ESA Working Paper No. 03-06

 

 

SMALLHOLDER AGROFORESTRY
PROJECTS: POTENTIAL FOR
CARBON SEQUESTRATION AND
POVERTY ALLEVIATION

by
Oscar J. Cacho, Graham R. Marshall and Mary Milne

 

ABSTRACT
PDF (641 KB)

Agricultural and Development Economics Division
The Food and Agriculture Organization
of the United Nations

 

ABSTRACT

This paper provides an assessment of the potential for small-holder agro-forestry projects to be competitive in markets for carbon emission reduction credits, and explores the ways in which small-holder participation in such markets may be facilitated. The paper begins with an overview of the issue of global warming and the role of carbon sinks in mitigating climate change. Then an economic model of the carbon emission reduction (CER) market is presented, which includes the impact of transactions costs. An in-depth survey of the economic literature on transactions costs and their implications in the design of markets for CER follows. An assessment of the emission abatement and transaction costs likely to be associated with smallholder agro-forestry projects is presented, based on case study information from Latin America and Indonesia. The paper concludes with policy recommendations on how to design carbon sequestration projects to benefit small-holders and suggests institutional reforms which will be necessary for reducing the transactions costs associated with small-holder participation in the market. The paper also includes a detailed annex with information on carbon sequestration projects involving small-holders which are already under implementation.


 

© FAO 2003