Potential trajectories of the upcoming forest trading mechanism in Pará State, Brazilian Amazon.

In 2012, the Brazilian government revised the federal Forest Code that governs the use of forest resources on rural properties. The revisions included a forest trading mechanism whereby landowners who deforested more than what is legally allowed before 2008 could absolve their deforestation "de...

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Main Author: Brenda Brito
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5381787?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-1ef694ef709146b792dfa1c585c309862020-11-24T22:12:25ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01124e017415410.1371/journal.pone.0174154Potential trajectories of the upcoming forest trading mechanism in Pará State, Brazilian Amazon.Brenda BritoIn 2012, the Brazilian government revised the federal Forest Code that governs the use of forest resources on rural properties. The revisions included a forest trading mechanism whereby landowners who deforested more than what is legally allowed before 2008 could absolve their deforestation "debts" by purchasing Environmental Reserve Quotas (CRA) from landowners who conserved more forest than legally required. CRA holds promise as a tool to complement command-and-control initiatives to reduce deforestation and incentivize restoration. However, the success of this instrument depends on how its implementation is governed. This study builds on a few recent assessments of the potential of the CRA in Brazil-but that are focused on biophysical potential-by assessing how a few key implementation decisions may influence the CRA market development. Specifically, this study estimates how decisions on who can participate will likely influence the potential forest surplus and forest debt for the CRA market, and takes into account governance characteristics relevant to the State of Pará, eastern Amazonia. In particular, the study evaluates the effects in the CRA market eligibility after simulating a validation of properties in the environmental rural registry (CAR) and assessing different scenarios surrounding land tenure status of properties. Results show how regulatory decisions on CRA market eligibility will determine the extent to which CRA will serve as a tool to support forest conservation or as a low-cost path to help illegal deforesters to comply with legislation, but with limited additional environmental benefits. The study reviews regulatory options that would reduce the risk of forest oversupply, and thereby increase the additionality of the areas eligible for CRA. Overall, the study demonstrates the importance of including governance as well as biophysical characteristics in assessing the potential of forest trading tools to deliver additional environmental conservation and restoration benefits.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5381787?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brenda Brito
spellingShingle Brenda Brito
Potential trajectories of the upcoming forest trading mechanism in Pará State, Brazilian Amazon.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Brenda Brito
author_sort Brenda Brito
title Potential trajectories of the upcoming forest trading mechanism in Pará State, Brazilian Amazon.
title_short Potential trajectories of the upcoming forest trading mechanism in Pará State, Brazilian Amazon.
title_full Potential trajectories of the upcoming forest trading mechanism in Pará State, Brazilian Amazon.
title_fullStr Potential trajectories of the upcoming forest trading mechanism in Pará State, Brazilian Amazon.
title_full_unstemmed Potential trajectories of the upcoming forest trading mechanism in Pará State, Brazilian Amazon.
title_sort potential trajectories of the upcoming forest trading mechanism in pará state, brazilian amazon.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description In 2012, the Brazilian government revised the federal Forest Code that governs the use of forest resources on rural properties. The revisions included a forest trading mechanism whereby landowners who deforested more than what is legally allowed before 2008 could absolve their deforestation "debts" by purchasing Environmental Reserve Quotas (CRA) from landowners who conserved more forest than legally required. CRA holds promise as a tool to complement command-and-control initiatives to reduce deforestation and incentivize restoration. However, the success of this instrument depends on how its implementation is governed. This study builds on a few recent assessments of the potential of the CRA in Brazil-but that are focused on biophysical potential-by assessing how a few key implementation decisions may influence the CRA market development. Specifically, this study estimates how decisions on who can participate will likely influence the potential forest surplus and forest debt for the CRA market, and takes into account governance characteristics relevant to the State of Pará, eastern Amazonia. In particular, the study evaluates the effects in the CRA market eligibility after simulating a validation of properties in the environmental rural registry (CAR) and assessing different scenarios surrounding land tenure status of properties. Results show how regulatory decisions on CRA market eligibility will determine the extent to which CRA will serve as a tool to support forest conservation or as a low-cost path to help illegal deforesters to comply with legislation, but with limited additional environmental benefits. The study reviews regulatory options that would reduce the risk of forest oversupply, and thereby increase the additionality of the areas eligible for CRA. Overall, the study demonstrates the importance of including governance as well as biophysical characteristics in assessing the potential of forest trading tools to deliver additional environmental conservation and restoration benefits.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5381787?pdf=render
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