deforestation

Carlos Muñoz

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E
Focus Area(s)
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8
Interviewers
Blair Cameron
Name
Carlos Muñoz
Interviewee's Position
Mexican National Institute of Ecology (INE)
Language
English
Town/City
Mexico City
Country
Date of Interview
Reform Profile
No
Abstract

In this interview, Carlos Muñoz discusses the implementation of the Payment for Environmental Services (PES) program in Mexico. He relates how the idea for PES developed during his studies and his travels through Mexico and Latin America. While finishing his dissertation at UC Berkeley, Muñoz received an offer of employment at the Mexican National Institute of Ecology (INE). As the Director of Economic Research at INE, Muñoz worked to earmark a portion of existing water taxes to fund the PES program, which pays communities for the positive externalities of their forests. Muñoz describes the complicated but ultimately successful processes of developing the PES policy at INE and then building political consensus to pass it into law. Once this was accomplished in 2003, PES quickly gained support from the involved communities, and program funding was expanded. INE then focused on improving PES by better targeting the forests at greatest risk of being destroyed. Muñoz describes how the program successfully reduced deforestation rates and empowered communities, who used PES money for education and community forestry firms. He lastly relates the program’s greatest challenges and the influence of outside groups like the World Bank. Muñoz hopes that PES will continue to improve its targeting of forests, and sees discretional use of PES as the program’s biggest threat in the future.

Profile

At the time of this interview, Carlos Muñoz-Piña was an Independent Senior Consultant in economic analysis as well as a professor at the Mexican Autonomous Institute of Technology (ITAM). Muñoz studied economics at ITAM and holds an M.Sc degree in Environmental Economics from University College London and a Ph.D. from UC Berkeley. Muñoz has worked for the federal government of Mexico, the World Bank, and the London Environmental Economics Centre, and also worked pro-bono for various NGOs. From 2001 to 2011, he served as the Director General of Environmental Economics and Policy Research at the federal Ministry of the Environment; it was in this capacity that he implemented the PES program.

Full Audio File Size
100 MB
Full Audio Title
Carlos Muñoz Interview

Franz Tattenbach

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D
Focus Area(s)
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7
Country of Reform
Interviewers
Blair Cameron
Name
Franz Tattenbach
Interviewee's Position
Former CEO, FUNDECOR
Interviewee's Organization
FUNDECOR (Fundación de Cordillera Volcánica Central – Foundation for the Protection of the Central Volcanic Mountain Chain)
Language
English
Town/City
San Jose
Country
Date of Interview
Reform Profile
No
Abstract

In this interview, Franz Tattenbach shares his experiences as Executive Director of FUNDECOR (Foundation for the Protection of the Central Volcanic Mountain Chain) regarding forestry management and environmental services. He describes how FUNDECOR negotiated with the conservation community to pass the 1996 Forestry Law that allowed environmental service payments (PES) and explains how these reforms were implemented.  He then evaluates the successes and impacts of the PES program before going on to describe FUNDECOR’s activities and roles in the conservation community since the 1996 law. 

Other Key Terms: Cordillera, FUNDECOR (Foundation for the Protection of the Central Volcanic Mountain Chain) 

 

Profile

At the time of this interview, Franz Tattenbach José was­­ the US Agency for International Development Regional Climate Change Program’s Chief of Party and a Distinguished Fellow of the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD). Previously, he served as IISD’s President and CEO for two years and FUNDECOR’s Executive Director for seventeen, where he worked to reverse deforestation and establish sustainable forest management. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Agricultural Economics, a master’s degree in Regional Science and Spatial Economics, and a doctorate in Economic Development and Peace Science from Cornell University. 

René Castro

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D
Focus Area(s)
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12
Critical Tasks
Country of Reform
Interviewers
Blair Cameron
Name
René Castro
Interviewee's Position
Minister of Natural Resources, Energy, and Mines from 1994-1998 & Minister of Environment and Energy from 2011-2014
Language
English
Town/City
San Jose
Country
Date of Interview
Reform Profile
No
Abstract

In this interview, Dr. René Castro explains the inception and implementation of the Payment for Environmental Services (PES) program during his tenure as Minister of Natural Resources, Energy and Mines from 1994 to 1998. He describes how disputes regarding the best practices for cutting down deforestation resulted in the legal reforms, which helped propel the need for the PES. He discusses the role of members of the opposition party and the president in these reforms, including the passage of a carbon tax. Furthermore, he notes the organizational challenges of transitioning to multiple new agencies, hiring and training staff for these agencies, and balancing power among them. Finally, he reviews the program’s successes and failures and provides his advice to other developing countries pursuing similar programs of forestry reforms.  

Additional Key Terms: national parks, Ministry of Natural Resources, Energy and Mines, National Forestry Funding Fund (FONAFIFO), Costa Rican Petroleum Company (RECOPE) 

Profile

At the time of this interview, Dr. René Castro was the former Costa Rican Minister of Natural Resources, Energy, and Mines from 1994 to 1998. Castro received his undergraduate degree in Civil Engineering from the University of Costa Rica, and both a master’s degree in Public Administration and a doctoral degree in Design from Harvard University. In addition to his tenure as Minister of Natural Resources, Energy and Mines, Castro served as Vice Minister of Interior from 1984 to 1986 and the Head of Transportation Division of the Ministry of Transportation and Vice Minister of Interior from 1982 to 1984. He also served as the President of the Municipal Council of the City of San Jose. From 2010 to 2011 he served as Minister of Foreign Affairs and from 2011 to 2014 served as Minister of Environment and Energy. While in office, he was a board member of the Costa Rican Petroleum Company (RECOPE), the Public Transportation Council and the National Emergency Commission. He also worked as a consultant for the United Nations, World Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank and other development organizations. He serves as a Full Professor at INCAE Business School.  

Forests, Farms, and the Future of the Lacandon Jungle: Payments for Environmental Services in Mexico, 2007–2014

Author
Blair Cameron
Focus Area(s)
Country of Reform
Abstract

In 2007, the tropical forests of Marqués de Comillas, a municipality in Mexico’s Lacandon jungle, were disappearing rapidly. Poor farmers who had migrated to the region during the 1970s relied on clear-cutting the forest to open up land for agriculture, and they were cutting more and more trees every year. After 1997, the average deforestation rate accelerated to 4.8% per year from 2.7%. By 2005, only 35% of the municipality’s forested area remained. In 2007, former environment minister Julia Carabias decided to take action. Carabias and her team at Natura Mexicana, a nongovernmental organization, joined with local communities to enroll participants in the National Forestry Commission’s payments for environmental services (PES) program and find economic alternatives to clearing the forest for agricultural use. PES, which remunerated landholders who preserved their trees, immediately slowed deforestation in the areas where it was implemented. Natura Mexicana’s work in environmental education, land planning, and ecotourism development helped change farmers’ attitudes about the importance of protecting the rain forest.

Blair Cameron drafted this case study based on interviews conducted in Mexico in March and April 2015. The case was funded by the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation in collaboration with the Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy program at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. Case published September 2015.

Creating a Green Republic: Payments for Environmental Services in Costa Rica, 1994–2005

Author
Blair Cameron
Focus Area(s)
Country of Reform
Abstract

In 1994, Costa Rica's new minister of the environment, René Castro, faced a difficult task. The finance ministry was planning to cut the funding of a subsidy program that had started to reverse decades of forest loss, and Castro urgently needed a new policy that would sustain the program's progress. First, Castro built a broad-based coalition to press for a revamped national forestry law. The coalition persuaded the legislature to ban the conversion of forested land to other uses and to create incentives for landholder compliance. In 1997, Costa Rica implemented the world's first countrywide payments for environmental services program, which recognized the continuing economic contribution of forests in terms of greenhouse gas mitigation, biodiversity conservation, water protection, and scenic beauty. Funded by a new fossil fuel tax, carbon credit sales, and money from companies that benefited from the forests, the program offered landowners financial incentives to preserve and expand tree cover on their properties. The program helped reduce the destruction of primary forest and encouraged reforestation of degraded land. From 1997 to 2005 Costa Rica's forest cover increased to 51% of total land area from 42%.

Blair Cameron drafted this case study based on interviews conducted in Costa Rica in December 2014. The case was funded by the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation in collaboration with the Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy program of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. Case published July 2015.

Luciano Evaristo

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C
Focus Area(s)
Ref Batch Number
5
Critical Tasks
Country of Reform
Interviewers
Rachel Jackson
Name
Luciano Evaristo
Interviewee's Position
Director
Interviewee's Organization
Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources
Language
Portuguese/English
Country
Date of Interview
Reform Profile
No
Abstract

In this interview, Luciano Evaristo explains the work of IBAMA, focusing on the institute’s monitoring and inspection capabilities. The main thrust of those efforts has been on monitoring both the illegal and legal deforestation of the Amazon rain forest. Evaristo describes the technology and government coordination both in Brazil and transnationally that were required to maximize the efficiency of the monitoring system and ensure results in capturing illegal actors. He also acknowledges the challenges that arose along the way, as well as the many different creative solutions IBAMA was able to come up with each time in response. Toward the end of the interview, Evaristo takes interviewer Rachel Jackson on a step-by-step mock investigation of a deforestation violation to point out how the new monitoring technology serves to geographically locate the offense, determine its nature and magnitude, identify the person in the system, and immediately issue a fine and/or conduct an arrest on the spot.

Case Study:  A Credible Commitment: Reducing Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon, 2003–2012

Profile

At the time of this interview, Luciano de Meneses Evaristo was director of the Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources (IBAMA). Previously, he had been with IBAMA in the department of strategic management as well as in the area of environmental monitoring. In addition, Evaristo served as head of the department of environmental protection at various times from 2002 to 2012. He also was in the Brazilian government’s internal affairs office on combatting corruption.

Defending the Environment at the Local Level: Dom Eliseu, Brazil, 2008–2014

Author
Maya Gainer
Country of Reform
Abstract

A former center of the timber industry in the Brazilian Amazon, the municipality of Dom Eliseu had built its economy around deforestation—much of it illegal. In 2008, as part of a strategy to enforce the country’s environmental policies, the federal Ministry of the Environment included Dom Eliseu on a list of the worst violators of deforestation laws. The blacklist cut off residents’ access to markets and credit and made the municipality the target of intensive law enforcement. To get off the blacklist, the community had to overcome a collective-action problem. The local government had to persuade the owners of 80% of private land—more than 1,000 properties—to map their property boundaries, declare the extent of deforestation, enter their properties in the state environmental registration system, and adopt more-sustainable methods of production. The municipality also had to build the capacity to take on new responsibilities for environmental protection—most important, environmental licensing, which would enable the local government to regulate land use. With support from nongovernmental organizations and the state, Dom Eliseu successfully coordinated private compliance with the national policy and left the blacklist in 2012.

 

Maya Gainer drafted this case study based on interviews conducted in Belém and Dom Eliseu, Brazil, in September 2014. This case was funded by the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation in collaboration with the Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy program at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. Case published March 2015.

A Credible Commitment: Reducing Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon, 2003–2012

Author
Rachel Jackson
Focus Area(s)
Country of Reform
Abstract

In the early 2000s, deforestation increased sharply in the Brazilian Amazon, jeopardizing the tropical rain forest’s critical role in mitigating global climate change. In 2003, under the administration of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and his minister of the environment, Marina Silva, the federal government decided to address the problem. More than a dozen ministries worked together to draft the Action Plan for Prevention and Control of Deforestation in the Legal Amazon. Implementation, which began the following year under coordination by the Office of the Chief of Staff of the President, expanded Brazil’s system of protected areas, improved remote monitoring of the Amazon, and increased enforcement of existing forestry laws. By 2007, the deforestation rate was less than half of 2004 levels. In response to an uptick in deforestation in late 2007 and early 2008, however, the Ministry of the Environment shifted tactics. Silva and her team at the ministry published a list of municipalities that bore the greatest responsibility for deforestation. The blacklisted municipalities were targets of increased enforcement operations and sanctions. The federal government also restricted landholders’ access to credit by requiring environmental compliance to qualify for government-subsidized agricultural credit. Brazil’s decade-long effort reduced the deforestation rate in the Amazon region by nearly 75% from the 1996–2005 average annual rate.

 

Rachel Jackson drafted this case study based on interviews conducted in Brazil, in September and October 2014. This case was funded by the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation in collaboration with the Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy program at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. Case published January 2015. To learn more about how one local municipality implemented deforestation efforts, see "Controlling Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon: Alta Floresta Works Towards Sustainability." 

Associated Interview(s):  Luciano Evaristo

Controlling Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon: Alta Floresta Works Towards Sustainability, 2008-2013

Author
Rachel Jackson
Focus Area(s)
Country of Reform
Abstract

In the early 2000s, the municipality of Alta Floresta was part of Brazil’s Arc of Fire, a curving frontier of communities whose residents were clearing old-growth forests in the Amazon region so they could graze livestock, harvest timber, or cultivate crops. In 2008, the federal government cracked down on deforestation and pressured local governments to implement national environmental regulations. It created a blacklist of municipalities that were the worst violators of deforestation laws. Alta Floresta, as one of the 36 municipalities on the list, was thrust into an unfavorable national spotlight, cut off from access to rural agricultural credit, and its ranchers embargoed from selling their cattle to slaughterhouses. To get off the list, the municipality had to convince the owners of 80% of privately held land—more than 2,500 owners in all—to register their property, map property boundaries, declare the extent of deforestation, and agree to restore any illegally degraded or deforested areas within 10 years. Making compliance feasible for local ranchers meant that the municipal government had to promote more efficient agricultural production and provide opportunities for alternative livelihoods. This approach protected land set aside for restoration and reduced the economic need for future deforestation. In 2012, Alta Floresta became the third municipality in Brazil to earn removal from the blacklist.
 
Rachel Jackson drafted this case study based on interviews conducted in Brazil, in March and April 2014. This case was funded by the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation in collaboration with the Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy program at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. Case published July 2014. To learn more about national deforestation efforts, see "A Credible Commitment: Reducing Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon, 2003-2012."