Abstract

We estimate the effects of Peru’s oldest watershed payments for environmental services (PES) initiative in Moyobamba (Andes–Amazon transition zone) and disentangle the complex intervention into its two main forest conservation treatments. First, a state-managed protected area (PA) was established, allowing sustainable use but drastically limiting de facto land use and land rights of households in the upper watershed through command-and-control interventions. Second, a subset of those environmentally regulated households also received incentives: PES-like voluntary contracts with conditional in-kind rewards, combined with access to participation in sustainable income-generating activities of the integrated conservation and development project (ICDP) type. To evaluate impacts, we perform matching procedures and adjustment regressions to obtain the average treatment effect on the treated (ATT) of each intervention. We investigate impacts on plot-level forest cover and household welfare for the period 2010–2016. We find that both treatments—command-and-control restrictions and the incentive package—modestly but significantly mitigated primary forest loss. Incentive-induced conservation gains came at elevated per-hectare implementation costs. We also find positive effects on incentive-treated households’ incomes and assets; however, their self-perceived wellbeing counterintuitively declined. We hypothesise that locally frustrated beneficiary expectations vis-a-vis the ambitiously designed PES-cum-ICDP intervention help explain this surprising finding. We finalise with some recommendations for watershed incentives and policy mix design in Moyobamba and beyond.

Highlights

  • Learning processes regarding conservation incentives have often been based on anecdotal evidence [1, 2], rather than on rigorous impact assessments [3, 4]

  • For 2010 to 2016, we evaluate the effects of both treatment components of the Moyobamba initiative on primary and secondary forest cover at the plot level

  • Land cover effects In Moyobamba, a set of interventions to protect strategic micro-watersheds for municipal water supply has been undertaken over the last decade, with the aim of reducing erosive sedimentation and enhancing dry season flows

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Summary

Introduction

Learning processes regarding conservation incentives have often been based on anecdotal evidence [1, 2], rather than on rigorous impact assessments [3, 4]. Randomised control trials have been almost absent in testing conservation incentives, barring some recent exceptions [5]. Adding rewards to regulation in Moyobamba, Peru by the Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Cientıfico, Tecnologico y de Innovacion Tecnologica (FONDECYT), an initiative of the Consejo Nacional de Ciencia, Tecnologıa e Innovacion Tecnologica (CONCYTEC-Peru). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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