Preferences for REDD+ Contract Attributes in Low-Income Countries : A Choice Experiment in Ethiopia

This paper informs the national and international policy discussions related to the adoption of the United Nations Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation Programme. Effective program instruments must carefully consider incentives, opportunity costs, and community interactions. A choice experiment survey was applied to rural Ethiopian communities to understand respondents’ preferences toward the institutional structure of the program contracts. The results show that respondents have particular preferences about how Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation programs are structured with regard to the manner in which the payments are divided between the households and the communities, the restrictions on using grazing land, and the level of payments received for the program. Surprisingly, restrictions on firewood collection do not significantly impact contract choice. The paper further analyzes the structure of the preferences by using attribute interaction terms and socio-demographic interaction terms. The analysis finds significant regional variation in preferences, indicating that Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation should be tailored to specific regions. Finally, the marginal willingness to pay for attributes is calculated using the traditional preference space approach, as well as the more recent willingness-to-pay approach.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dissanayake, Sahan T. M., Beyene, Abebe Damte, Bluffstone, Randall, Gebreegziabher, Zenebe, Martinsson, Peter, Mekonnen, Alemu, Toman, Michael, Vieider, Ferdinand M.
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2015-06
Subjects:ECOSYSTEM SERVICES, FOREST DEGRADATION, ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY, GREENHOUSE GAS ABATEMENT COST, FOREST MANAGEMENT, VALUATION, REDUCING EMISSIONS, NATURE, GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS, CARBON, FINANCIAL RESOURCES, TIMBER, ANIMALS, HEALTHY FORESTS, MONITORING, EMISSIONS, POLITICAL ECONOMY, CARBON MARKETS, CARBON SEQUESTRATION SERVICES, BIOGAS, FORESTRY PRODUCTS, WELFARE, ATMOSPHERE, SUSTAINABLE MANAGEMENT, INCENTIVES, TROPICAL FOREST, MODELS, GAS, INTERNATIONAL FORESTRY RESEARCH, LIVESTOCK GRAZING, GLOBAL GREENHOUSE GAS, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, TREES, AIR, GREENHOUSE GAS, WILLINGNESS TO PAY, FERTILIZERS, CARBON MITIGATION, BIOMASS, CARBON NEUTRAL, RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES, CO2, CARBON CONCENTRATIONS, FOREST PRODUCTS, FOREST SECTOR, EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENTS, ENERGY SOURCES, CAPACITY, CHOICE EXPERIMENTS, HETEROGENEITY, PREFERENCES, OPTIONS, CARBON SEQUESTRATION, CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE, WTP, POLLUTION, FORESTRY, FOREST ECOSYSTEM, TROPICAL REGIONS, WTA, ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE, FOREST RESOURCES, FOREST LOSS, ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS, GAS EMISSIONS, NATURAL RESOURCES, FUEL SWITCHING, FUELS, UNEP, CONTINGENT VALUATION, ABATEMENT COST, EFFICIENCY, GREENHOUSE GASES, CARBON EMISSIONS, RESOURCES, FOREST CARBON, FUEL WOOD, GREENHOUSE, ENVIRONMENTAL VALUATION, ECOSYSTEM, MARSH, LEAD, GREENHOUSE GAS ABATEMENT, CLIMATE CHANGE, ENVIRONMENTAL GOODS, FOREST COVER, VALUES, DEFORESTATION, CLIMATE, ABATEMENT, FORESTS, FOREST CARBON STOCKS, LAND AREA, CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION, CARBON IN FORESTS, LOGGING, FOREST, OPPORTUNITY COSTS, ENVIRONMENT, WEATHER PATTERNS, ECONOMICS, DISCOUNT RATES, TRADE, LAND, COST OF CARBON, CARBON PRICES, ECOSYSTEMS, SIMULATION, LOCAL COMMUNITIES, EMISSIONS FROM DEFORESTATION, ANNUAL GREENHOUSE GAS, FOREST BIOMASS, CARBON STOCKS, STATED PREFERENCE METHODS, COMMUNITY FORESTRY, CARBON MARKET, LESS, FOREST FIRES, WILLINGNESS TO ACCEPT, RATE OF DEFORESTATION, CLIMATE STABILIZATION, COMMUNITY, VARIANCE, RENEWABLE ENERGY, VARIETY, ENVIRONMENTAL, GASES, FOREST AREA, GLOBAL FOREST, FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE, PRICES, BENEFITS, ILLEGAL LOGGING, LAND ECONOMICS, ENERGY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/06/24602989/preferences-redd-contract-attributes-low-income-countries-choice-experiment-ethiopia
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22169
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