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Learn about the Gran Reserva Chachi, a conservation project in Ecuador that provides economic incentives to indigenous communities for protecting communal land. Discover the achievements, challenges, and lessons learned in this pro-poor approach to ecosystem services.
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The Gran Reserva ChachiRewarding Indigenous Communities for Forest Conservation on Communal Land Luis SuárezConservation International Ecuador Designing “Pro-Poor” Rewards for Ecosystem Services Madison, 7-8 April 2008
The Gran Reserva Chachi Context: • Hotspot (Tumbes-Chocó-Magdalena) • High levels of poverty • High deforestation rate • Significant threats: Timber extraction and oil palm plantations • > 60% of all timber produced in Ecuador comes from this region • High opportunity costs for conservation • Little local benefits from resource exploitation
The Gran Reserva Chachi Rationale: • Conservation priority areas have people in them • Conservation means working with people • Conservation must become economically attractive to be viable • Communities must have the ability to conserve: - Rights - Resources - Capacity
The Gran Reserva Chachi Process: • Participatory design: - Prior informed consent (assemblies) - Reserve area & location - Rules definition (use & limitations) - Economic incentive (opportunity costs & needs) • Trial phase (2-4 years): - Incentive mechanism operation - Distribution of benefits - Implementation & enforcement of rules
The Gran Reserva Chachi Characteristics: • Reserve area: 7,200 ha (Strict Protection Zone) • Buffer (multiple use) area: 11,500 ha • Communities involved: 3 Chachi Centers ~ 300 families ~ 30,000 ha (total area) • Incentive: $5/ha/year + salaries for reserve guards • Other costs: Monitoring & technical assistance
The Gran Reserva Chachi Current status: • Communities are interested in the maintenance of the Reserve • Compensation is improving livingconditions (health, education & organization) • The Conservation Agreement is providing a framework for engagement on related themes: - Institutional strengthening - Capacity building - Social control and transparency • Strong community support for agreement renewal • Interest of neighboring communities to develop similar agreements (replication & enlargement)
The Gran Reserva Chachi Main achievements: Conservation • 7.200 ha protected in the buffer zone of a key Ecological Reserve • Globally endangered species protected: • Long-Wattled Umbrellabird • Great Curassow • Brown-Headed Spider Monkey • 8 local reserve guards trained • Patrol mechanisms established
The Gran Reserva Chachi Main achievements: Local development • Enterprises established in 2005 are still functioning (e.g. gas station, store) • Households infrastructure has improved (e.g. piped water, zinc roofs) • Community members have access to medicines & to financial support for emergencies • Children have access to school materials • Techniques to improve cacao production have been implemented
The Gran Reserva Chachi Main achievements: Transparency • The leadership of the Centers has been legalized • Social control has improved (e.g. reporting the incentive management in assemblies) Distribution of benefits • Marginalized groups are direct beneficiaries of the incentives (e.g. women enterprises)
The Gran Reserva Chachi Main achievements: Sustainability • Seed capital raised for a Trust Fund (~$150k of $2 million needed; commitment for $150k more) • Interest from different donors & sources(GCF, CSP, GTZ, USAID, Coldplay, Forest Trends)
The Gran Reserva Chachi Challenges: Conservation • Reduce the pressure of timber companies & middlemen • Prevent the invasion of the Reserve by other communities • Strength Reserve ownership by the Chachi communities • Improve patrolling and enforcement of rules (e.g. denouncing illegal logging or hunting in the Reserve) • Implement an environmental education and communication program
The Gran Reserva Chachi Lessons learned: • Changes in the way the Chachi manage their natural resources take time • A strong technical support and follow-up in the field is a key factor • Sanctions must be applied if the agreement is broken • Pressure groups interested in timber are constantly working to break the agreements by dividing local communities (individual vs. collective benefits) • External factors may negatively affect conservation agreements
The Gran Reserva Chachi Conclusions: • Conservation Agreement is an economic tool that provides direct and stable benefits (income) to resource owners • It allows conservation to be economically viable and competitive in relation to unsustainable uses (e.g. forest exploitation and conversion) • It provides a framework for making conservation feasible for local communities (e.g. rights, resources, and capacity) • It creates a direct link between conservation and poverty reduction • It seems to be an efficient, fair and effective mechanism for community conservation