An evaluation of REDD+ in community managed forests: a case study from Nepal
コミュニティ管理森林におけるREDD+の評価:ネパールのケーススタディ (AI 翻訳)
Shiva Shankar Pandey
🤖 gxceed AI 要約
日本語
REDD+プログラムがコミュニティ森林の炭素固定に与える影響と経済的トレードオフをネパールの105の森林利用グループで評価。炭素蓄積量の増加には種組成や管理方法が重要だが、参加によりコミュニティに追加コストが発生し、経済的に不利な場合が多いことを示した。非炭素便益のバンドルや代替エネルギー推進で改善可能。
English
This study evaluates REDD+ impacts on carbon stocks in community-managed forests across 105 user groups in Nepal. It finds that while there is significant potential for carbon sequestration, participation often imposes net economic costs on communities due to foregone forest products and additional activities. Outcomes can be improved by bundling non-carbon benefits and promoting alternative energy to reduce leakage.
Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.
📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters
日本のGX文脈において
日本ではJ-クレジット制度で森林吸収源を活用しており、本論文はコミュニティ森林のREDD+実装における課題と改善策を示す。日本の海外クレジット調達や国際協力の参考となる。
In the global GX context
REDD+ is a key UNFCCC mechanism for forest-based emission reductions. This paper provides empirical evidence on trade-offs and cost-effectiveness, informing global carbon offset design and policy.
👥 読者別の含意
🔬研究者:Provides empirical evidence on factors affecting carbon stock changes and economic trade-offs in REDD+ community forest projects.
🏢実務担当者:Highlights the need to bundle non-carbon benefits and reduce opportunity costs to make REDD+ projects viable for communities.
🏛政策担当者:Offers insights for designing REDD+ programs that balance carbon sequestration goals with community welfare and reduce leakage.
📄 Abstract(原文)
Deforestation and forest degradation contribute between 10 and 25% of total annual greenhouse gas emissions. The REDD+ program for reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation and promoting forest conservation, sustainable management of the forests and enhancement of forest carbon stocks is one mechanism developed in an attempt to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. Various REDD+ initiatives have been trialled in developing countries, including for community forests (CFs), which are an increasingly common form of resource management. Through the program, incentives are provided to community forest user groups (CFUGs) to encourage changes in management practices likely to increase sequestration stocks. There is, however, limited knowledge about the factors responsible for enhancing carbon stocks in CFs, the likely trade-offs within communities and the potential for increasing sequestration stocks. The overarching goal of this research is to evaluate the impacts and potential of REDD+ projects in CF systems. Results from this study provide information for the design and development of programs to increase sequestration and conservation benefits in developing countries. This study estimated carbon stocks and change in carbon stock, technical potential (maximum stocks), key factors affecting carbon stock and trade-offs between gains in sequestration and other foregone community benefits. The study covered 105 CFUGs operating within five major dominant vegetation types. Annual data of carbon pools comprising above and below ground biomass were used to analyse carbon stocks and stock changes. Where sufficient data and models for key species were available, the potential carbon stock was estimated. Social, economic and management data, including a review of existing relevant documents, key informant survey and focus group discussion were used to identify major drivers of forest carbon stock changes in CFs and added community effort and foregone cost added for REDD+. Total costs of REDD+ participation were compared with the potential carbon benefits to enable trade-offs to be identified. This study found variations in sequestration rates between CFUGs. Key variables were species type, canopy cover, elevation, age, forest scale, agriculture landholding size, disturbance levels, biomass extraction and the use of alternative energy sources. In comparing present carbon stock with the technical potential of carbon stock in forests, the study identified significant potential for REDD+ projects to increase carbon stock in CFs. On the negative side, changes in management practices added costs to communities, either through loss of forest products or through additional REDD+ activities, to the extent that the pilot REDD + projects were generally not economically beneficial for CFUGs. However, they could be made more beneficial with a reduction in the opportunity cost of community engagement (through scheduling) and the bundling of other non-carbon benefits together with carbon benefits. Outcomes could be improved through reducing ‘leakages’ resulting from a high dependency on forest resources through strategies such as the promotion of alternative energy sources (e.g. improved cooking stove and biogas).
🔗 Provenance — このレコードを発見したソース
- openalex https://doi.org/10.26192/q3163first seen 2026-07-16 04:56:30
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