| Literature DB >> 30002962 |
Mahesh Poudyal1, Julia P G Jones1, O Sarobidy Rakotonarivo2, Neal Hockley1, James M Gibbons1, Rina Mandimbiniaina3, Alexandra Rasoamanana3, Nilsen S Andrianantenaina3, Bruno S Ramamonjisoa3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While the importance of conserving ecosystems for sustainable development is widely recognized, it is increasingly evident that despite delivering global benefits, conservation often comes at local cost. Protected areas funded by multilateral lenders have explicit commitments to ensure that those negatively affected are adequately compensated. We make the first comparison of the magnitude and distribution of the local costs of a protected area with the magnitude and distribution of the compensation provided under the World Bank social safeguard policies (Performance Standard 5).Entities:
Keywords: Compensation; Conservation science; Forest conservation; Human well-being; Opportunity cost; Protected areas; REDD+; Social and environmental safeguards; Sustainable development goals; Tropical rainforest
Year: 2018 PMID: 30002962 PMCID: PMC6035863 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.5106
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Map showing the location of the Corridor Ankeniheny Zahamena (CAZ) new protected area in eastern Madagascar.
The location of the four study sites, and the pilot sites are indicated.
Characteristics of the sites selected for this study, and sample sizes for various surveys.
| Site | Fokontany, (commune) district | No. of villages | History of conservation | Enforcement of conservation rules | Compensation provided | HH survey & choice experiment sample | Agri. survey sample | Contingent valuation exercise |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. New PA with safeguard | Ampahitra (Ambohibary) MORAMANGA | 8 | Granted temporary status in 2006, formally gazetted in 2015 | Weak | Yes (World Bank social safeguards) | 102 | 25 | 62 |
| 2. New PA (no safeguard) | Sahavazina (Antenina) TOAMASINA II) | 7 | Granted temporary status–in 2006, formally gazetted in 2015 | Very weak | No | 95 | 40 | – |
| 3. Established PA (Zahamena) | Antevibe & Ambodivoangy (Ambodimangavalo) VAVATENINA | 7 | Long history of conservation (since 1927) on periphery of Zahamena National Park | Relatively strong | Park entry fees shared used to fund local development projects | 152 | 37 | – |
| 4. Established PA (Mantadia) | Volove & Vohibazaha (Ambatavola) MORAMANGA | 3 | Long history of conservation (since 1989) on periphery of Mantadia National Park | Relatively strong | Park entry fees used to fund local development projects | 104 | – | – |
Key socio-economic characteristics of the surveyed households.
| Variables | Description | Summary statistics | Coding for use in combined poverty index |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of rooms | Total number of rooms (including external kitchens) | Median = 2, Mean = 1.90, Std. dev. = 0.96 | Continuous variable (0–10) |
| House quality | Type of roof in the primary dwelling | 77% thatch | Roof type (sheet metal = 2; thatch = 1) |
| Food security (n = 452) | Number of months for which HH has enough to eat | Median = 7, Mean = 6.7, Std. dev. = 2.93 | Continuous variable (0–12) |
| Tropical livestock units | Numeric variable indicating the total livestock ownership of a household measured as “Tropical Livestock Unit” ( | Median = 0.05, Mean = 0.42, Std. dev. = 1.15 | Continuous variable (0–14.2) |
| Irrigated rice | Whether the household has access to at least one irrigated rice field | 63% no | 0 = no; 1 = yes |
| Access to lighting | Type of light and whether household have sufficient light | Median = 2, Mean = 1.96, Std. dev. = 1.05 | Type of light (firewood = 0, candle, petrol or torch = 1; solar lamp or generator = 2) AND sufficient (never or rarely = 0, sometimes = 1, mostly or always = 2) |
| ‘Radio card’ mp3 player | Binary variable indicating whether the household has an mp3 device for playing music. | 78% no | 0 = no; 1 = yes |
| Education level | Binary variable indicating low or high level of education of the household head. Low (0) = 0 to 5 years of schooling; High (1) = 6 or more years of schooling. | 90% low | NA |
| Household size | Total number of individuals considered members of the household. | Median = 5, Mean = 5.5, Std. dev. = 1.5 | NA |
| Ethnic group | Ethnic group to which the respondent household head belongs | Betsimisarika = 94%, Bezanozano = 3% | NA |
| Primary occupation | Main occupation of the household head | Agriculture = 90% Daily wage = 7% Other = 3% | NA |
| Distance from the forest (km) | Distance of the household’s main home from the nearest protected area boundary (negative values refer to households based within the protected area). | Median = 2.1, Mean = 2.3, Std. dev. = 2 | NA |
| Household age (years) | The length of time a household has been established as an independent unit (since cohabiting or starting to farm independently) | Median = 10, Mean = 14.6, Std. dev. = 13 | NA |
Note:
Where we don’t have valid data for the full data set of 453, the sample size is given in parentheses the first column. For variables included in our combined poverty index, we give details of how they were coded for inclusion in the PCA.
Figure 2Indicators of wealth.
Principal Component Analysis plots showing (A) loadings of measures of wealth, and (B) individual household scores with a convex hull for each site. Wealth axis 1 can be interpreted as an overall measure of wealth (a higher value indicates higher household wealth while wealth axis 2 distinguishes between households with larger, higher quality houses and those growing irrigated rice and with high animal numbers.
Figure 3The Net Present Value (NPV) of net household opportunity cost of conservation restrictions estimated from the choice experiment.
(A) The distribution of opportunity cost across the four study sites. (B) Coefficient plot showing the effect of study site, distance of a household from the forest frontier, household age, education of the household head and the two wealth axes on the estimated household opportunity cost.
Figure 4The relationship between annualized household opportunity cost (from the discrete choice model) as a proportion of household income, plotted against household income (in 2015 US$).
Median household income (US$233) is indicated with a dashed vertical line. Lines are locally smoothed (Loess) fits to the data for the individual discount rate.
Figure 5The underfunding of conservation compensation.
(A) A comparison between the number of households with NPV of opportunity costs greater than 2–4 times median annual household income, the number of households identified to receive compensation, and our estimate of the number fully compensated. (B) Comparison between the magnitude of the median net present value (NPV) of household opportunity cost (from our choice experiment), the maximum projected spend on compensation, and households’ ex post valuation of the compensation provided (from our contingent valuation). The inset puts these figures in the context of our estimate of the carbon value per household of the REDD+ project in CAZ. Orange bars represent results from our survey and analysis, blue bars represent data obtained from published reports about the safeguarding process.