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Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management Prospects for REDD+ in swidden landscapes Ole Mertz, Jean-Christophe Castella, Thoumthone Vongvisouk, Neil Dawson, Rikke Brandt Broegaard, Laura Vang Rasmussen, Guillaume Lestrelin, Sithong Thongmanivong

Prospects for REDD+ in swidden landscapes

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Page 1: Prospects for REDD+ in swidden landscapes

Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management

Prospects for REDD+ in swidden landscapesOle Mertz, Jean-Christophe Castella, Thoumthone Vongvisouk, Neil Dawson,

Rikke Brandt Broegaard, Laura Vang Rasmussen, Guillaume Lestrelin, Sithong Thongmanivong

Page 2: Prospects for REDD+ in swidden landscapes

• International conventions – biodiversity, climate• Global consumer pressure – sustainable production, certified

products• International conservation NGOs and development agencies –

double roles?• National and international agri-businesses• National policy targets

• land sparing seen as economic development• land sharing the traditional practice, ignored

by policy• … but not always

• Science?

Policies on shifting cultivation (SC) in SEAsia

Country SC Illegal by lawSC de facto illegal

by indirect legislation

SC legal, but restricted to certain areas and/or short

fallows

Agricultural and forestry

policies aim to stop SC

SC legal and without

restrictions

Bangladesh X     X  Bhutan X     X  Brunei       X  Cambodia     X    China       X  India X   X X  Indonesia       X  Laos     X X  Malaysia   X   X  Myanmar       X  Nepal   X      Papua New Guinea         XPhilippines X X X X  Sri Lanka     X X  Thailand X X   X  Timor-Leste       X  Vietnam     X X  

Page 3: Prospects for REDD+ in swidden landscapes

Land use change in northern Laos (and elsewhere in SEAsia)

Will incentive-based REDD+ payments stop deforestation?

Deforestation in northern Laos = about 40t CO2 ha-1 year-1

Carbon price: 1 ton CO2 = 10 US$ (World Bank 2015)

REDD+ annual income: 400 US$ ha-1 year-1

Rubber ≈ 6,000-8,000 US$ ha-1 year-1 (2012 data)

Page 4: Prospects for REDD+ in swidden landscapes

What will it take to conserve forests and improve livelihoods?

Page 5: Prospects for REDD+ in swidden landscapes

But first some further obstacles

This sign says that Homephan village in Huaphan province has ended the cutting of forest for the purpose of shifting cultivation

Page 6: Prospects for REDD+ in swidden landscapes

Land sparing in Laos policies: replace shifting cultivation to spare forests, e.g. through REDD+

But also realize ‘land capital’ with agricul-tural investments

Page 7: Prospects for REDD+ in swidden landscapes

Obstacles for REDD+ in Laos

• Contradictory policies: REDD+ and biodiversity conservation land development and investment

• Land tenure has not been clarified by multiple land use planning excercises, e.g.:• previous land allocation overruled by revised protected area boundary• only 3 out of 76 villages had land titled• … and here only house plots, not agricultural land

• REDD+ implementation stalled by institutional re-organizations and associated lacking human resource capacity

• Local authorities hesitant to monitor and report on policy compliance when policies are contradictory (and poorly understood, such as REDD+)

• But this gives room for maneuvering for both civil servants and local communities and the situation is not necessarily perceived as undesirable…

Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management

Page 8: Prospects for REDD+ in swidden landscapes

Dramatic conversions where both forests and mosaic shifting cultivation landscapes disappear

Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management

Page 9: Prospects for REDD+ in swidden landscapes

Importance of mosaic landscapes for livelihoods

Khorn Ngua and Son Kua: Shifting cultivation with rice and maizePhon Song: Continuous maize cultivation

Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management

Page 10: Prospects for REDD+ in swidden landscapes

Importance of mosaic landscapes for nutrition

Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management

Page 11: Prospects for REDD+ in swidden landscapes

Conclusions

• Shift focus from strict conservation of forest to landscapes

• REDD+ cannot do the job alone – other ecosystem services are essential for local people’s health and livelihood and need to be valued

• Essentially this calls for a political recognition of the multifunctional landscape in Southeast Asia:mosaics that integrate protected forest, productive forest, extensive and intensive agriculture

Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management

References:Broegaard RB, Rasmussen LV, Dawson N, Mertz O, Vongvisouk T. (in review) Wild food collection and nutrition under

commercial agriculture expansion in agriculture-forest landscapes. Resubmitted to Forest Policy and EconomicsBroegaard RB, Vongvisouk T, Mertz O (in press): Contradictory Land Use Plans and Policies in Laos: Tenure Security and the

Threat of Exclusion. World Development, online. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2016.08.008Rasmussen LV, Christensen AE, Danielsen D, Dawson N, Martin A, Mertz O, Sikor T, Xaydongvanh P (in press): From food to

pest: Conversion factors determine switches between ecosystem services and disservices. Ambio, online. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13280-016-0813-6  

Rasmussen LV, Mertz O, Christensen AE, Danielsen F, Dawson N, Xaydongvanh P (2016): A combination of methods needed to assess the actual use of provisioning ecosystem services. Ecosystem Services 17:75-86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoser.2015.11.005

Vongvisouk T, Lestrelin G, Castella J-C, Mertz O, Broegaard RB, Thongmanivong S (in press): REDD+ on hold: Lessons from an emerging institutional setup in Laos. Asia Pacific Viewpoint, online. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/apv.12134

Vongvisouk T, Broegaard RB, Mertz O, Thongmanivong S (2016): Rush for cash crops and forest protection: Neither land sparing nor land sharing. Land Use Policy 55:182–192. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.landusepol.2016.04.001

Page 12: Prospects for REDD+ in swidden landscapes

Thank You!