A Framework Proposal for the Ex Post Evaluation of a Solution-Driven PES Scheme: The Case of Medvednica Nature Park
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Review of the Literature
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. A Solution-Driven PES Framework Proposal: Design, Implementation, and Impacts
2.1.1. Goal and Identification Area
- Demand-driven: this is the case when service users encounter a problem in its provision and are willing to pay for its maintenance or improved provision—for example, improving the quality and quantity of drinking water (off-site). In this case, service providers are incentivised to produce it;
- Supply-driven: this is found when there is a problem on-site, related to the conservation and management of the ecosystem. In this case, the economic contribution by the service users helps the provider to maintain or improve the management of the natural resource for the benefit of both the ecosystem and the users;
- Solution-driven: this occurs when a third-party organisation identifies cases where the creation of a PES scheme would be feasible and beneficial.
2.1.2. Governance
- Access and use: the possibility of choosing who can have access to and whom to exclude from the land for use;
- Control: the possibility of choosing what land is to be used for;
- Transfer: the possibility of transferring the right of access, use, and control to other persons, by selling, mortgaging, or bequeathing the land tenure.
2.1.3. Ecosystem Services
2.1.4. Market
2.1.5. Stakeholders
- Service producers/sellers: the public or private land and forest owners who conserve and manage the natural resource;
- Service users/buyers: who are willing to pay for the provision of the service and may also be public or private;
- Intermediaries: who connect producers and users and who support the creation of the PES scheme, for example, trade associations, public institutions, and NGOs. This category also includes donors, regulators who influence, control, and facilitate the start-up and effectiveness of PES and funding agencies that support the start-up and operation of the scheme with for example feasibility studies;
- Knowledge providers: those who provide advice, knowledge, and assistance for the development of the PES scheme, such as experts, planners, universities, and research institutes and consultants.
2.1.6. PES Scheme
- A single service provider and service user (one-to-one): such as the case of the government or a company that comes into direct contact with an individual forest or landowner [12];
- Many service providers and a single service user (many-to-one): such as the case of Vittel with farmers in France [65];
- A single service provider and many service users (one-to-many): such as the case of the UK Ministry of Defence and retail companies and the North Pennines AONB with the UK Woodland Carbon Code in Cumbria [66];
- Many service providers and service users (many-to-many): such as the case of water certificates issued by the Bonneville Environmental Foundation between private sector businesses and landowners in the USA [67].
- Arrangement: whether it is based on improved management practices (action-based), on the actual provision of the ecosystem service (result-based), or mixed (hybrid-based);
- Type: whether it is cash, in-kind, or mixed;
- Time: whether it occurs as a one-off, or whether it is periodic, or mixed;
- Frequency: whether it occurs upfront, after practice improvement, or after service delivery.
2.1.7. Impact Evaluation
2.2. Case Study
2.3. Data Collection
2.3.1. Data Mining
2.3.2. Document Review
2.3.3. Semi-Structured Interviews
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- Gender:
- Male;
- Female.
- Age:
- 6–17;
- 18–30;
- 31–45;
- 46–60;
- >60.
- Level of education:
- Completed primary education;
- Skilled worker;
- Completed secondary education;
- Bachelor/master’s degree;
- PhD degree.
- Where do you come from?
- Do you know what eco system services are?
- Yes;
- No;
- If yes, can you mention some of them?
- How often do you visit Medvednica?
- First time;
- Once a year;
- Several times a year;
- Once a month;
- Several times a month;
- Once a week;
- Several times a week.
- Did you go up and down walking?
- Yes;
- No;
- If no, how long are you walking?
- How often and how intensively do you exercise?
- Once a month -Light activity;
- Several times a month -Moderate activity;
- Once a week -Intense activity;
- Several times a week.
- How much does the visit of Medvednica impact the following areas? (1—completely disagree, 2—partially disagree, 3—neither agree or disagree, 4—partially agree, 5—completely agree).
- Improvement in social well-being
- 1 → 2 → 3 → 4 → 5
- Improvement in psychological well-being
- 1 → 2 → 3 → 4 → 5
- Improvement in physical well-being
- 1 → 2 → 3 → 4 → 5
- How would you value your visit to Medvednica compared to commercial products and services?
- A visit to the gym (HRK 35 per hour);
- Movies (HRK 75);
- Spa day (HRK 150 per day);
- Massage (HRK 250 per hour);
- Spa day with treatments (HRK 1500 per day);
- Concert (HRK 200);
- Local travel (HRK 350);
- International travel (HRK 2100).
- Are you willing to pay to visit the Medvednica Nature Park?
- Yes;
- No;
- If yes, how much?
- HRK 5;
- HRK 10;
- HRK 15.
Appendix B
- About the project
- What was your role in developing research project and carrying it forward?
- Are there any other PES projects that have helped you in co-designing the project? Which are these and why?
- About the co-design process
- What was your main emotion during the co-design (enthusiasm, sense of participation, conflictual, affliction, etc.)?
- About PES
- What element(s) do you think are necessary for the successful implementation of a PES?
- What are the main difficulties/obstacles you found in the implementation of a PES?
- Future recommendations
- What is your perception of the added value/impact of the project implementation?
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Document Category | Document Name |
---|---|
Institutional and legal framework | Constitution of the Republic of Croatia [73] Forest Act and its regulations (OG 68/18) [74] Environment Protection Act (OG 80/13, 153/13, 78/15, 12/18, 118/18) [75] |
Stakeholders | Three multi-actor group (MAG) meeting [76] |
Characteristics of PES and project results | Report D4.1—Assessing the upscaling potential of SINCERE IAs using a theory of change structure [77] Report D4.2—Synthesis report of the experiences and lessons learnt, situating them in the global experiences and knowledge [78] |
Category | Attribute | Role | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
User | Manager | Advisor | ||
Emotions | Positive | x | x | x |
Negative | x | x | ||
Neutral | x | |||
Elements for PES success | “Paying a tax for transit” | x | x | |
“Mindset” | x | x | ||
“Showing the difference between Business-As-Usual and PES scenario” | x | |||
“Charge for the facilities/things that are used in the PES area” | x | |||
“Raising the awareness and education of users” | x | x | ||
“Good cooperation with all stakeholders” | x | x | ||
“Understanding the willingness to pay for forest ecosystem services” | ||||
“Transparency” | x | |||
“Legislation” | x | |||
“Better communication to the public” | x | |||
Difficulties for PES implementation | “Different point of views” | x | ||
“Misunderstanding” | x | x | ||
“Ownership conflicts” | x | |||
“Nature is free” | x | x | ||
“Do not consider different scenarios” | x | |||
Project added value | “Cooperation with different stakeholders” | x | x | |
“Implications only in theory and not in practice” | x | x | ||
“Good foundation for the future” | x | |||
“Raising the awareness about the benefits of forest ecosystem services to society” | x | x | ||
“Implementation and replication of a PES mechanism” | x | |||
“Nothing is changed” | x | x | ||
“Fostering new innovative approaches to the monetary valuation of ecosystem service” | x |
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Bruzzese, S.; Tolić Mandić, I.; Tišma, S.; Blanc, S.; Brun, F.; Vuletić, D. A Framework Proposal for the Ex Post Evaluation of a Solution-Driven PES Scheme: The Case of Medvednica Nature Park. Sustainability 2023, 15, 8101. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15108101
Bruzzese S, Tolić Mandić I, Tišma S, Blanc S, Brun F, Vuletić D. A Framework Proposal for the Ex Post Evaluation of a Solution-Driven PES Scheme: The Case of Medvednica Nature Park. Sustainability. 2023; 15(10):8101. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15108101
Chicago/Turabian StyleBruzzese, Stefano, Iva Tolić Mandić, Sanja Tišma, Simone Blanc, Filippo Brun, and Dijana Vuletić. 2023. "A Framework Proposal for the Ex Post Evaluation of a Solution-Driven PES Scheme: The Case of Medvednica Nature Park" Sustainability 15, no. 10: 8101. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15108101
APA StyleBruzzese, S., Tolić Mandić, I., Tišma, S., Blanc, S., Brun, F., & Vuletić, D. (2023). A Framework Proposal for the Ex Post Evaluation of a Solution-Driven PES Scheme: The Case of Medvednica Nature Park. Sustainability, 15(10), 8101. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15108101