The Proposition of Value: Leveraging Carbon Capital to Finance Biodiversity Conservation in Peru
Abstract
Carbon offsets and carbon markets have generated great interest in their potential
as a market-based source of funding for biodiversity conservation. Since the concept
of creating markets for “offsetting” greenhouse gas emissions was first discussed,
there has existed an accompanying narrative that such markets would inevitably generate
both profits for investors and “co-benefits” in the form of biodiversity conservation
and associated sustainable development goals. However, because direct financial returns
from forest-based carbon offsets seem both low, while also high risk, we ask why this
approach is being so heavily promoted and implemented as a means to finance conservation.
Employing a comparative case study design, we examined four carbon-financed conservation
projects in Peru to explore the set of “value propositions” offered by these projects
and for whom to explore what is driving the continued interest and implementation
of these schemes and to understand how various types of value (e.g. direct and indirect
financial returns, reputational or social license value, political capital, etc.)
are produced and captured and the barriers to doing so. Through analysis of project
documents, promotional materials and the transcripts of key actor interviews, we developed
detailed stakeholder maps and written case studies. Our final assessment maps and
characterizes the values, costs, and risks accrued by each set of actors in the value
chain and the ways in which these dynamics influence the viability of employing carbon
offsets to finance biodiversity conservation.
Type
Master's projectPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22644Citation
Gonzalez Natera, Andrea; & Su, Yingle (2021). The Proposition of Value: Leveraging Carbon Capital to Finance Biodiversity Conservation
in Peru. Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22644.Collections
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