center, City University of New York, USA;3. Department of Environment and Water Resources of the State of Paraná, Brazil
Abstract:Given the decision to include small-scale sinks projects implemented by low-income communities in the clean development mechanism of the Kyoto Protocol, the paper explores some of the basic governance conditions that such carbon forestry projects will have to meet if they are to be successfully put in practice. To date there are no validated small-scale sinks projects and investors have shown little interest in financing such projects, possibly to due to the risks and uncertainties associated with sinks projects. Some suggest however, that carbon has the potential to become a serious commodity on the world market, thus governance over ownership, rights and responsibilities merit discussion. Drawing on the interdisciplinary development, as well as from the literature on livelihoods and democratic decentralization in forestry, the paper explores how to adapt forest carbon projects to the realities encountered in the local context. It also highlights the importance of capitalizing on synergies with other rural development strategies, ensuring stakeholder participation by working with accountable, representative local organizations, and creating flexible and adaptive project designs.
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