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Payments for watershed services (PWS) are schemes that use funds from water users (including governments) as an incentive for landholders to improve their land management practices.
This paper reports the results of a case study on the use of market-based instruments for pollution prevention in the steel sector in India.
Policymakers and practioners worldwide are increasingly interested in the use of markets and payments for environmental services. In the developing world, Costa Rica has led efforts to experiment with these mechanisms.
This paper is intended to provide some guidance to the policy-oriented researchers’ work on valuing climate change adaptation in developing countries.
Cost-benefit analysis has important uses – and crucial blind spots. It represents only one of several economic tools that can be used to assess options for adapting to climate change in developing countries.
The literature on rangelands is extensive but very little includes an examination of rangeland valuation.
Mangrove ecosystems provide a range of non-marketed as well as marketed goods and services, both on and off-site.
This study assesses the impacts of Costa Rica’s Payments for Environmental Services (PES) scheme in relation to reforestation activities as a source of carbon sinks.
In 1996 Costa Rica implemented an innovative programme of Payments for Environmental Services (PES).
Payments for environmental services (PES) is a topic of increasing interest in Ecuador, particularly as a way to leverage funding for environmental protection.









