SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  11
PSE:  Questions Politiques Slayde Hawkins Forest Trends/Katoomba Group Atelier de Formation sur les Paiements pour les Services Environnementaux (PSE) et la Réduction des Emissions résultant du Déboisement et la Dégradation (REDD+) Nairobi, Kenya – 9 août  2011
[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],Vue d’ensemble: Questions Politiques Clés
[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],Les PSE Autoriés par la Loi?
[object Object],[object Object],Droits Fonciers: Définition ,[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object]
[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],Régime Foncier, Services Environnementaux ,[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object]
[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],Régime Foncier: Défis Communs
[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],Application des Lois Existantes
[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],Impôts Potentiels
Liste de Contrôle Politique pour les PSE ,[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],Pour plus d’informations: www.katoombagroup.org/legal
[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],Politiques pour attirer les acheteurs
MERCI! Slayde Hawkins Forest Trends/Katoomba Group [email_address]

Contenu connexe

Plus de Pro-poor Rewards for Environmental Services in Africa ICRAF

Plus de Pro-poor Rewards for Environmental Services in Africa ICRAF (20)

Report of the FORMAS - PRESA stakeholder workshop - September 2011
Report of the FORMAS - PRESA stakeholder workshop - September 2011Report of the FORMAS - PRESA stakeholder workshop - September 2011
Report of the FORMAS - PRESA stakeholder workshop - September 2011
 
Questions politiques clés pour les pse et le mécanisme redd fr
Questions politiques clés pour les pse et le mécanisme redd   frQuestions politiques clés pour les pse et le mécanisme redd   fr
Questions politiques clés pour les pse et le mécanisme redd fr
 
Defis institutionnels dans la mise en oeuvre du bassin versant de sasumua au ...
Defis institutionnels dans la mise en oeuvre du bassin versant de sasumua au ...Defis institutionnels dans la mise en oeuvre du bassin versant de sasumua au ...
Defis institutionnels dans la mise en oeuvre du bassin versant de sasumua au ...
 
Conditions de Réussite de Projet: La Faisabilité Economique et Sociale des PSE
Conditions de Réussite de Projet: La Faisabilité Economique et Sociale des PSEConditions de Réussite de Projet: La Faisabilité Economique et Sociale des PSE
Conditions de Réussite de Projet: La Faisabilité Economique et Sociale des PSE
 
Potential ‘value’ of ecosystem services vis-à-vis cost of project implementat...
Potential ‘value’ of ecosystem services vis-à-vis cost of project implementat...Potential ‘value’ of ecosystem services vis-à-vis cost of project implementat...
Potential ‘value’ of ecosystem services vis-à-vis cost of project implementat...
 
Conservation of Critical Chimpanzee Habitats in Bugoma-Budongo Corridor Fores...
Conservation of Critical Chimpanzee Habitats in Bugoma-Budongo Corridor Fores...Conservation of Critical Chimpanzee Habitats in Bugoma-Budongo Corridor Fores...
Conservation of Critical Chimpanzee Habitats in Bugoma-Budongo Corridor Fores...
 
Criteria for a good process flow diagram (PFD)
Criteria for a good process flow diagram (PFD)Criteria for a good process flow diagram (PFD)
Criteria for a good process flow diagram (PFD)
 
Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 3: Project design
Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 3: Project designSocial and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 3: Project design
Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 3: Project design
 
Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 3: Project design
Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 3: Project designSocial and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 3: Project design
Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 3: Project design
 
Agenda kenya uganda sia workshop 10-12 aug
Agenda kenya uganda sia workshop 10-12 augAgenda kenya uganda sia workshop 10-12 aug
Agenda kenya uganda sia workshop 10-12 aug
 
Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 2: ‘Without Project’ a...
Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 2: ‘Without Project’ a...Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 2: ‘Without Project’ a...
Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 2: ‘Without Project’ a...
 
Introduction to Social Impact Assessment for REDD+ Projects, Nairobi, 10 - 12...
Introduction to Social Impact Assessment for REDD+ Projects, Nairobi, 10 - 12...Introduction to Social Impact Assessment for REDD+ Projects, Nairobi, 10 - 12...
Introduction to Social Impact Assessment for REDD+ Projects, Nairobi, 10 - 12...
 
Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 1: Starting conditions...
Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 1: Starting conditions...Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 1: Starting conditions...
Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 1: Starting conditions...
 
Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 7: Data collection, an...
Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 7: Data collection, an...Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 7: Data collection, an...
Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment (SBIA) Stage 7: Data collection, an...
 
Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment - the 7 stages
Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment  - the 7 stagesSocial and Biodiversity Impact Assessment  - the 7 stages
Social and Biodiversity Impact Assessment - the 7 stages
 
Payments for ecosystem services: policy issues
Payments for ecosystem services: policy issuesPayments for ecosystem services: policy issues
Payments for ecosystem services: policy issues
 
Key policy issues for PES and REDD+
Key policy issues for PES and REDD+Key policy issues for PES and REDD+
Key policy issues for PES and REDD+
 
Introduction to PES and REDD+: Implications for participating land managers
Introduction to PES and REDD+: Implications for participating land managersIntroduction to PES and REDD+: Implications for participating land managers
Introduction to PES and REDD+: Implications for participating land managers
 
Rewarding upland farmers for reducing sedimentation: A river care scheme
Rewarding upland farmers for reducing sedimentation: A river care schemeRewarding upland farmers for reducing sedimentation: A river care scheme
Rewarding upland farmers for reducing sedimentation: A river care scheme
 
Guide to structuring a PES project
Guide to structuring a PES projectGuide to structuring a PES project
Guide to structuring a PES project
 

Pse questions politiques fr

  • 1. PSE: Questions Politiques Slayde Hawkins Forest Trends/Katoomba Group Atelier de Formation sur les Paiements pour les Services Environnementaux (PSE) et la Réduction des Emissions résultant du Déboisement et la Dégradation (REDD+) Nairobi, Kenya – 9 août 2011
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • 4.
  • 5.
  • 6.
  • 7.
  • 8.
  • 9.
  • 10.
  • 11. MERCI! Slayde Hawkins Forest Trends/Katoomba Group [email_address]

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. PSE peuvent être interdits par la Constitution ou la loi Il peut être une interdiction sur la vente de services écosystémiques, comme un bien public qui est tenu au nom de tous Si la vente de crédits SE est interdite, il peut être néanmoins légal de faire des contrats pour fournir des services qui restaurent ou conservent les services écosystémiques
  2. Land tenure is the legal or customary relationship of an individual or group with respect to land and other natural resources, such as water and trees. Tenure rules define how access is granted to rights to use, control, and transfer land, and associated responsibilities and restraints. Put simply, land tenure rules determine (1) who can use (2) what resources (3) for how long, and (4) under what conditions. FAO. 2002. Land tenure and rural development , 3.1. Rome: FAO Economic & Social Development Department. http://www.fao.org/DOCREP/005/Y4307E/y4307e00.htm
  3. Rights in the Project Area Project participants who have insufficient rights in land and natural resources in the project area cannot guarantee that project activities will continue as promised, resulting in risks to ecosystem service generation. At a minimum, project participants must have the right to perform project activities and to exclude incompatible uses for the duration of the project Customary rights may provide sufficient legal certainty, depending upon the circumstances. However, a lack of formal tenure rights exposes project participants and potential buyers to higher risk of challenge or conflict. Rights in Ecosystem Services (i.e. carbon, water quality, biodiversity) Rights to sell ecosystem services credits generally must be implied from laws that are not directly applicable, because there are few official rules that explicitly allocate ecosystem services rights. How to treat these rights is often an open question, although they generally are tied to rights in land or natural resources. For example, a land owner may be considered to have the right to sell ecosystem services credits generated on his or her land. Alternately, the person entitled to manage a forest area for timber could have the right to ecosystem service credits generated from that forest, for example, because of improved forest management, decreased logging, or other actions.
  4. In many ecosystems, tenure is unclear or insecure, because land title is not validly vested in local land users, land use arrangements are poorly defined or recorded, or because it is unclear who has rights to ecosystem services revenues, or whether transferring credits to ecosystem services is permitted by law. There may be restrictions on a person or entity’s ability to transfer ecosystem services rights, particularly if natural resources are held by the government in trust for the people as a whole. Transfer restrictions may impair the ability to sell ecosystem services credits, such as carbon credits. If tenure problems are severe, they can make a PES project infeasible because risks to investors or buyers are too high, because relevant standards organizations will not validate and verify credits, and/or because necessary governmental approvals cannot be obtained. Policies and programs that improve titling and registration of tenure rights and provide for demarcation of area that are not officially allocated to local users can be very effective in laying the necessary foundation for PES. The process of demarcating land, however, is likely to be highly politically charged and technically difficult and is not a quick fix, by any means. Beyond minimum requirements, the level of rights in the project area is an important dimension of project risk. In general, the clearer and more secure are project participants’ rights, the lower the risk and the potential for disputes.
  5. To evaluate potential policy options, it is necessary to understand how the existing policy, legal, and regulatory frameworks apply to PES projects. Because laws and regulations were not written with PES in mind, their implications for PES can be difficult to identify with certainty. Nevertheless, sources of applicable law and their likely impacts can – and must – be assessed in light of specific local and national circumstances. In general, applicable laws will be found in a country’s framework environmental, water, and forestry laws, as well as their laws on land and natural resources, agriculture, planning and infrastructure, and indigenous peoples. Depending on the host country, national laws and regulations may be readily available on the internet or at a library. However, “common law,” the law developed by judges through court decisions, is also important in many countries (so-called “common law” countries), and is likely to be significantly more difficult to find and interpret. It will also be important to identify applicable local laws and regulations, which may be harder to find than their national counterparts. Furthermore, legal language can be difficult for a layperson to interpret accurately. A local lawyer should be consulted to help identify the likely effect of all applicable laws and regulations. The government bodies that are most likely to have regulatory authority include those in charge of the environment, agriculture, and forestry. If the host country has a climate change office or Designated National Authority (DNA), this would also be a natural place to look for more information specifically about carbon issues. In most places, applicable laws were not written with PES in mind, meaning that project developers must watch out for gaps or overlaps in regulation and missing or inconsistent legal requirements. For example, the ministries of environment and agriculture, which often have overlapping authority over forests, water resources, and land, may each have a valid claim of regulatory authority over PES. In exercising their authority, they may impose inconsistent or even contradictory requirements on sellers and project developers.
  6. Tax implications of project activities are important to understand because of the effect they can have on the project’s revenue. Carbon revenue taxes are still uncommon, but apply in some places. Guarantee part of carbon revenues to government. Failure to consider the tax consequences of a carbon project or transaction may mean the difference between a profit and loss. The applicability and impact of these and other taxes depends entirely upon the circumstances of the particular project. For example, a project proponent that is a for-profit private enterprise may face very different tax obligation than a community enterprise or NGO. A formal tax analysis, conducted after the completion of project planning (i.e. when the structure of the project and relationships between the parties are clear) will help project participants structure carbon transactions so as to minimize tax liability while ensuring that the project is in full compliance with tax law.