Julia Rérolle
Published: 2013
Total Pages: 54
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Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES) have attracted international interest, to protect the supply of services from an ecosystem. The main obstacles identified in literature when creating a transaction for Ecosystem Services (ES) preservation are i) identifying the environmental problem and the main drivers of ES provisioning, ii) overcoming legal administration barrier to design the appropriate scheme, iii) estimating the value of the ES focused, iv) convincing local ES providers to change behaviors, v) finding financial and technical support, which may depend upon a large panel of partners, vi) ensuring adequate monitoring procedures for PES transaction. This paper analyses the success of a pioneering Brazilian PES water-related scheme in Extrema, a city of 25,000 inhabitants in southeast Brazil, about 100 km from São Paulo. Using an institutional analysis approach through literature review completed with interviews, this case gives an overview of the strategy adopted by the municipality of Extrema to overcome challenges to protect watershed basin in private properties through a PES scheme. The analysis of this PES case tends to portray important aspects in all the three following steps: the PES conceptualization, the project implantation and the mechanism consolidation. The efficiency of PES depended on program design based on legal framework mainly driven by the municipal Environmental Department. They first have been confronted to population resistance to enter in the project. The next challenge was the development of effective implementation system established thanks to financial, technical and material support of several stakeholders (Federal, State, Private, NGO). We raised the issue of the concentration power in one actor for the decision-making process, but it was compensated by its deep involvement at the adapted local scale. To allow a sustainable PES project, one should try to connect environmental and social concerns. Considering both social context and impacts of such a project and including rural population should be necessary.