Costa
Rica's
'Green
Economy'
Shows
That
Money
Can
Grow
On
Trees
Controversy
stalks
the
green
economy
concept,
even
as
it
topped
the
agenda
of
world
leaders
at
the
Rio+20
summit.
Its
detractors
say
it
spells
a
commodification
of
nature
that
will
transfer
money,
power
and
land
to
elites
and
corporations
while
supporters
counter
that
our
collective
failure
to
value
nature
is
why
forests
and
other
ecosystems
are
in
such
trouble.
A
boy
jumps
into
the
Llanos
del
Cortes
waterfall
in
Bagaces.
Payment
for
environmental
services,
such
as
water
use,
could
enable
Costa
Rica
to
develop
more
sustainably.
Photograph:
Juan
Carlos Ulate/Reuters
As
the
world
watches
and
waits
to
see
how
giants
like
the
US
and
China
respond
to
our
environmental,
social
and
economic
crises,
a
small
country
–
Costa
Rica
–
has
big
lessons
to
share.
The
story
emerged
last
week
at
the
International
Institute
for
Environment
and
Development's
fair
ideas
conference
in
Rio,
when
Costa
Rican
politicians,
community
leaders
and
researchers
related
their
experiences
of
putting
the
green
economy
model
into
practice
as
they
pioneered
payments
for
environmental
services
(PES).
The
idea
is
simple:
landowners
are
rewarded
financially
for
actions
that
maintain
environmental
services
that
benefit
other
people,
who
then
pay
for
that
gain.
Lowland
water
users
would,
for
example,
pay
highland
communities
that
plant
or
protect
forests
and
so
maintain
the
flow
of
water
downstream.
Costa
Rica's
journey
to
implement
PES
began
two
decades
ago.
The
environment
minister,
René
Castro,
told
last
week's
meeting
how
in
1992,
when
Rio
hosted
the
original
Earth
summit,
there
was
plenty
of
talk
about
environmental
protection
and
international
co-operation
to
make
it
happen.
But
for
Costa
Rica,
he
said,
waiting
for
the
international
community
to
act
was
not
an
option.
The
rapid
deforestation
that
had
taken
place
in
the
country
had
begun
to
slow,
and
urgent
action
was
needed
to
nurture
this
change.
PES
was
one
of
the
routes
taken
by
Costa
Rica,
which
passed
a
law
banning
further
deforestation
and
allowing
forest
owners
to
sell
the
environmental
services
which
forests
provide.
The
law
created
an
institution,
Fonafifo,
to
broker
deals,
and
stipulated
that
a
share
of
fuel
tax
revenues
would
provide
the
finance
to
kickstart
the
process.
Oscar
Sanchez
of
Fonafifo
told
the
conference
that
although
the
fuel
tax
provided
some
stability,
new
sources
of
finance
were
needed.
Costa
Rica
realised
it
would
struggle
to
compete
with
bigger
countries
for
international
finance,
he
said,
"so
we
looked
inside
our
own
country
instead".
The
result
was
an
increase
in
water
taxes,
with
25%
of
the
revenue
now
reserved
for
paying
for
environmental
services
in
key
watersheds.
Creative
new
ways
to
fund
conservation
know
no
limits
in
Costa
Rica.
Virginia
Reyes,
from
NGO
Cedarena,
showed
her
green
bank
card,
a
debit
card
that
raises
money
for
conservation;
people
accumulate
points
as
they
use
the
card
and
the
points
are
donated
by
the
bank
to
the
biodiversity
fund.
Fonafifo
will
use
the
funds
raised
to
pay
to
protect
forests
in
areas
that
do
not
have
downstream
users
who
can
pay
for
environmental
services.
Among
those
who
receive
PES
payments
is
José
Rafael
León
from
El
Silencio
farming
co-operative.
He
told
the
meeting
in
Rio
how
the
co-operative's
members
invest
the
money
they
get
from
Fonafifo
in
activities
that
add
value
to
their
resources.
"PES
has
definitely
helped
increase
the
value
of
our
forest,
and
our
quality
of
life,"
he
said.
The
timber
produced
in
agroforestry,
for
example,
is
used
to
build
furniture.
Community
ecotourism
provides
jobs
for
women
and
young
people.
But
as
payments
for
environmental
services
took
off
in
Costa
Rica,
the
poorest
people
were
often
left
behind.
"Many
small
and
medium
farmers
in
our
region
find
it
difficult
to
enter
the
official
PES
programme,
either
because
of
legal
restrictions
on
their
land,
or
because
Fonafifo
is
not
capable
of
meeting
the
demand
because
of
their
limited
funding,"
said
Carlos
Herrera,
executive
director
of
NGO
Fundecor.
So
Fundecor
designed
a
parallel
payment
scheme
to
complement
the
national
one.
Called
PSA
Solidario,
it
forms
part
of
the
carbon
market
that
Costa
Rica
created
when
it
announced
its
intention
to
be
carbon
neutral
by
this
year.
Small-scale
farmers
who
protect
forests
can
earn
carbon
credits
that
they
sell
to
national
industries
so
they
can
offset
their
greenhouse
gas
emissions.
Although
the
payments
from
PSA
Solidario
are
20%
lower
than
in
the
national
scheme,
transactions
are
faster,
with
more
chance
of
success
because
of
less
competition.
After
many
years
of
change,
PES
now
faces
new
challenges
in
Costa
Rica
from
the
rising
price
of
land.
An
annual
PES
payment
of
$64
(£41)
per
hectare,
however
generous,
cannot
compete
against
the
$500
per
hectare
per
year
that
farmers
can
get
by
leasing
their
land
to
produce
pineapples,
or
selling
it
off
so
developers
can
build
tourist
resorts.
"Small
patches
of
forest
in
areas
with
high-value
crops
are
almost
doomed
to
slowly
disappear,
law
or
not,"
said
Herrera.
What's
clear
is
that
PES
is
not
a
panacea.
For
some
communities,
though,
PES
provides
all
three
pillars
that
define
sustainable
development
–
economic,
social
and
environmental.
Among
the
speakers
at
the
conference
in
Rio
was
Justa
Romero,
a
midwife
and
indigenous
community
leader.
"When
the
PES
began,
people
were
confused,"
she
said.
"They
thought
that
if
we
sold
the
air
from
the
trees,
it
was
a
step
from
there
to
lose
our
land."
Today,
they
see
PES
in a
positive
light.
It
supports
projects
that
bring
long-term
benefits
for
all
–
such
as
small
cocoa
enterprises
for
women,
furniture
workshops,
and
scholarships
for
doctors
and
nurses.
"Trees
are
land,
land
is
water,
water
is
life,"
Romero
said.
"PES
is
helping
us
protect
our
own
way
of
living."
By
Ina
Porras
Guardian.co.uk.
Porras
is a
researcher
at
the
International
institute
for
environment
and
development