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Reward to the Upland Poor for Environmental Service, Food Security and/or Environmental Sustainability? Case of Sloped Upland Conversion Program (SLCP) in China. XU Jianchu Center for Biodiversity and Indigenous Knowledge http://www.cbik.org. Background.
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Reward to the Upland Poor for Environmental Service, Food Security and/or Environmental Sustainability? Case of Sloped Upland Conversion Program (SLCP) in China XU Jianchu Center for Biodiversity and Indigenous Knowledge http://www.cbik.org
Background • 1998, Floods in downstream of Yangtze • ……Logging Ban or “Natural Forest Protection Program” in 1998 • ……Sloped Upland Conversion Program in 1999 • Rational: logging and upland farming contribute to erosion and flooding
Timber Extraction in Diqing Prefecture, NW Yunnan1974-1999 (Unit: 1,000 m3)
Rational beyond State’ decision • No good forest to log, structure adjustment in state logging companies • Too much grain production, no rooms for storage
Incentive • Targeted farmland >25o • Planted forest or grass, mono-culture, state recognized species • 90USD/hectare for seedings • unprocessed “rice” 2250kg/ha/year, subsidized for 5-8 years • 36USD/ha/year for schooling and healthcare • Private ownership, whose land, who owns the tree
Farmland within major watersheds of Yunnan (Yunnan Upland Conversion Draft Plan, 2001)
“Snowball” Inquiry from Yunnan Provincial Government • From small-scale to large scale • Each year subsidy • What happen, if state no surplus grain? • At what extend, the state can sustain financially • Recently debate on food security
Environmental Services • What do environmental services mean for local farmers?
Environmental services (water, B, C) Area Spatial Mismatch • What are the most cost-benefit efficient scale for SLCP? • Where are the ‘hotspots’?
Time Mismatch Services Goods Time Payment for future
Competing Knowledge System:Scientific v.s. indigenous • Characterization of smallholder upland farming • Composite: mosaic of land use and landscapes • Diversity of crops: agrobiodiversity • Environment friendly technology • Even early stage of secondary vegetation has little soil erosion • Characterization of commercial large-scale plantation • Rubber plantation • Tea garden (heavy erosion in the first storm) • Large-scale land clearing (e.g. sugarcane plantation) • Tobacco (why not plantation?) • Misperception • Soil erosion: Forest < grass < crops • Land use practices is more important (e.g., sweet potato cultivation in swidden field in Ifugao, Philippines)
Biodiversity indices in swidden-fallow succession vegetation
What drive land use/cover change? Conversion without compensation
Competing Objective • Household farmers (the poor vs. the rich) • Local environment goods and services • On-site and off-site • Upstream and downstream • National vs. international (e.g., GMS region) • Whose agenda and objectives accounted? • How are decisions made at which levels? (quota, where, which species, how)
Priority Setting • What are the proper incentives (opportunist farmers vs. converted farmers)? • Where are the critical areas (biophysical environment, land use practices and socio-economic demands) for SLCP? • At what scale, the collective action of small-sale farmers can contribute to environmental services? (e.g., 60% forest cover in Baoshan and NW Yunnan)
SLCP Forest cover Biodiversity Time Ecological Perspective:Forest Cover vs Biodiversity What are the impacts of these SLCP on biodiversity and ecosystem functioning? How do these translate into changes in ecosystem services in short-term and long-run? Does increasing forest cover contribute to increase biodiversity (specie richness)? What are forest cover and land use/cover change contribution to runoff and water/hydrological dynamics?
Technical Perspective How does SLCP affect the tradeoffs between gains and losses of ecosystems goods and services (e.g. carbon storage via plantations vs biodiverse secondary succession)?
Social Application • At what extend, does SLCP contribute to strengthen or weaken the customary or existing institutions between upland and lowland? • SLCP as a emerging institutions or another wave of commercialization of plantation or territorilization ?
Fairness and Equity • How to recognize the local and historical initiatives for SLCP? • e.g.: • Baoshan • Shifting cultivators • More than SLCP
Household Livelihoodand Decision-making • How does SLCP changes in ecosystem goods and services affect the capabilities, livelihoods and vulnerability of people and land use? • What are the effects of the spatial distribution of human systems: population density, economic resources, decision and power structures on the delivery and exploitation of ecosystem services? • How do farmers make decisions under changing conditions of risk and uncertainty, and what are the implications for the sustainability SLCP? • How do local institutions (governance, markets, property rights), policy, and social organization affect household decisions on adaptation of SLCP?
Pathways • What are possible pathways towards sustainable land practices? • What are the possible pathways towards sustainable livelihoods? • What are the possible pathways towards sustainable and responsible society? • SLCP: as social construction process rather than technical/economic solution • Social credit and creditability (farmers’ access to information, market and decision-making) • Financial credit and creditability (access to credit and financial support) • Access to social insurance system (healthcare, low-income security) • Access to training, education, job opportunities and alternative livelihoods