1 / 15

The Pro-poor Conservation Paradigm Dr Dipayan Dey South Asian Forum for Environment

The Pro-poor Conservation Paradigm Dr Dipayan Dey South Asian Forum for Environment. : Backgrounder. Nature degradation leads to poverty and poverty leads to exploitation of natural resources… A negative link.

nituna
Download Presentation

The Pro-poor Conservation Paradigm Dr Dipayan Dey South Asian Forum for Environment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Pro-poor Conservation Paradigm Dr Dipayan Dey South Asian Forum for Environment

  2. : Backgrounder • Nature degradation leads to poverty and poverty leads to exploitation of natural resources… A negative link • Addressing environmental issues and poverty together, needs community based participatory programme… A partnership on equity and reciprocity

  3. : What’s New? • An innovative financial mechanism to compensate the opportunity cost of poor communities towards environmental conservation through payment of environmental services (PES).

  4. : The Challenge… • Transforming nature services to alternative economic opportunity and translating economic benefits to conservation responsibilities… • Developing partnership between non-tangible benefits and tangible returns

  5. : The Criteria • Target Area: Global Ecological Significance, facing threat of degradation • Target Beneficiaries: Low average GDP and per-capita. • Prerequisites': Available nature services, Community dependent ecology, Loss of nature resources • Tool: Conservation CBA, Micro-Finance Compensation model

  6. : Smart Evaluators • Financial inclusion of communities towards risk spreading and compensation of opportunity cost. • No repay of loan or interest, but active volunteering to generate man hours for conservation. • Allocation of payment is based on success of measures in attaining conservation objectives.

  7. : Operating Paradigm

  8. India's First Biorights Project : East Kolkata Wetlands (EKW) • Transforming Nature Services through Ecotourism as a means of poverty alleviation and sustainable environment development through community partnership in East Kolkata Wetlands.

  9. : Project Objectives • To identify economically beneficial nature-services in the area through cost benefit analysis. • To expand economic opportunity & capacity building among local stakeholders for livelihood. • To en suit sustainable conservation objectives with poverty alleviation strategies through revenue generation in eco-friendly process. • To create awareness among local stakeholders about restoration of East Kolkata Wetlands.

  10. Environmental Impacts • 56% habitat restoration in project area (Scaled in terms of Biodiversity Index, Species IVI, Water body permanence index, Limnological assessment and EIA). • Rehabilitation of 12 priced fish species endemic to East Kolkata Wetlands. • Go-green activities: Plantation, community sanitation, awareness campaigns.

  11. Social Impacts • 450 families covered in micro-insurance policy through Biorights component. • 78% attitude change of stakeholders in conservation of wetlands. • 25 women self help groups credit linked through financial inclusion programme • 17% increase in per head income for the community partners.

  12. Implications

  13. Implications

  14. New Challanges • Conservation Priorities • Suitable CBA tool • Alternative Livelihood: Non-competitive and Un-competitive options • Micro-finance as a suitable financial paradigm • Common-trade effect • Externalities

More Related