TY - JOUR
T1 - Taking stock of carbon rights in REDD+ candidate countries
T2 - Concept meets reality
AU - Loft, Lasse
AU - Ravikumar, Ashwin
AU - Gebara, Maria Fernanda
AU - Pham, Thu Thuy
AU - Resosudarmo, Ida Aju Pradnja
AU - Assembe, Samuel
AU - Tovar, Jazmín Gonzales
AU - Mwangi, Esther
AU - Andersson, Krister
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - In the discourses on who should benefit from national REDD+ implementation, rights-based approaches are prominent across various countries. Options on how to create viable property rights arrangements are currently being debated by scholars, policy makers and practitioners alike. Many REDD+ advocates argue that assigning carbon rights represents a solution to insecure individual and community property rights. But carbon rights, i.e., the bundle of legal rights to carbon sequestered in biomass, present their own set of theoretical and practical challenges. We assess the status and approaches chosen in emerging carbon-rights legislations in five REDD+ countries based on a literature review and country expert knowledge: Peru, Brazil, Cameroon, Vietnam and Indonesia. We find that most countries assessed have not yet made final decisions as to the type of benefit sharing mechanisms they intend to implement and that there is a lack of clarity about who owns rights to carbon as a property and who is entitled to receive benefits. However, there is a trend of linking carbon rights to land rights. As such, the technical and also political challenges that land tenure clarification has faced over the past decades will still need to be addressed in the context of carbon rights.
AB - In the discourses on who should benefit from national REDD+ implementation, rights-based approaches are prominent across various countries. Options on how to create viable property rights arrangements are currently being debated by scholars, policy makers and practitioners alike. Many REDD+ advocates argue that assigning carbon rights represents a solution to insecure individual and community property rights. But carbon rights, i.e., the bundle of legal rights to carbon sequestered in biomass, present their own set of theoretical and practical challenges. We assess the status and approaches chosen in emerging carbon-rights legislations in five REDD+ countries based on a literature review and country expert knowledge: Peru, Brazil, Cameroon, Vietnam and Indonesia. We find that most countries assessed have not yet made final decisions as to the type of benefit sharing mechanisms they intend to implement and that there is a lack of clarity about who owns rights to carbon as a property and who is entitled to receive benefits. However, there is a trend of linking carbon rights to land rights. As such, the technical and also political challenges that land tenure clarification has faced over the past decades will still need to be addressed in the context of carbon rights.
KW - Benefit sharing
KW - Carbon rights
KW - Land tenure
KW - National implementation
KW - Reducing emissions from deforestation and degradation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84930642953&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/f6041031
DO - 10.3390/f6041031
M3 - Article
SN - 1999-4907
VL - 6
SP - 1031
EP - 1060
JO - Forests
JF - Forests
IS - 4
ER -