PS 24-67
Global environmental policy in the local resource management: Analysis of REDD+ implications in the Nepal’s community forestry

Tuesday, August 12, 2014
Exhibit Hall, Sacramento Convention Center
Harisharan Luintel, School of the Environment, Portland State University, Portland, OR
Robert Scheller, Department of Environmental Sciences and Management, Portland State University, Portland, OR
Randall A. Bluffstone, Economics, Portland State University, Portland, OR
Background/Question/Methods

REDD+ is expected to reduce forest carbon emissions; sequester atmospheric carbon; promote collaboration between developing and developed countries; and support poverty alleviation effectively, quickly, and cheaply. Therefore, tropical developing countries have been increasingly interested in incorporating REDD+ provisions in their forest policy formulation/revision processes. However, there is a critical need for empirical knowledge on how REDD+ affects existing forest management, particularly in situations of decentralized forest management and strong potential effects on local communities’ livelihoods. To address this need, we sampled 130 forests using rapid-assessment surveys and surveyed 130 forest user groups and 1,300 forest dependent households across Nepal.

Results/Conclusions

Our first analysis examined some of the critical ecological, social and economic aspects to understand the implications of REDD+ on community forest management. The initial findings indicate that REDD+ brings both opportunities and challenges for the community forestry. It often highlights conflicting objectives to forest management – ecological conservation and consumptive use of forest - and adds complexities and dynamism in the forest management. It destabilizes the forest governance and re-centralizes power and authority in forest management; imposes restrictions in forest products use; increases disproportionately higher responsibilities to the communities; and undermines the unique forest ecosystem and traditional practice of forest management. However, it creates awareness about climate change in the rural communities; brings unconventional resources in the forest managing communities; brings new technology and approaches to forest management so as to increase forest productivity; link the local forest management with global environmental concerns; and capacitates the communities to understand and manage forest ecosystem as a complex process. Flexibility to adapt the core concepts of REDD+ at the national and local levels helps achieve twin goals of reducing emissions and poverty reduction through the promotion of conservation as well as judicious local use of forest resources.