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Submission |
ID |
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5473 |
Submitting Entity |
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IUCN |
Submitted for |
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Fifth Ordinary Meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity (COP 5) |
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Main Information |
Title |
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Financial and policy instruments for the conservation of Mount Kenya forest, Kenya |
Description |
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Mount Kenya forest is one of the largest, most ecologically significant and commercially valuable indigenous forests in Kenya. Three major tools have been used to introduce positive incentives for conservation and to overcome the perverse incentives that encourage forest degradation and loss. These include: (a) Property rights and policy change;(b) Development of alternative products and markets; (c) Provision of finance and funding. All these measures have substantially improved community-level economic incentives for forest conservation. However, the case of Mount Kenya forest also illustrates the limitations of community incentives. Many of the economic forces driving forest degradation and loss do not arise at the local level, and are not directly related to the forest sector. Perhaps the single most important perverse incentive encouraging local forest degradation and loss is policy in the land and agriculture sectors based on extending and intensifying arable production and which still promulgates subsidies and interventions aimed at achieving these goals. |
Web Link |
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/doc/meetings/cop/cop-05/information/cop-05-inf-14-en.pdf |
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Additional Information |
Countries |
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Kenya |
Ecosystems |
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Forest Biodiversity |
Regions |
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Africa |
Incentive Measures |
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Indirect Incentives (property rights, market creation) Positive Incentives (subsidies, tax breaks, ...) Reform of Perverse Incentives Regulations / Access Restrictions |
Keywords |
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Access restrictions Conservation payments Market creation (organic production, tourism, ...) Revenue sharing with communities Strengthening property rights (land tenure, ...) Subsidy reform Parks and reserves |
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