ENVIRONMENTALLY SUSTAINABLE DEVELOP M~:ENT STUDIES AND MONOGRAPHS SERIES No-lI Work in progress for public discussion \J n el l f f' Five Years after Rio Inno vations in Envilronmental Poli(y Po M. -i r Ig,ssIlon I IL 1 I. a I t1T : rnS~~.% 2illid i f iti . #Stut -s ESD Proceedings Series 1 Culture and Development in Africa: Proceedings of an International Conference (also in French) 2 Valuing the Environment: Proceedings of the First Annual International Conference on Environmentally Sustainable Development 3 Overcoming Global Hunger: Proceedings of a Conference on Actions to Reduce Hunger Worldwide 4 Traditional Knowledge and Sustainable Development: Proceedings of a Conference 5 The hluman Face of the Urban Environment: A Report to the Development Community 6 The hluman Face of the Urban Environment: Proceedings of the Second Annual World Bank Conference on Environmentally Sustainable Development 7 The Business of Sustainable Cities: Public-Private Partnershipsfor Creative Technical and Institutional Solutions 8 Enabling Sustainable Community Development 9 Sustainable Financing Mechanisms for Coral Reef Conservation: Proceedings of a Workshop 10 Effective Financing of Environmentally Sustainable Development: Proceedings of the Third Annual World Bank Conference on Environmentally Sustainable Development 11 Servicing Innovative Financing of Environmentally Sustainable Development 12 Ethics and Spiritual Values: Promoting Environmentally Sustainable Development 13 The Self and the Other: Sustainability and Self-Empowerment 14 Meeting the Challenges of Population, Environment, and Resources: The Costs of Inaction 15 Rural Well-being: From Vision to Action (forthcoming) ESD Studies and Monographs (formerly Occasional Paper) Series 1 The Contribution of People's Participation: Evidencefiom 121 Rural Water Supply Projects 2 Makitig Development Sustainable: From Concepts to AIction 3 Sociology, Anthropology, and Development: An Annoi'ated Bibliography of World Bank Publications 1975-1993 4 The World Bank's Strategyfor Reducing Poverty and Hunger: A Report to the Development Community 5 Sustainability and the Wealth of Nations: First Steps in an Ongoing Journey 6 Social Organization and Development Anthropology: 'The 1995 Malinowski Award Lecture 7 Confronting Crisis: A Summary of Household Responses to Poverty and Vulnerabili'ty in Four Poor Urban Communities (also in French and Spanish) 8 Confronting Crisis: A Comparative Study of Household Responses to Poverty and V'ulnerability in Four Poor Urban Communities 9 Guidelinesfor Integrated Coastal Zone Management (ContinLed on the inside back cover) ENVIRONMENTALLY SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT STUDIES AND MONOGRAPHS SERIES NO. 18 Five Years after Rio Innovations in Environmental Policy The World Bank Washington, D.C. Copyright © 1997 The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/THE WORLD BANK 1818 H Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20433, U.S.A. All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America First printing June 1997 This report has been prepared by the staff of the World Bank. The judgments expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of the Board of Executive Directors or of the governments they represent. Cover illustration by Kathy S. Rosen. The cover figure shows that an optimal level of pollution is reached when the damage from an additional unit of emission equals the cost of reducing emissions by one additional unit. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Five years after Rio : mnovations in environmental policy / World Bank. p. cm. - (Environmentally sustainable development studies and monographs series ; no. 18) Includes bibliographical references. ISBN 0-8213-3957-5 1. Environmental policy. 2. Environmental management. 3. Sustainable development. I. World Bank. II. Series. GE17O.F54 1997 363.7'056-dc2l 97-16997 CIP @3 The text and the cover are printed on recycled paper, with a flood aqueous coating on the cover. Contents Foreword v PART ONE FROM RHETORIC TO AcTION: POLICIES FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT Chapter 1 The Road from Rio 3 Chapter 2 From Policy Framework to Policy Action 5 National Sustainable Development Strategies and Action Plans 5 The Policy Matrix: New Approaches, Proven Winners 7 Chapter 3 Designing Effective Policies 15 Achieving Financial Sustainability 15 Ensuring Administrative Sustainabilbty 16 Building Constituenciesfor Change 16 Achieving Policy Integration 16 PART Two SELECTED CASE STUDIES FROM THE POLICY MATRIX 19 List of Case Studies 20 Chapter 4 Using Markets 21 Chapter 5 Creating Markets 37 Chapter 6 Using Environmental Regulations 41 Chapter 7 Engaging the Public 45 References 51 iti. iv Five Years after Rio: Innovatons in Environmental Policy Boxes 1.1 Hallmarks of the "New Environmentalism" 4 2.1 The policy matrix: an outline 6 2.2 Estimates of major subsidies 10 2.3 Sulfur taxes in Sweden 11 2.4 Certifiable and transferable greenhouse gas emissions offsets in Costa Rica 12 2.5 Regulating ozone-depleting substances in China 13 2.6 Public participation in irrigation management in Mexico 14 Figures 4.1 Effect of real prices on urea use in Bangladesh, 1970-95 21 4.2 Chinese government revenues from .ie pollution levy, 1986-93 28 6.3 Irrigated area and water application rate in Israel, selected years 1951 to 1985 43 Tables 2.1 The policy matrix: instruments and sample applications 8 4.1 Indonesia: pesticide subsidies, 1985-90 24 4.2 The Netherlands: effluent charges on industrial wastewater 30 4.3 Effects of energy taxes or subsidies: cross-country comparison 32 6.1 Malaysia: experience in effluent control in the pa[m oil industry 41 Foreword T'rf development is to become sustainable, and the case studies underpinning it, will be human behavior must change. Corporations, available on the Internet. We intend to make this consumers, and public agencies all need to a "live" database of international experience on switch away from activities that degrade the environmental and natural resource policy. The environment and invest instead in activities that broader the base of approaches and case studies conserve ecosystems for the future. Sometimes such on which the matrix can draw, the more useful it changesaremotivatedbymoralconcerns,butoften will be to policymakers and practitioners incentives and consciousness raising are required. everywhere. We are looking for partners in this In the five years since the Rio Earth Summit, endeavor, and I invite you not only to read what enlightened governments have been searching for follows but also to consider what you could more effective ways to encourage behavioral change contribute from the experience in your country whilemaintainingefficiencyandfreedom. or organization. We can be reached at: This study explores some of the innovative environment@worldbank.org, Subject: Policy policies designed to change behavior toward Matrix. more environmentally sustainable patterns. The This study was conceived by Andrew Steer, presentation is focused around a policy matrix Environment Department director, and executed that identifies four sets of different policy instru- under his leadership. The text was written by ments: Kirk Hamilton, John Dixon, Jian Xie, and * Policies based on existing markets Arundhati Kunte of the department's Indica- * Policy instruments that involve creating tors and Environmental Valuation Unit. Editing new markets and coordination were done by Tine Nielsen, Ali- * Regulations and quantitative restrictions cia Hetzner, Donna Allen, and Virginia Hitchcock. * Policies that seek to harness the power of Desktop production was done by Isabel Alegre, public information and participation. Sriyani Cumine, Jim Cantrell, and Glenn The most successful governments will use a com- McGrath. We wish to thank all those who con- bination of all four. tributed examples of new policies for this work The framework we present here is still and the Governments of Norway and Sweden for incomplete. Future updates of the policy matrix, their generous support. Ismail Serageldin Vice President Environmentally Sustainable Development v PART ONE From Rhetoric to Action: Policies for Sustainable Development CHAPTER 1 The Road from Rio I n June 1992 representatives of 178 nations alleviation, which forms the core of Agenda 21, met in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil to decide what is addressed in terms of improving both the access actions were needed to promote environmen- to natural resources and the management of the tally and socially sustainable development. The environmental resources base. The persistence of Rio Earth Summit catalyzed govemment interest severe poverty in some parts of the world, in translating broad policy goals into concrete ac- together with a standard of living based on tion on the ground. Rio heightened awareness of wasteful consumption in other parts, are both global environmental threats, opened new path- incompatible with achieving the sustainable use ways for communication between official and of the earth's resources. nonofficial organizations working towards a com- A striking feature of the outcome of Rio was mon end, and greatly increased public awareness the fact that it was a consensus of national of the issues at hand. Progress since Rio has not governments and not that of scientific and necessarily been smooth or easy, however, as poli- technical experts. Securing commitzent to action cymakers have had to confront the sheer complex- at the level of heads of state is remarkable and ity of linking environment and development critical, particularly when it comes to global problems. crortal whenrit nes to managl The commitment of leaders from around the environmenl issues. The urgent need to manage world to achieving sustainable development was global environmental resources, resources thatare embodied in Agenda 21, the centerpiece shared by every nation and everyoring creature, agreement that emerged from the Earth Summit. means that all nations must work in collaboration The action programs and activities of Agenda 21 with one another. Although the diverse and are organized under six themes -the quality of complex contribution of human activity to global life, efficient use of natural resources, protection concerns such as climate change and depletion of the global commons, management of human of the ozone layer are not fully understood, the settlements, waste management, and potentially irreversible nature of changes in these sustainable economic growth-and in most life-sustaining biogeochemical processes led to the themes both environmental and developmental adoption of a precautionary approach. concerns are addressed. This report is a stock-taking, five years after The attempt to find synergies between Rio, of what has been attempted worldwide by environment and development comes out most national governments and international clearly in strategies addressing the issues of institutions to foster the use of economic, poverty, consumption patterns, demographic regulatory, and institutional instruments to better pressures, land, freshwater, and forests. Poverty manage the environment. The body of lessons 3 4 Five Years after Rwo: Innovations in Envzronmental Policy Box 1.1 Hallmarks of the "New Environmentalism" The many approaches to environmentally sustainable The growing understanding of the costs of regu- development in the developing world have produced latory approaches has dictated an increased use of a range of lessons from experience. These lessons nmarket instruments uaherefeasible. Harnessing the mar- point to a "New Environmentalism" that offers a fresh ket in environmental protection also sends the mes- perspective on the policies traditionally implemented sage that governments mustwotk with the pnvate sector, in industrialized countries (Steer 1996). The new en- not against it. Above all, the recognition of the limita- vironmentalism is both more practical and more tions of existing institutions emphasizes the need to aware of the need to harmonize economic and envi- economize on scarce administrative and regulatory ronmental agendas. It takes a more balanced ap- capacity. proach to policy change, one that recognizes the Participation is an important ingredient of effec- constraints that governments and societies face. Ulti- tive policy development and implementation and the mately the new environmentalism promises to be need to involve citizens thoroughly (including the pri- more successful in helping countries address their se- vate sector) is important in developing the political nous environmental management challenges. will to take effective action. By building and invest- There are a number of defining characteristics ing in partnerships that work, it is possible to create a of the new environmentalism that reflect these prac- sense of shared responsibility for better management, tical lessons from experience. These include the need and gain acceptance of the added personal costs that to set pnorities carefully and to pursue cost effective so- may be required to obtain larger social gains. While lutions. With scarce mternal and diminishing exter- technical "fixes" are often attractive, it bears repeat- nal financial sources, it is important to be strategic in ing that management is more important than technology, deciding which issues to address first. This approach and developing the institutional and human capac- also requires seeking synergies in policy reform that ity for better environmental irLanagement will take result in environmental improvements while produc- time and mvestments. Finally, the new environmen- ing other economic benefits-subsidy reform is the talism has clearly learned thai: the single most im- classic example of a triple dividend, where pressure portant step towards an improved environment is on the environment is reduced, fiscal resources are to incorporate the environment from the start, not as an freed for other uses, and economic efficiency increases "add-on" at the end of project analysis or develop- as a result of reductions in price distortions. ment of macroeconomic policies. learned through this process can rightly be termed policy approaches under the broad headings of "the New Environmentalism" (see box 1.1 for using markets, creating markets, regulations, and summary characteristics). engaging the public. This is backed up by Part Two, The breadth and range of policy instruments which presents brief case studies of many of for environmental and natural resource the policy instruments highiighted in the matrix. management can be overwhelming. A key part The concluding section in Part One emphasizes of this stock-taking exercise, therefore, is the the key characteristics of effective environmental construction of a policy matrix that organizes policy. CHAPTER 2 From Policy Framework to Policy Action 1he high rhetoric of Rio has been followed building institutions that involve the public di- by an often painful silence as policymakers rectly in resource management. > face the challenge of converting rhetoric to The twenty five years since Stockholm and action. Not only do many countries lack a mature the five years since Rio have witnessed major ad- institutional base for environmental management, vances in terms of both national awareness of en- but the very act of addressing environmental vironmental issues and commitments to action. problems and correcting distortions usually These commitments are manifest in a variety of implies imposing a "tax" on someone -either a ways, and take place at two levels. First, and here polluter who has been disposing of wastes into Rio really did play a catalytic role, there has been the environment without charge, or a forester or a welcome emphasis on the development of policy fisherman who exploits an existing natural frameworks. These sustainable development resource without paying a stumpage fee or strategies and action plans lay out the broad observing a quota on sustainable fish catch. policy priorities for countries, a necessary first Environmental policy is at heart concerned step if environment and natural resource policy with changing the incentives that individuals and is to be strategic. Second, there is a need to trans- institutions face. Governments have met this chal- late policy priorities into specific policy actions. lenge in a variety of ways. In the past the com- Some of the valuable experience gained and in- monest approach to changing environmental novative policies developed at this level will be incentives was to directly regulate activities in the explored below in the policy matrix. marketplace, but this has proven to be costly and The policy matrix attempts to categorize and complex. Using markets or creating them where summarize a great deal of useful experience with they are lacking is a more recent innovation in individual policy instruments. It provides an es- environmental protection - this can take the form sential structure for the case studies on policy in- of eliminating distortions in market prices struments presented in Part Two. The first step, through subsidy reform, using taxes to increase though, before exploring specific policies, is to prices to reflect social costs, or establishing new summarize recent experiences in the development markets in which pollution permits or develop- of policy frameworks. ment rights may be traded. Finally, experience in many countries has shown that involving and National Sustainable Development Strategies informing the public can be a very effective and and Action Plans efficient way to protect the environment, whether througheducationonenvironmentalissues,eco- Around 100 countries have now prepared labeling, publishing pollution emission data, or national sustainable development strategies or 5 6 Five Years after Rio: Innovations in Environmental Policy Box 2.1 The policy matrix: an outline The policy mLatrix, presented here in outline and in Warford and others (1997). As well as bringmg some more detailed "slices" on subsequent pages, organizes order to an often-fragmented slabject area, the policy and categorizes what is by now a very rich and diverse matrix is intended to become a tool for analysts con- set of national experiences in environmental manage- cemed with the design of natural resource and envi- ment. The rows of the matrix are divided into two ronmental policy. Looking across a row of the Matrix, themes, resource management and pollution control, and at forest resources for example, shows the wide range these themes are then divided into sectors such as wa- of instruments that have been applied to the manage- ter resources, forests, air pollution, and solid waste. ment of this resource. Looking down a column, at trad- The columns of the matrix are divided into four broad able permits for instance, indica tes the broad spectrum classifications of policy instruments: using markets, cre- of resource and pollution issues to which this instru- ating markets, using environmental regulations, and en- ment has been applied. The matrix structure is also in- gaging the public. tended to stimulate thinking about how individual Each column of the policy matrix is further subdi- vided by type of instrument, as shown in the table be- policies iteract, increasing the scope for positve syn- low. Using markets is therefore broken down into ergiey andtrenthn mdividual instruments and approaches, such as sub- policy instruments. sidy reduction, environmental taxes, user fees, deposit- Many of the country case studies highlighted in the refund systems, and targeted subsidies. Within each policy matrix are summarized irL Part Two. The presen- cell of the detailed policy matrix, shown on the follow- tation of the Matrix which follows is necessanly a syn- ing pages, there is greater specificity still: under "user opsis of a great deal of information, and the case studies fees for natural resources" for instance, there is an en- in Part Two are only a selection firom a larger, and grow- try for bioprospecting fees in Costa Rica and Mada- ing, set of example applications of innovative policy ap- gascar-however, where countries or regions are proaches to environmentand natural resource problems. names, these are selected examples and not compre- Ultimately the policy matrix will become the front end hensive listings. to a "live" database on the Worlk Wide Web, which will The idea for the policy matrix has many intellec- lead users to individual case studies and references to tual precursors, including Panayotou (1996) and more complete mformation. The policy matrix: policy instruments for sustainable development Policy instruments Using environmental Themes Using markets Creating markets regulations 'Engaging the public * Subsidy reduction * Property rights/ * Standards Public Resource decentralization participation managefment * Environmental * Tradable permits/ * Bans Information taxes rights disclosure and * User fees * Internatioal offset * Permits and systems quotas * Deposit-refund systems Pollution control * Targeted subsidies National Environmental Action Plans (NEAPs) to priorities for action and ma king explicit links to help guide their thinking on environmental policy changes. The best NEAPs often use management (World Bank 1997a). Although these economic analysis to help identify priorities for strategies are frequently effective inhighlighting environmental interventions based on important environmental issues, they have assessments of the benefits and costs of different sometimes been less successful in identifying alternatives - recent examples include countries From Policy Framezoork to Policy Action 7 as diverse as Costa Rica, Lebanon, and Moldova, approaches are efficient and which are practical. all using economic analysis as one "filter" to help The new post Rio emphasis on reconciling identify priorities for action. environment and development, incorporating The major lesson learned from the sustain- poverty and equity issues, and managing the able development strategy and NEAP processes global commons has built the momentum for is the fundamental importance of setting priori- policy innovations. Governments, including ties, developing national ownership, and involv- developing country governments, and the World ing the public. Setting priorities either on an Bank have been adopting the best of the proven economic or an ecological basis is essential since approaches and fostering significant innovations. financial and human resources are limited, and Taking stock of the various policy instruments governments can only respond to a few needs at being used for sustainable development requires a time. In the Costa Rican NEAP for example five some organizing principles which are set out be- priority areas were identified out of more than a low in the policy matrix. The matrix distinguishes dozen areas initially targeted for action. National between policy approaches that are aimed atnatu- ownership is also central to creating the political ral resource management as compared with pol- climate for effective action and policy change. It lution prevention and mitigation, and it organizes often takes longer to develop ownership and in- the approaches themselves into four broad cat- volve the public and relevant ministries, but it has egories depending on the principal emphasis of been found that without ownership and the as- each policy instrument: sociated participation, an action plan or strategy * Using markets usually becomes a paper document that goes on * Creating markets the shelf and is ignored. * Using environmental regulations In many cases preparing a strategy paper or * Engaging the public. an action plan is the easiest part of the environ- The policy matrix, outlined in box 2.1, places mental management challenge. Creating the ac- the expanding set of policies and instruments for tual institutions that are needed to monitor sustainable development within a coherent struc- compliance with policies or enforce measures is ture. The four more detailed matrices, one for each a slow, difficult process. Since most countries did policy approach, give a partial (but not exhaus- not have existing agencies with environmental tive) listing of countries where given policies have management responsibilities, the creation, staff- been or are in the process of being implemented. ing, funding, and empowerment of such agencies To give the full flavor of the specific approaches, has taken a great deal of effort and political capi- a selection of brief case studies is presented in tal. Many different approaches have been used Part Two of this study. to institutionalize environmental management responsibility: in different countries this respon- sibility has been housed in a new ministry, as part Using Markets of an existing ministry, or as a specialized agency under the executive branch of government. It is Among the most powerful policies for improved not yet clear whether there is a "best" answer to environmental management are those that use the the appropriate institutional structure; it seems market and price signals to make the appropri- that the success or failure of each alternative is ate allocation of resources. Environmental re- dependent on local conditions. sources are typically underpriced in two important ways: many subsidies actually reduce The Policy Matrix: New Approaches, the cost of overexploiting or polluting the envi- Proven Winners ronment, and market prices generally reflect only private costs, ignoring the damages inflicted on The preparation of national sustainable others by pollution emissions. Using markets development strategies for the Earth Summit of therefore involves moving towards free market 1992 gave new impetus to the evaluation of past prices on the one hand and moving beyond free environmental policies. A lot was learned about market prices on the other. As long as markets what is effective and what is not, which are reasonably free and competitive, harnessing 8 Five Years after Rio: Innovations in Environmental Policy Table 2.1 The policy matrix: instruments and sample applications Using Markets Subsidy Environmental taxes on | User fees for Perform bondsl Targeted Bylsectorortheme redjction eniissions inpitits produicts nat resoutrces services diosit-refund subsidies Water Reduction in Water resources Water resources water subsidy taxes Brazi, pricing China, Hun- Germany Chile, gary, Poland Chma, Colombia Watershed protection charges _ __ Fisheries Fishing Product Fisheries Oil pill bonds mpuot taxes taxes licenses U S Mauritania Land . Removal of . Property Betterment Subsidies for Management land con- taxes charges restoring natural version sub- . Differential Korea, Mexico cover Canada sidies land use Braztl taxes/fees Removal of Germany the tax on undeveloped land France " Forests Reduction in Forest Stumpage fees * Park en- Refc restation * Subsidies for land conversion product Brazd, Costa trance fees deposit/per- seedings India subsidies and taxes Rica, Honduras, Costa Rica forniance bond * Credit subsidies subsidized Brazil, Indonesia, . Reforesta- Cosia Rica, for reforestation bO ihvestock credit Colombia, Phlippines, tion taxes Indo,nesia, Costa Rica t5 Brazil, Central Venezuela Malaysia Indonesia Mal,ysia S; America _ Sustainable Reduction in agriculture agriculture 0) subsidies most developing countries O Bi.d.versityl Reduction in Boprospectmg * Watershed Habitat protection w protected land conversion fees Costa Rica, protection subsidies area subsidies Madagascar charges Costa Rica, Indonesia Park en- trance fees Costa Rica, tndonesia, Nepal Mieral Fees on Mining royal- resources mine wastes ties Algeria, and tailings Brazil, Brunei, Philppmes Colombia, Ecuador, Ma- laysia, Namibia, Nigeria, Vene- zuela, and Canada, U S and other I___I__OECD Air Reduction in Emission * Energy Environ- Royalties for Sulfur tax Subsidies for potlution energy taxes taxes ment- fossi fuel refu nd systems mdustrial energy- subsidies Egypt, OECD related extraction Sweden saving Sweden Transition Korea, * D.fferen- product economies, Chma, tbated taxes most Eastern gasoline Bangla- developing Europe, prices desh, countries Kazakhstan, Egypt, OECD OECD Mexico, Phflip- pines, Turkey Water Wastewater Sewage Tax rehef and -^ pollubton discharge charges subsidized credit O fees Brazd, Brazil, Chile, for env mvestment China, Chmna, Brazil, Chile, Eastern Colombia, China, Colombia, 0J Europe, Indonesia, Ecuador, India, C Korea, Malaysia, Korea, Mexico, O Mexico, Mexico, Philippines OECD, Singapore, _ Philippines _ Thailand Solid waste Waste User fees for DepDsit-refund Credit/subsidy O disposal waste systims Bang- policy Korea, PLl taxes management ladesh, Brazil, Taiwan (China), Canada, Ecuador, Chile, Colom- Turkey, U K France, U K, OECD, bIa, Ecuador, U S Thailand, Fminlnd, (a- Venezuela mau a, Japan, Mexico, Nor- way, Philip- pines, Sweden, Tai-an (Chia), LU S Venezuela Hazardous Reduction m Disposal Pesticide Product Bondl for wasle Subsidies for wa.teftouin agrochemical charges taxes OECD taxes treatment phasing out chemicals subsidies most China, Denmark pesticides Sweden developing OECD, countries Thailand _ From Policy Framezvork to Policy Action 9 Table 2.1 The policy matrix (continued) Creating arnkets Envir relations Enj agthe public Properby nghts Tradable Internatonal Infonm2tw0n Publ2c By sector or thenr decentrlization pennits/nghts Ofsetsytr Standards Bans Quotas disclosure paiapahon Water resoustes . Water nghts' Water Water Water quahty Seasenal ban of Water use Water Water user Chile, US mnarkets trading standards certain types of quotas' effiaency association * Deanhahzatc!n Australia, across water use US Israel, US labelng Argenhna, of water supply Chile, Incha, borders Mexrux, mnagenent' New Zealand, Turkey _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ US_ _ _ _ Fisheries 20I)r-ile Exdusive Tradable Fishing zshrngbans Fishing Econormc Zone quotas/ standards quotas (EE2 perrmts New Zegarad_ Land Land title. Transferable Tradable Land use Establishmient Land ranagenent Thailand developmnent conservation standards/ of environmern subdivision nghts Puerto credits zornng Brazd, tally sesitive Rico, US Chnia, Guate- areas mala, Korea, OECD, Pakistan r Forests Land tthlng Tradable Tradable * Loggeg Lning/log Loeging Eco- reforestation reforestation regulations export baro quotas labehng credit credits Costa * Zoning Costa Rica Malaysia Nordic Rica, Pan- Brazil countries arn, Russia u6 Sulstainable * Land owner- Transferable Zoning Brazil Ban on use of Eco- Community O agriculture shup Thailand development pesticides labelng self-help * Partclpatory nghts Indonesia, nany groups irrigation n'an- Latin Amenca OECD Kenya agerient Ar- countnes gentna, Irdia, Meico, Philp- puies, Sn Lanka, Turnsia Biodiversity/ Biodiversity International Tradable Conservation Establishment NGO protected area patents and bho- tradable conservation zone- Brazil, of ntional gwevoant prospectng rights' coservation credits China, Costa parks Brazil, Phlhppies Costa Rica, credits Costa Rca Costa Rica, Madagascar Rica, Mecico hindonesta Mneral Waste and Energy resources talngs efficiency containment labeing Ausralia Airpollution * Environrntnal * Tradable Jont umple- Air quality Ban on miports * Enusi2n Pubhc habihty emnssion mentation and emission of OD5 China quotas disclosure * Pnvate energy permits- carbon standards OBCD program production. Chile, Czech offsets Brazil, Chia, * Area Chile, Phihppines Rep, Poland, Argentna, India, Korea, hlcsing Indonesia Kazaklhstan, Latin OECD, for US Amerca, Phulippines, velides Auctionable Norway, Sngawpore, Sr2w- permits for Poland, Turkey gapore ODS Russia, U S 0 eaco, Singapore O Water pollution Environnental Tradable Wastewater hidustral Public Comnaunity lhabilty wastewater dLscharge wastewater disdosure pressure O discharge standards discharge progran Korea permits Chuia, hIdia, quotas Bangladesh, Indonesia, Bahamas, Indonsia, O Korea, Malay- China, Philippines sia, OECD, Colornbia, Phihppines, OECD SinRapoe _____ ____ Solid waste Environenntal Tradable Landfill Indushrial liability recyded standards and waste contents landfill zoning Excdange program _lippmines Hazardous Envircnental Contamment/ * Basel con- Labelng wastettoxic liability treaonent vention chemnicals stindards * Ban on use of somfe pesticdes: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___ aIndonesaa 10 Five Years after Rio: Innovations in Environmental Policy market forces can be a powerful way to reduce subsidy removal include energy and water pric- the cost to the economy of achieving environmen- ing reform in many countries, pesticide and fer- tal goals. tilizer subsidy reductions in Bangladesh and Policies that use the market have two princi- Indonesia, and the removal of subsidies that had pal attractive features. First, although they may led to excessive land clearing in Brazil. Subsidy appear to be blunter than other, more targeted removal, however, is only the first step. Even if policy instruments, market-based approaches are there is no subsidy and market prices reflect the often much easier to administer and implement. full costs of production, there may be other ex- Administrative considerations are discussed in ternal costs. Environmental taxes can then be used chapter 3. to reflect the additional costs to others (the eco- Second, market-based approaches may have nomic externalities) that are created by the use of important fiscal consequences for governments, resources. The policy matrix presents examples either from reducing costs to the treasury by re- of environmental taxes imposed on industrial ducing subsidies that harm the environment (for emissions in China and the Netherlands, on in- instance, subsidized prices for fossil fuels), or by puts such as energy and water in many countries, raising revenues through user fees or environ- and on final products. By sending the signal that mental taxes. These sums may be considerable. the use of a resource imposes costs on others, en- For example, recent estimates are that environ- vironmental taxes serve as an incentive both to mentally damaging subsidies total over $240 bil- be more efficient in resource use (thereby decreas- lion per year in developing countries and the ing total demand and redlucing environmental transition economies (see box 2.2). Tapping even damages), and generating r evenues (see box 2.3 part of the potential savings from reducing sub- for an innovative use of environmental taxes in sidies could go a long way to meeting the need Sweden). for new firnancial resources to help developing A third category of market-based approaches countries achieve environmentally sustainable is userfees. This recognizes that many individu- development. als receive important benefits from the use of the As seen in the policy matrix, there are sev- environment, but may pay very little or nothing eral different categories of instruments that rely for this right, often leading to poor levels of ser- on using the market. As mentioned earlier, sub- v.ice or overuse of the resource. The introduction szdy reduction is a classic and well-known example oiF user fees is one way to capture part of this ben- of policy reform: reductions in or elimination of efit, improve levels of management and service, subsidies normally results in reduced environ- and share the benefits from exploiting natural mental impacts (from reduced use of the previ- resources. For example, sturnpage fees for forestry ously subsidized factor) and monetary savings activities are commonly being increased in order to the Treasury. Recent successful examples of to capture part of the "economic rents" associated Box 2.2 Estimates of major subsidies As the table opposite shows, estmated subsidies Environmentally Damaging Suibsidies mid-1990's to energy, roads, water, and agriculture in devel- (billions of U S. dollars per year) opmg and transition economies total over $240 bil- Developing and transition lion per year in the 1990's. While this is a substantial Sector or product economies improveinent over the situation in the 1980's, these Fossil fuels 48 subsidies still lead to wasteful resource use, exces- Electricity 112 sive damage to the environment, and a drain on Road transport 16 the Treasury. Cutting these subsidies in half would Water 56 free over $100 billion of finance that could be used Agriculture 10 for sustainable development, simultaneously re- Total ducing the stress on the environment. Source: Gandhi and others (1997). From Policy Frameu7ork to Policy Action 11 Box 2.3 Sulfur taxes in Sweden In Sweden the tax on the sulfur content of fuels is a tax on the sulfur content of fuels provides incentives good example of living within your administrative to switch to low-sulfur fuels and to reduce energy use means. While the "best' instrument for reducing sul- overall. fur emissions is an emissions tax or tradable emission This tax on fuels is relatively simple to implement permits, both of these approaches are complex to ad- because it can be levied at the wholesale level. To date minister-economic instruments like these may be administrative costs have been less than 1 percent of efficient, but they do not substantially reduce the re- revenue. For any country that has an excise regime quirement for monitoring and enforcing of the policy. for fuels, the sulfur content tax would be a straight- The alternative implemented in Sweden in 1990 is a forward addition to the existing administrative hybrid: a substantial tax is levied on the sulfur con- apparatus. tent of fuels (more than $4 per kilogram of sulfur), The Swedish sulfur tax has been extremely effec- but this is rebated for large emitters who can prove tive. The national target for sulfur emissions was met how much sulfur emission they have abated (through several years ahead of schedule, and the revenue from flue gas desulfurization, for instance). For large emit- the tax was actually lower than projected, as a result ters, therefore, the effect of the sulfur tax is precisely of the extensive fuel switching and emission reduc- the same as an emissions tax; for everybody else the tions that followed the introduction of the tax. with forestry operations. Part Two contains a case trend of subsidy removal and the distancing of study with relevant examples from countries as government from active involvement in the mar- diverse as Brazil, Costa Rica, Indonesia, and the ket, there are cases when such subsidies may be Philippines. The managers of parks and protected justified. For example, in the resources manage- areas recognize the large private benefits indi- ment area, targeted subsidies have been used to viduals receive from visiting these areas and are promote reforestation in Costa Rica. Targeted sub- beginning to capture part of this benefit via in- sidies have promoted pollution control in Brazil, creased admission fees and user permits. Costa China, and India, industrial energy savings in Rica with its volcanoes, beaches, and rainforests, Sweden, and the phase out of ozone depleting and several of the East African countries with substances in many countries around the world. large safari businesses, are actively using user fees Global Environment Facility projects often take to generate additional government revenues and the form of targeted subsidies. to provide for enhanced protected area manage- ment. User fees are also being increased for pub- Creating Markets lic provision of water and sanitation services, thereby allowing for an improved level of service Market creation is an important way to reduce and increased overall welfare. one of the most persistent and pervasive dangers Markets are also useful in the establishment to sustainable development, the lack of markets of performance bond and deposit-refund systems. In for environmental resources and services. both cases a financial bond or deposit is used to Defining property rights, privatizing and guarantee compliance with the desired outcome decentralizing, establishing tradable permits and such as meeting environmental standards, re- rights, and creating international offsets are all planting forests after harvest, or by correctly dis- examples of the innovations underway in market posing of waste products, as in Japan and Taiwan creation, as highlighted in the policy matrix. (China). The existence of the deposit or bond helps Establishing property rights for land, water and ensure that the financial costs of noncompliance v c v are sufficiently high that firms and individuals logging concessions provides a fundamental in- take the necessary steps to protect the environ- centive for better resource management When ment. squatters become owners and forest concession- A last category of policy instruments that rely aires have long-term contracts, there is a built-in on markets is targeted subsidies, where an explicit incentive to exploit natural resources in a sustain- subsidy is offered to achieve a socially desirable able manner. Tropical deforestation and the deci- outcome. Although these go against the general mation of the world's fisheries are stark reminders 12 Ftve Years after Rio: Innovations in Environmental Policy of the sorts of perverse results created by unregu- that they are very effective as long as a number lated open access to resources. of important design issues are addressed. First, Privatization and decentralization can play an the permit must actually create a property right- important role in moving many aspects of envi- if there is any doubt on this count then firms will ronmental management out of the state sector, not participate in the market Second, the ques- which is often starved for capital, and into more tion of initial allocations of permits must be commercial operations where there is a strong handled equitably. Finally, thaere must be no arti- incentive both to generate current revenue and ficial obstructions to trading permits. to make investments that will increase revenue A variety of international offset systems extend in the future. Public sector water and sewage the notion of a market for environmental re- works are the classic examples of important en- sources across country boundaries, permitting vironmental resource management institutions firms and institutions to meet environmental ob- where fee collection is low, maintenance expen- jectives by purchasing abatement wherever on the diture is insufficient, and investment is lacking. globe it is cheapest. Box 2.4 highlights a particu- Private sector participation in infrastructure is not larly novel approach to carbon offsets that is be- a panacea, but there is a growing list of success ing implemented in Costa Rica; similar efforts at stories in which the correct balance of risk-shar- "joint implementation" are developing in Belize, ing and performance standards has dramatically Bolivia, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Panama. improved access, quality, and economic perfor- As the policy matrix shows, environmental mance as well as environmental performance (see policy instruments that create markets come in a the case study from Cote d'Ivoire in Part Two). variety of forms and have broad applicability Tradable pernits and rights involve the explicit across pollution and resource management issues. creation of a market in environmental resources, A wide range of industrial aind developing coun- encouraging efficient use and fostering the rec- tries are applying these inst-uments to deal with ognition that these resources are scarce and valu- practical issues. While these approaches get the able. Tradable pollution emission permits (as incentives right and encourage least-cost solutions implemented for ozone-depleting substances in to environmental problems, they can be costly to Singapore, for instance) are the best known ex- administer. Finding the right balance of monitor- amples of market creation, and the evidence is ing, enforcing, and giving free play to market Box 2.4 Certifiable and transferable greenhouse gas emissions offsets in Costa Rica High transaction costs have been one of the traditional of new forest on these lands, as well as sustainable impediments to implementing international offset maintenance of the resulting forest stock. The amount systems for carbon emissions. Many of the earliest of carbon sequestration on these lands has been veri- examples of carbon offsets involved firms (typically fiLed by the U.S. government, leading to transferable electric utilities) having to identify individual plots offset permits that are recognized in the United States. of land in tropical countries on which a given amount From the purchasing firm's point of view buying an of carbon could be absorbed and sequestered, and offset is now almost as simple as buying stock in a then signing agreements guaranteeing the sequestra- securities market. Similar arrangements with the gov- tion through a long-term management regime with ernment of Norway have led to the sale of 200,000 the owners of the land. These guarantees by the land certifiable and transferable offisets (in units of metric owner then had to be certified as valid by the emit- tons of carbon) for $2 million. ting country. Each of these steps increased the costs Given the millions of hectares of marginal and per unit of carbon sequestered. c[egraded agricultural land in the developing world, Costa Rica launched a scheme of certifiable and there is great scope for afforestation schemes to be- transferable offsets in 1995, and signed an agreement come the cornerstone of a much expanded develop- with the U.S. government for their recognition that ment and use of certifiable and transferable offsets in year. The Costa Rican government has acquired sub- the future. This scheme by Costa Rica is an excellent stantial areas of degraded pastureland and estab- example of a developing country providing leader- lished management regimes that will ensure growth ship in addressing a problem of global importance. From Policy Frame7work to Policy Action 13 forces is the challenge prospective users of these Where there are relatively few sources of a instruments must face. pollutant, regulation may be the most adminis- tratively feasible approach. So if a few electricity Using Environmental Regulations generating stations are the major source of an air pollutant like sulfur oxides, regulatory abatement Regulations are the most common approach to standards will probably be cheaper and simpler environmental problems. But they should be used to administer than pollution permit trading (in judiciously because of the large direct and indirect this case the market may be too thin) or pollution costs they impose. Standards, bans, permits and taxes. Box 2.5 examines the experience of ban- quotas are often favored by policymakers because ning ozone-depleting substances in China. they promise certainty of outcome-without The final considerations in designing regula- costly monitoring and enforcement, however, this tions are credibility and sanctions. If regulations promise may not be realized. are not enforced then there is little incentive for Regulations are in some cases the only fea- firms and individuals to obey them. If govern- sible instrument by which to achieve the aims of ment environmental policies are not credible then public policy. For example, controlling emissions they will not meet their goals. Regarding sanc- of very hazardous substances will generally best tions for noncompliance, it is often the case that be accomplished by outright bans. Similarly, land environmental legislation stipulates penalties that zoning regulations are the most effective means are either too weak (a small fine, for instance, to ensure that residential areas are not down- which firms will happily pay rather than having stream or downwind from polluting factories. to install abatement equipment) or too strong Rules restricting certain activities on ecologically (closing the offending plant, creating strong po- sensitive lands would be another example of a litical pressure for it to be reopened). Penalties case in which regulatory approaches are for noncompliance must be proportionate and essential. fair. Some approaches to regulating pollution are more efficient than others. One that is particularly Engaging the Public inefficient is to stipulate abatement technologies- this tends to discourage innovations that have the The final set of environmental policy instruments potential to limit pollution emissions more are those that are a result of public involvement cheaply. In other cases a mixture of approaches in improved environmental management. It has works best-in Malaysia, for example, a combi- been commonly observed that governments nation of standards and charges were effective in rarely lead in the fight for an improved environ- reducing water pollution from oil palm mills. ment; more often political leaders respond to pub- Box 2.5 Regulating ozone-depleting substances in China Where there are relatively few producers of ozone- production facilities based on ODS in the halon and depleting substances (ODS) and the enforcement of aerosol sectors have been banned since 1991. Im- regulations on imports is effective, phasing out these portation of refrigerators and freezers using chlo- substances through regulatory approaches will be rofluorocarbons was banned in January1995, along relatively efficient and effective. This approach is with the manufacture of auto air conditioning being taken in China, whlch has set the target of re- withet banucturoflutocarbonditiohn ducing ODS use to its 1991 level by 1996 (although equipment based on chlorofluorocarbon-12. At the rapid economic growth in the early 1990s is proving same time imports of non-chlorofluorocarbons us- this an ambitious target), with subsequent targets set ing refrigerators, freezers, and compressors were at a 50 percent reduction from this level by the year granted preferential import duty treatment. It is es- 2000 and complete phaseout by 2010. timated that the use of roughly 4500 tons of ODS These targets will be met through a series of had been eliminated through the implementation regulations, pricing policies, and penalties. New of these measures by mid-1996. Source. World Bank (1995) 14 Five Years after Rio: Innovations in Environmental Policy Box 2.6 Public participation in irrigation management in Mexico In 1989 the Mexican government adopted a policy on a twenty-year concession. The average recovery of participatory irrigation management. The main rate of operation and maintenance costs increased purpose of the policy was to transfer the manage- from 57 percent in 1991 to close to 100 percent in ment responsibilities of irrigation districts from the areas with water user associations. Improvements govemment to water user associations. In 1990 the have also been seen in water use efficiency, man- first irrigation district was transferred to the users. agement staff productivity, and environmental ben- By 1995 more than two-thirds of the country's 3.2 efits. million hectare irrigation network (divided into From the government side, the transfer freed up eighty irrigation districts) had been transferred to government resources and the iresponsibility of pro- 316 water user associations. After the transfer farm- vidmg, maintaining, and repairing irrigation sys- ers had to face higher charges for irrigation water tems. This allowed the goverrLment to concentrate owing to the loss of government subsidies, but they scarce financial and human resources m those sec- gained management autonomy and ownership based tors most in need of government intervention. Source: World Bank (1996b). lic demands for action to address environmental introduced in Indonesia and the Philippines at the issues. Consequently, information disclosure, present time. community pressure, and public participation are The other broad means of engaging the pub- crucial in creating the political will to take effec- lic in sustainable development is through public tive action. participation. One avenue to participation that has Two major sets of instruments have been proven to be particularly efiective is the require- identified. The first revolves around information ment for public discussion of environmental as- disclosure and other means that allow consumers sessments of major projects. This has raised public to make more informed choices and demand awareness of environmental problems and given more environmentally friendly goods and ser- whole communities an effective voice in decid- vices. Eco-labeling, whereby such products as ing how important aspects of their environment tuna or tropical woods (as in Indonesia) are la- will be affected by the development process. Par- beled to show that they were harvested in an en- ticipatory approaches have also been key to the vironmentally safe manner, are increasingly successful management of environmental infra- structure. The well known examples of water user commn. nery eficincyguies o maor ome associations in countries as dliverse as Argentina, appliances and automobiles are another practi- Indonesia, Mexico usee box 2.6), and Turken are cal form of information disclosure; in Australia, Indonlesiaf Mexice box 2.6), and Ture y are for~~~~~~ exml,eeg .fiiec aeigalw examples of active and successful public partici- for example, energy efficlency labeling allows pation in resource managernent. consumers to choose between less efficient (but Building effective public participation is not possibly cheaper) appliances and those that may necessarily easy to achieve, however. It requires cost more initially, but have lower operating costs tools to help the poor to express themselves. It re- (and associated external benefits from reduced qulires new partnerships between governments, energy consumption). In fact, a number of coun- NGOs (see, for example, the case study on NGO tries allow public energy utilities to take tax cred- involvement in the operation of protected areas in its for subsidizing consumer adoption of higher thte Philippines), trade unions and community efficiency appliances or lighting fixtures. The dis- groups. Participatory approaches require new ways closure of information about pollution emissions to carry out pilot projects and new funding mecha- can also allow the public to monitor the perfor- nisms. Above all, participation requires capacity- mance of individual firms and their compliance building in the nuts and bolts of community-based (or the lack thereof) with environmental stan- management. But the evidence to date is that in- dards. This has been used in Japan and in several vesting in public participation can pay large divi- European countries for some time, and is being dends in effective environmental management. CHAPTER 3 Designing Effective Policies ust as environmental problems are not the lessons that have emerged from this review of result of a single action at one point in time, environmental policies-both proven winners solving these problems and building and new approaches. These lessons are the im- stainable development will be a long, slow portance of achievingfinancial sustainability, the prac- process that often involves making tradeoffs. As tical aspects of ensunng administrative sustainability, such, we are rarely in the world of the "first-best" the benefits of building constituenciesfor change, and solution but are more often in the more realistic the need for achieving policy integration. world of the "second-best." This is not necessarily a problem-practical solutions often require Achieving Financial Sustainability balancing competing needs, and it is important not to let the perfect be the enemy of the good in The most successful policy initiatives are those implementing policy changes. that generate financial resources, recognizing the A useful aspect of the policy matrix is that it constraints of limited external resources and fiscal juxtaposes a wide range of policy instruments. As restraint by governments. In spite of the rhetoric policymakers set their priorities and choose their of Rio it is now clear that there will be little if any preferred approaches, the policy matrix could also additional external resources to fund serve as a reminder that avoiding conflicts environmental improvements. Governments are between instruments, and seeking also facing strict fiscal regimes with many complementarities, is an important part of the competing demands and a desire to reduce, not environmental management process. increase, the role of government in the economy. The policy matrix illustrates many of the ap- These factors all place additional emphasis on the proaches that are being tried around the world. importance of devising policies that are Applications of a given policy instrument to dif- financially sustainable. ferent sectors can be seen by scanning down a Fortunately there are many examples of poli- column; the range of approaches to one sectoral cies that do generate financial resources, either area can be seen by going across a row. Since most by removing environmentally damaging subsi- cells in the matrix list countries where an ap- dies, imposing environmental taxes that help ac- proach has been tried, it can quickly be seen that count for externalities, or charging users a fairer different countries have applied very different price for the benefits that they receive from the policy instruments to similar environmental man- environment. Of course, when the management agement problems, in part reflecting differing problem is one that involves global externalities, constraints at the national level. the Global Environment Facility (GEF) and other Nevertheless, in spite of the plethora of issues funds are available to offer limited financial sup- and approaches being tried, there are four strong port. These resources, however, are insufficient 15 16 Five Yeatrs after Rio: Innovations in Envtronmental Policy to address all global problems, and are not avail- cieties. Some of the most polluted places on earth able for the often more pressing national-level were in parts of Eastern Europe and the former needs. Consequently, the financial sustainability Soviet Union where environmental protests and of new policies is often the single most important debates were not tolerated. Without the combi- dimension of creating effective change. nation of an informed and involved public and a committed government, the best laws and legis- Ensuring Administrative Sustainability lation are likely to have little impact. Of equal importance in creating change is Achieving Policy Integration recognizing the many administrative constraints to implementing new policies or procedures. One of the lessons from Rio is that the Since the environment is a relatively new concern, environment and economic development are few countries have well-established environ- inextricably linked. Major progress has been made mental management bureaucracies. As a result since Rio in understanding and measuring the the environmental management function is links between macroeconomic policies and the frequently housed in a new, often weak, ministry environment. or unit. Technically trained staff, laboratory While the policy matrix focuses on the wide facilities, and other support are often scarce or range of policy instruments that are available to nonexistent. Environmental change also often manage specific environmental resources and requires change on the part of other, well problems, countries need to recognize that deci- established and powerful ministries. sions made in the macroeconomic domain will Consequently, policies that do not require ultimately have an impact on these resources as elaborate and expensive administrative support well. Many of these effects will be positive: insta- have a better chance of success. Building capac- biTity in an economy is generally destructive of ity for improved environmental management is the sorts of investments in resource management an important, but longer-term, process. The poli- upon which sustainability depends, and the effi- cies reviewed in this report highlight a number ciencies inherent in reducing price distortions will of innovative approaches to improved manage- often lead to increased efficiency of resource use. ment, sometimes involving policies that are self- There are, however, clear instances where eco- policing or that make minimal administrative nomic liberalization can exacerbate existing policy demands. As with financing, a second-best but failures: for example, increased access to interna- implementable policy is often preferred over the tional markets can put pressure on natural re- "ideal" but tnrealistic first-best choice. sources where property rights and resource pricing regimes are inadequate, leading to exces- Building Constituencies for Change sive exploitation. To the extent that liberalization leads to growth in production and incomes, this Whenever policy change involves removing may lead to new environmental problems in the "rights" or taking away economic rents, those form of pollution emissions, The bottom line, of whose financial interests are negatively affected course, is not for countries to resistmacroeconomic will fight back. Political will is therefore necessary reforms for environmental reasons, but rather to to implement effective change and fight vested ensure that policy reforms ol the sort highlighted interests. This is true for the environment as for in the policy matrix are established to work in any other sector. In fact, the existence of perva- conjunction with the process of economic liberal- sive externalities and rent capture in the environ- ization. mental sector makes the political dimension even It is equally important for economic policy- more important. makers to understand the extent to which re- Informing the public about the costs of envi- source and environmental conditions impinge ronmental degradation or pollution, and involv- upon macroeconomic perfor rnance. Bad resource ing them as advocates for reform is facilitated by policies can actually hurt long-run economic open exchange of information, and more open so- growth by dissipating the wealth inherent in natu- Designing Effective Policies 17 ral resource stocks. And excessive pollution lev- institutional issues need to be addressed. This re- els damage not only economic assets, such as port is a "work in progress," a first attempt to or- buildings, crops and forests, but human health ganize a disparate body of knowledge about the as well. Excess levels of pollution-linked illness different and often very creative approaches that result in lost productivity, and excess levels of governments and organizations are taking to man- mortality imply substantial welfare losses. age natural resources and the environment. The In sum, the lessons in the five years since Rio World Bank is committed to extending this work suggest optimism about the potential for effec- and making it widely available -it can most suc- tive, cost-efficient environmental reform, but tem- cessfully do so with the assistance of its partners pered with the reality that additional financial in governments and in the wider development resources are likely to be limited and that major community. I PART Two Selected Case Studies from the Policy Matrix List of Case Studies Policy instruments CHAPTER 4 Using Markets Specific approach Country Sector Subsidy reduction Bangladesh Agriculture- fertilizers 21 China Coal 23 France Undeveloped land 24 Hungary Irrigaton and public water supply 25 Indonesia Agriculture: pesticides 26 Environmental taxes China Industrial pollutants and waste 27 Denmark Agriculture, industry 28 Netherlands Industrial waste 29 Philippines Industrial wastewater 30 United States Ozone-depleting chemicals 31 Taxes and subsidies Composite Energy policies 32 (China, Germany, Japan, Russia, United States) Userfees Costa Rica Ecotourism 33 Composite Forestry stumpage fees, taxes, and removal of subsidies 34 (Brazil, Costa Rica, Honduras, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines) Deposit-refund system Composite Deposit-refund systems for solid waste recycling 36 Uapan and Taiwan (China)) Chapter 5 Creating Markets Specific approach Country Sector Property rights or C6te d'Ivoire Concessions to private water supply 37 decentralization United States Solid waste 38 Tradable permits Singapore Ozone-depleting substances 39 International offset Composite Joint implementation m the Americas 40 systems (Belize, Bolivia, Costa Rica, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama) CHAPTER 6 Using Environmental Regulations Specific approach Country Sector Standards and charges Malaysia Palm oil industry 41 Quotas and charges Israel Irrigation 43 CHAPTER 7 Engaging the Public Specific approach Country Sector Information disclosure Australia Industry: energy-efficiency labeling 45 Indonesia Industry 46 Philippines Industry: eco-labeling 47 Public participation Kenya Water supply 48 Philippines Protected areas 49 Senegal Irrigation 50 20 CHAPTER 4 Using Markets Bangladesh: Reducing Fertilizer Subsidies Figure 4.1 Effect of real prices on urea use in Specific approach: subsidy reduction Bangladesh, 1970-95 Urea use 7.ntil 1978 the Bangladesh government had (lograrn per hectare a monopoly on fertilizer production, pro- 500 iX4 curement, and distribution. Three basic types of subsidies existed in this period: a direct 250 price subsidy when border prices exceeded gov- ernment sales prices, an indirect production sub- sidy when ex-factory prices exceeded border 0 - - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1970 1975 1980 1985 199)0 1995 prices, and an indirect distribution subsidy when Pea price of urea distribution costs exceeded private sector costs. Thousands of 1995 taka Although these subsidies contributed to the I0 promotion of fertilizer use, they imposed heavy financial burdens on the government. By the late 1970s, fertilizer subsidies accounted for 4 percent of the national budget (Mokarrum 1994). In 1978, for example, the total fertilizer subsidy was $93 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 million (1995 dollars), with an average subsidy Subsidy rate rate of 54 percent (Renfro 1992). The governmentYs Percent control of the fertilizer market also resulted in 75 misallocation of resources and inefficient 50 production and distribution. The government \ spending on fertilizer marketing and distribution 25 rose by 240 percent in 1973-78 even though sales 0 increased by only 90 percent (Mokarrum 1994). -25 * 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 In addition, concern arose over environmental pollution resulting from fertilizer production and Source Mokarrum 1994; Renfro 1992 use, including the possible contamination prices were deregulated completely in 1983. The of surface and drainage water and lake savings resulting from the removal of fertilizer eutrophication. subsidies were estimated at US$294 million in In 1978 Bangladesh began experimenting 1990-93: $253 million from saving in fertilizer with partial deregulation of urea sales. Retail transportation and movement, $33 million from 21 22 Five Years after Rio: Innovations in Environmental Policy reductions in direct subsidies, and $7 million from decreases in world urea prices in the mid-1980s. procurement through private sector imports Declining prices, together with a substantial in- (Mokarrum 1994). The savings represent more than crease in the area planted to irmproved varieties, 2 percent of total government revenue per year. have resulted in a sustained increased in fertil- Despite the abolition of price control and the izer use of 10 percent annually from 1970 to 1990 reduction in subsidies, real prices of urea have (see figure 4.1). declined over time due to improved efficiency in distribution, increased domestic production, and Source: Mokarrum (1994); Renfro (1992). Using Markets 23 China: Subsidy Reform in the Coal Sector Specific approach: subsidy reduction Since the mid-1980s China has made remarkable These achievements have been made by re- progress in reducing energy subsidies. This is es- moving coal price controls and by the developing pecially true in the coal sector, which contributes of non-state-owned coal mines. Currently about more than 70 percent of the country's energy pro- 50 percent of production is carried out by these duction. Subsidy rates for coal have fallen from 61 percent in 1984 to 11 percent in 1995. prlvate mines (Wang 1996). About 80 percent of The World Bank (1997a) recently estimated coal is now sold at international prices (Gray 1995). that China's total economic subsidy for fossil fu- Reform in the energy sector has reduced gov- els (based on the difference between domestic and ernment spending and also, along with the struc- world prices) fell from $25 billion in 1990/91 to tural adjustment and technological change, $10 billion in 1995/96. It has also been reported contributed to energy conservation and environ- that the budgetary subsidy from central govern- mental protection. Energy intensity in China has ment to cover the operating losses in state-owned fallen by about 30 percent since 1985. This im- coal mines decreased significantly (from $750 plies that energy consumption (in oil equivalents) million or 1.09 percent of total government ex- and carbon dioxide emissions are now respec- penditure in 1993 to $240 million or 0.26 percent tiv in 1995 (Wang 1996)). Simultaneously, the eco- ely 0.3 billion metric tons less and 1.1 billion nomic performance of coal mines improved, with metric tons less than would have been the case if estimated operating losses of state-owned mines reform had not taken place. dropping from $1.4 billion in 1990 to $0.23 billion in 1994 (Wang 1996). Source: World Bank (1997a); Wang (1996); Gray (1995). 24 Fve Years after Rio: Innovatons in Environmental Policy France: Removing Tax on Undeveloped Land Specific approach: subsidy reduction France has levied a tax on undeveloped land since cant reduction in the tax to be paid, and (3) gen- the first half of the nineteenth century. Although eral reform of the basis for the calculation of prop- the tax can be justified in terms of the optimum erty value to better reflect local economic and distribution of the factors of production and the ecological realities. Through the 1992 Finance Acts revenue of local authorities, it has exacerbated the government began to abo Lish certain exemp- several problems. Among these is ignorance of tions and subsidies detrimental to the environ- the environmental value of undeveloped lands ment and set out to dismantle departmental and regional payments of the tax on undeveloped land Under the tax system, non-intensive andtlly in 1992. There has since been a significant reduc- productive natural areas such as envpronentally tion in the amount of these taxes imposed and sensitive woodlands and wetlands are penalized therefore in the proceeds generated from the tax. Realizing the negative environmental impli- With a reduction in the tax burden on underde- cation of the tax on undeveloped land, the French veloped land, the economic incentive to convert government recently began to reform it so as to less productive natural areas into productive remove the incentive to destroy natural ecosys- lands has decreased. tems. Three areas for reform were identified: (1) the overhaul of the system of exemptions to in- Source: International Institute for Sustainable Develop- clude environmental considerations, (2) a signifi- ment (1994). Using Markets 25 Hungary: Decentralization and Subsidy Reduction in the Water Sector Specific approach: subsidy reduction The Hungarian government has phased out many tariffs. The central government has legally trans- subsidies from the state budget since beginning ferred water supply facilities to local authorities, to move to a market economy in 1989. The per- along with ownership of existing water assets. centage of total budgetary subsidy in total gov- According to a World Bank-ODI joint study ernment expenditure dropped from 60 percent in (Bhatia, Cestti, and Winpenny 1995), 28 out of 33 1993 to 42 percent in 1995 (IMF 1995). The sub- water utilities have become independent systems. sidy reduction in the water sector is significant. The percentage of investment in the water sector The subsidy for irrigation was eliminated in 1990; from the state budget has fallen to less than one- equivalent to an annual saving of 2 million 1986 third. U.S. dollars, about 0.01 percent of government Water tariffs have been raised to the level U.S. dollars, about 0.01 percent of government bsdo oml hticue h oto n expenditure (OECD 1994). The subsidies from the based on a formula that includes the cost of in- texedietfor publc 19.ter subsidies from tee puts, depreciation, maintenance, and a markup statebdge flo p er ppies hv been of 1 to 2 percent. The combined tariff for water decreased from 100 percent prior to 1989 to 30 and sewerage now ranges from Ft 23 ($0.31) per percent in the early 1990s (Bhatia, and others cubic meter in Budapest to Ft 107 ($1.42) per cu- 1995). bic meter in Siofok. In the past three years, for The major steps taken by the Hungarian gov- example, the price of water in Budapest has in- ernment to reduce the high state budgetary sub- creased tenfold. sidy for water include decentralizing the responsibility of the central government for pro- Source. Bhatia, Cestti, and Winpenny (1995); OECD viding public water services and raising water (1994b); IMF (1995). 26 Five Years after Rio: Innovations in Environmental Policy Indonesia: Removing Pesticide Subsidies Specific approach: subsidy reduction Prior to 1986 the Indonesian government heavily people (Kenmore 1991). ReseaLrch indicated that subsidized pesticides in an attempt to boost agri- the overuse of rice insecticides, which kill the cultural production. The pesticide subsidy rate natural enemies of brown planthopper, together (the amount of the subsidy paid per unit of costs) with the intensification of rice production, was was as high as 85 percent in the early 1980s directly responsible for the outbreak. In addition (Pincus 1994). These heavy pesticide subsidies to the brown planthopper problem, pesticide were a financial burden to the government: for pollution was a major cause for concern in example, in 1986 subsidies amounted to 179 mil- Indonesia's densely populatecL village communi- lion 1995 U.S. dollars (about 0.17 percent of GDP ties, particularly where water for drinking and and 0.8 percent of the total government expendi- bathing was in limited supply. ture) and in the period of 1976-87 nearly $1.5 bil- These problems led Indonesia to drastically lion 1995 U.S. dollars (World Bank data). modify its pesticide policies. In 1986 many pesti- These huge subsidies resulted in excessive cides on rice were banned arnd direct subsidies and inefficient use of pesticides and consequently for pesticides were phased out in 1986-89. The caused economic loss and environmental dam- policy shift not only saves more than $100 mil- age. Domestic pesticide production soared from lion per year in government expenditure but also 6,000 tons in 1972 to 53,100 tons in 1985 (Indone- makes the country economically and environmen- sian National IPM Program, undated, and Pincus tally better off. Pesticide production dropped to 1994). The country's total consumption of rice 22,100 metric tons in 1990 ancl meanwhile pesti- insecticides was about 20 percent of the world cide imports fell to a third o0 mid-1980s levels. market in the mid 1980s (Kenmore 1991). Although no data exist to qu;ntify the environ- One of the well-known environmental prob- mental impact of the subsidy e limination, the sig- lems related to the overuse of pesticides in the nificant drop in pesticide use is thought to have country is the outbreak of brown planthopper. alleviated damage to the environment-particu- When agricultural production was traditional and larly to public health and to biological diversity. less intensified, with little use of pesticides, brown The reduction in pesticide use has been accom- planthopper was not considered a pest; it was plished without adverse effects on rice produc- controlled by its natural enemies in rice fields. tion. Total milled rice production rose from 27 However, as the applications of insecticides in- million metric tons in 1986 to 30 million metric creased, so did brown planthopper infestation. In tons in 1990 (see table 4.1). 1976, the country's loss to an outbreak of brown planthopper was recorded as over one million Source: Kenmore (1991); Pincus (1994); Indonesian tons of rice, enough to feed more than 2.5 million National IPM Program. Table 4.1 Indonesia: pesticide subsidies, 1985-90 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 Pesticide subsidy (1995 US$ mill.) 141 179 134 85 2 0 Subsidy rate (percent) 85 75 45 40 0 0 Pesticide production (1000 m.t) 53 46 58 48 29 22 Milled rice production (mill. m.t.) 26.5 26.8 27.3 28.3 29.4 30.3 Source Kenmore (1991) Using Markets 27 China: The Pollution Levy System Specific approach: environmental taxes China began to experiment with a levy on indus- Figure 4.2 Chinese government revenues from the trial pollution that exceeded emissions standards pollution levy, 1986-93 in cities in 1979. In the early 1980s a pollution levy Million yuan system was officially incorporated into law and 3000 was gradually expanded to cover the entire coun- try. Government revenues from the pollution levy have since increased rapidly, for example, from 2000 1.2 billion yuan in 1986 to 2.7 billion yuan in 1993 (see figure 4.2). The pollution levy now provides j 500 about 15 percent of all capital expenditures for pollution control and is the principal source of 100096 1987 1988 989 990 199! 1992 993 funding for regulatory enforcement activities by local environmental protection bureaus. Source: National Environment Protection Agency of China, various years According to the pollution levy system, twenty-nine pollutants in wastewater, thirteen Although the pollution levy system provides pollutants in industrial waste gases, and all in- revenue for funding pollution control activities, dustrial solid waste, noise, and radioactive waste it has been criticized for its low charge rates and are subject to a fee. Prior to 1993 the Chinese pol- weak enforcement. The charges are below the lution levy system imposed charges only for pol- marginal costs of pollution control in most cases lutants that exceeded emissions standards and and are not indexed for inflation. A survey of in- then only for the one pollutant most in violation dustries in thirteen cities by a government agency of the standard. To provide incentives for enter- found about 120 million yuan in pollution levy prises to further reduce the within-standard pol- underpayments in 1992 under weak enforcement. lutant discharges into water, a fee charged on the The pollution levy system still has the potential total quantity of wastewater discharged was in- to increase government revenue. troduced in 1993. The collections of this within- standard fee now amount to over 10 percent of Source: National EPA of Chma (Environment Yearbook the collections of the over-standard fee. Series); Xie and Florig (forthcoming). 28 Fzve Years a)ter Rio: Innovations in Environmental Policy Denmark: Environment-Related Product Taxes Specific approach: environmental taxes In Denmark the total environment-related tax rev- Rechargeable nickel-cadmium batteries are enue consisted of 7.3 percent of total government also subject to a tax. The rate is DKr 2 per single revenue and equaled 3.7 percent of GDP in 1993. battery and DKr 8 per battery attached to a tech- In early 1994 the Danish government introduced nical device or apparatus. The total revenue from several new pollution-related product taxes. Al- the tax was DKr 7.8 million in 1993. The revenue though so far the revenue from these new taxes is earmarked for covering the costs of collection constitutes less than 0.01 percent of total govern- for used rechargeable batteries. ment revenue, they are increasingly important in An excise duty of DKr 30 per kilogram is lev- generating revenues and correcting market fail- ied on CFCs and Halons as well as products con- ure as the following examples shows. taining them. The tax revenue in 1993 was DKr The retail sales of pesticides sold in contain- 5.1 million. There iS an excise duty on ordinary light bulbs ers less than 1 kilogram or 1 liter are taxed at whereas enrysav in are exemt tolen 1/6 of the wholesale value including the tax but weeseeg-aigblsir xmtt n 1/6ludofg thewholese value-addedx i g The tax but courage energy efficiency. Domestic plastic and excluding the value-added tax (VAT). The tax on paper cups, plates, and cutlery are taxed at a rate imports is 20 percent of the producer price. Pesti- of one-third of the wholesale value including the cides sold in larger quantities are subject to a tax tax rate but excluding VAT, and imports face an of 3 percent of the wholesale price excluding dis- even higher rate of 50 percent. counts and VAT. In 1993 there was a tax revenue of DKr 11 million from pesticide sales. Source: OECD (1995). Using Markets 29 The Netherlands: Effluent Charges on Industrial Wastewater Specific approach: environmental taxes In an effort to reduce wastewater at indus- The results of this set of policies are remark- trial sources the Dutch government introduced a able (see table 4.2 below). For example, the total license system and effluent charges. For instance, amount of industrial wastewater discharge the country's 1970 Pollution of Surface Waters Act dropped by 73 percent between 1969 and 1990 requires that all nonlicensed discharges into sur- while industrial production was booming during face waters be prohibited and that polluters must the same period. Meanwhile, a large amount of pay for their discharges. The charges are imple- revenue has been raised through the charges. (FL mented and managed by water boards, self-gov- 1.3 billion or about 0.5 percent of total govern- erning bodies of surface water users responsible ment revenue in 1990). This revenue provided a for water management. The rate of effluent substantial resource for financing the construc- charges has risen sharply since its introduction, tion and operation of sewage treatment plants. for example, from FL 1.1 per population equiva- lentin1969,toFL27.9in1980,andtoFL55.1 in1990. Source. Bressers (1995); Jansen (1991). Table 4.2 The Netherlands: effluent charges on industrial wastewater 1969 1975 1980 1985 1990 Total discharges on surface water (million PE) 45.5 33 28 25.8 23.6 Industrial discharges 33 19.7 13.7 11.3 8.8 Domestic discharges 12.5 13.3 14.3 14.5 14.8 Total effluent charges (million FL) 50 340 780 1080 1300 Average charge per PE (FL/PE) 1.10 10.30 27.86 41.86 55.08 Average charge per m3 of wastewater (FL/m3) 0.01 0.14 0.38 0.57 0.75 (assuming 300g biological oxygen demand in lm3of wastewater) Average charge (dollars per m3) 0.004 0.06 0.19 0.17 0.41 Note The unit on which effluent charges are levied is the "population equivalent" (PE), which is roughly equivalent to the water pollution emissions by one individual. One PE is equal to 60g biological oxygen demand per day. 30 Five Years after Rio: Innovahons In Envzronmental Policy The Philippines: Introduction of Wastewater Discharge Fees Specific approach: environmental taxes The Philippines has recently introduced a mix of ant (biological oxygen demand) and one medium new environmental policies to ensure that the (water), one geographic area (the lake water shed rapid economic growth of the country is environ- of Laguna de Bay under administration of the mentally sustainable. These instruments comple- Laguna Lake Development Authority (LLDA) a ment the traditional command and control system government corporation), one group (industry) by using market forces (environmental user fees), and within this group only major polluters in five pubcdisclosure of information (see the case industrial sectors representing nearly 90 percent studyb The Philippines: The EcoWatch Project, o f the total water pollution discharged in the lake. study, "Th ePhilippine: ofthe EcoWactchProject," To start up the program the implementing agency p. 47), and engagement of the public through LLDA invested some of its own resources in ad- community participation in environmental man- ditionTal staff, equipment, and outreach programs. agement. A critical element of this first phase is the consul- After three years of preparation with support tation with industries, which had already started from the World Bank the Philippines started during the design phase. implementing its environmental user fee in Janu- The government will build on the experience ary 1997 with the first batch of industries paying of this first phase to mainstream the program a fee based on their assessed pollution load. Un- throughout the country and across sectors and der the system, activities that utilize environmen- media. In particular, the Department of Environ- tal resources by discharging wastewater are ment and Natural Resources hopes to use the re- required to pay a fee for every unit of pollution sults in drafting the legislalion required for they discharge, hence the name environmental applying user fees outside the LLDA area. user fee. This is in addition to meeting the exist- Revenues from the environmental user fee standards specified in the regula- will be used for water quality management pro- ting grams and to strengthen the existing monitoring Ions. and enforcement capability of the LLDA. Twenty In principle the system is expected to cover percent of the revenues are being shared with all pollutng activities from industrial, commer- local government units in the program area. To cial, domestic, and agricultural sources in the ensure a continuous funding of administrative country. The proposed user fees would eventu- costs, polluters pay a small flal fee in addition to ally also cover all major pollutants from all the variable fee. media (land, air, and water). However, imple- mentation of the system is gradual. During the Source Official brief by Secretary V. Ramos, Department first phase the program covers only one pollut- of Environment and Natural Resources, the Philippines. Using Markets 31 United States: Ozone-Depleting Substance Tax Specific approach: environmental taxes The United States introduced a tax on the produc- the five chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) originally tion of ozone-depleting substances (ODSs) in 1989 covered by the agreement, for example, produc- as a key component of its ozone protection policy. tion never exceeded 65 percent of the allowable The tax rate, originally $1.37 per pound, was in- level and, as a percentage of the caps, it fell some- creased to $5.35 in 1995. It was also set to increase what. Production of the same five CFCs has fallen by $0.45 per year. The tax was applied to eight faster than world production. This represents a chemicals in 1989 and then to twenty in 1990. To dramatic reversal of the situation before the tax protect the competitiveness in the world market, was introduced in 1990. border adjustments in the tax have been adopted. Besides its effect on reducing ozone-deplet- border adjustments in the taxn hvepbeeing stadoed ing substances, the tax has been a valuable source The effect of the ozone-depleting substances of revenue for the federal government. Annual tax has been very encouraging. Production of the revenues started at $360 million in 1990, and rose most important ozone-depleting substances has steadily to more than $1 billion in 1994. fallen to less than half their pre-tax level. Between 1990 and 1992 production was consistently well Source: International Institute for Sustainable Devrelop- below the caps set by the Montreal Protocol. For ment (1994). 32 Five Years after Rio: Innovations in Environmental Policy Effects of Energy Taxes and Subsidies on the Economy and the Environment Specific approach: taxes and subsidies Some people worry about the negative impact of respectively) than in Russia and China (5.43 and energy taxation on economic growth, but remov- 5.27 metric tons per thousand U.S. dollars, respec- ing energy subsidies and taxing environmentally tively). adverse energy use can be an economically and Germany provides an example of a country environmentally sound policy for a country. where the link between economic growth and Germany and Japan have heavily taxed en- energy consumption growth can be broken by im- ergy for years. Their percentages of gasoline proving efficiency in the use of energy. In 1990- prices accounted for by taxes in 1995, for example, 94 Germany achieved a 1.1 percent a year economic growth while its energy consumption were 78 percent and 53 percent respectively (see dropped by 1.5 percent a year. Similar results can table 4.3 below). The energy productivity (mea- also be seen in China. Frorn 1990 to 1994 the GDP sured by GDP per kilogram of energy used) in of China grew annually by 12.9 percent, while the Germany and Japan, however, is about ten times country's growth rate of energy consumption was higher than in Russia and China where energy is only 4 percent a year. still subsidized. Also, carbon dioxide emission in- tensity is much lower in Japan and Germany (0.30 Source: OECD (1996); World Bank (1996b); World Bank and 0.49 metric tons per thousand U.S. dollars, (1997a). Table 4.3 Effects of energy taxes or subsidies: cross-country comparison Carbon Average Average Average tax Per capita GDP dioxide annual annual (subsidy) energy per kg of emissions per energy GDP rates ai/ use ('h,/ energy dollar of GDP growth rate growth rate (1995) (1994) (1994) (1992) (1990-94) (1990-94) Country (/) (kg) (S/kg) (m. t./'O00$) () (/) China (7) 647 0.7 5.27 4.0 12.9 Germany 78.4 4097 6.1 0.49 -1.5 1.1 Japan 52.8 3825 9.6 0.30 2.3 1.2 Russia (20) 4038 0.6 5.43 -8.9 -10.6 U.S. 33.3 7905 3.2 0.82 1.8 2.5 a For Germany, Japan, and the United States, average tax rates on regular unleaded gasoline; for China and Russia, average subsidy rates b. Measured in oil equivalents Using Markets 33 Costa Rica: Ecotourism and Conservation Specific approach: userfees Ecotourism is widely considered more ecologi- Costa Rica's unique natural resources. The higher cally and culturally sensitive and less likely to fees sharply increased revenues but did result in bring negative impacts than most other produc- a decrease in the numbers of park visitors. The tion sectors. In recent years it has been increas- entrance fees were later reduced as a result of ingly accepted as a clean revenue source and an protests from foreign visitors and the tourism in- effective tool for combining conservation and sus- dustry and multi-park package admission tickets tainable development. Costa Rica is one of the best and differentiated pricing were introduced. The known examples of ecotourism. new pricing structure and increased revenues Costa Rica has developed a strategy for pro- have allowed the government to begin to upgrade moting ecotourism and linking protected areas park facilities. The varying fee structure also helps into the larger context of regional development. even out use among the various parks to reduce More than 12 percent of the country is included crowding at the most popular parks. In addition, in the parks and protected areas system. Tour- the regions are retaining a portion of the fees for ism has been one of the fastest growing sectors in use locally, rather than sending all the money to the economy, with an annual increase of 25 per- the nation's capital. cent between 1991 and 1994. Tourism revenue has In addition to the national system of protected become the second largest source of foreign in- areas Costa Rica has encouraged the creation of come (for example, $506 million in 1993) in the private nature reserves and nature attractions, country. It provides economic benefits to local and the use of debt-for-nature swaps. The expe- peoples and local governments while also sup- rience of Costa Rica shows that the creation of porting nature conservation. private reserves, such as the Monteverde Cloud Even though ecotourism provides important Forest, can benefit both local residents and the economic benefits to the country, the parks them- broader cause of conservation. The development setves were often starved for funds and a very of ecotourism in Costa Rica has not only brought low entrance fee was set for residents and for- in substantial revenues but has also given Costa eign visitors alike. In 1994, the new government Rica an international reputation as a leader in decided to increase admission fees for foreign sustainable development and the use of innova- visitors, initially to $15 per person, with residents tive management and financing mechanisms. paying about $1. This policy of differentiated user fees allows a government to capture part of the Source: Brandon (1996); Dixon (personal communica- observed willingness-to-pay by foreigners for tion). 34 Five Years after Rio: Innovations in Environmental Policy Pricing Forestry Resources Right: Selected Examples of User Fees and Taxes in Developing Countries Specific approach: userfees After many years of forestry resources underpric- cient to generate the forestry production ing that led to excessive exploitation and loss of equivalent to consumption levels. To some government revenue, a number of forest-rich de- extent, the charge has been a successful in- veloping countries began to reform their forestry centive to reforestation. policies towards capturing more economic rent * Setting stumpage prices at auction in Honduras. and setting incentives for protecting forestry re- Prior to 1992 stumpage charges and timber sources. The following are just a few examples of prices were set by the government at a very this: low level. Despite the timber production of Stumpage taxes, reforestation deposits, and ser- more than 9 million cubic meters per year in vice fees in Costa Rica. After revision of the Honduras, the state forestry revenue was very country's forestry law in 1986 several changes low (only $4.8 million, less than 1 percent of in forestry taxes and charges have become ef- central government revenue, in 1994). Real- fective. First, a 10 percent tax on stumpage izing that there was tremendous loss of eco- value was set in 1986. Second, loggers are re- nomic rents and inefficiency in the forestry quired to deposit 20 percent of stumpage sector induced by government intervention, value with government on guarantee that it the Honduras governlent began to reform will be refunded if trees are replanted. Third, the pricing policy in 1992. A new policy that loggers are charged for road maintenance and aims at raising timber prices to international other services. The reform of the stumpage levels by requiring the sale of timber at auc- fee structure succeeded in raising forest rev- tion has been adopted. According to the ex- enues drastically, for example, an increase of periment on a small portion of forest areas, 15 times in real terms between 1985 and 1989. the stumpage price rose from $5 (30 lempiras) Although the reforestation deposit is still per cubic meter of timlber in 1992 to $11 (72 lower than the replanting cost in many cases, lempiras) in 1993, and to $33 (280 lempiras) reforestation has increased significantly since in 1994 (World Bank data). The policy is con- the forestry policy reform. The area reforested sidered to have great potential for capturing jumped from an average of 10 square kilo- .sideredat aveget potecntia frcat meters a year between 1980 and 1985 to 230 aReform of stumpage prces in the Philippines. square kilometers in 1990 (World Bank 1994; Having a long history of low rent capture on * Removal of land conversion subsidies and charges its forestry resources, the Philippines govern- onRforestry products in Brazil. Since the 1980s ment began to change its pricing policy in the the Brazilian government has gradually re- vearly 1990s. In 1990, through Publc Act No. oed Brazliand conversont hasuidu. Te se- 7161, the government raised the charge on moved land conversion subsidies. The state eahcbcmtrotibrcufomaee of Minas Gerais levies a charge on all kinds each cubic meter of tirmber cut from a mere of forestry peroduteesfrom l eogs and fir ods percent to 25 percent of the market price. This of roo ts as .T cage ateworg policy change could result in a significant in- nally set at 3 percent of the value of forestry crease in rent capture from 11 percent to about products and was adjusted later based on an 50 percent of economic rent. The total charge indexed rate varying according to the value on logs harvested thus rose significantly from of each forestry product (da Motta and Reis 92 million pesos (0.06 percent of government 1994). This change has resulted in a much revenue) in 1989, to 460 million (0.26 percent) higher tax on charcoal and firewood from in 1990, and further to 806 million (0.37 per- native forest (major causes of deforestation) cent) in 1991 (Departrnent of Environment than on other forestry products. Furthermore, and Natural Resources, Philippines 1994). reductions of up to 50 percent of the tax due '0 A reforestationfee in Indonesia. The Indonesian are granted if reforestation activity is suffi- government began to impose a reforestation Using Markets 35 fee in 1980 of $4 per cubic meter on all tim- enabling timber merchants to realize their prof- ber-extraction activities. The fee was raised its in privately held offshore companies and to $7 per cubic meter in 1989, and then to $10 reduce their Malaysian tax exposure. The gov- in 1990. The current rate is about $22 per cu- ernment action has been reported to success- bic meter. Through the fee, a more than one fully reduce the problem to an acceptable level. billion dollar fund for forest restoration and Twenty timber companies were assessed for conservation activities has been established large back taxes -one owed as much as $40 (Sizer and Rice 1995). million (Sizer and Rice 1995). * Strengtheningforestry taxation in Malaysia. The Malaysian government recently took steps to Source: da Motta and Reis (1994); DENR (1992); DENR recapture revenue loss due to transfer pricing. (1994); Peuker (1992); Sizer and Rice (1995); World Transfer pricing was common in the country Bank (1994). 36 Five Years after Rio: Innovations In Environmental Policy Japan and Taiwan (China): Deposit-Refund Systems for Solid Waste ]Recycling Specific approach: deposit-refund system The basic idea of a deposit-refund system is to let then to retail shops and ultimately to consumers. those who generate waste be responsible for the The refund is made at each distribution stage costs and to provide incentives to encourage when the used packages and bottles are collected. waste recovery and recycling. This system has Local communities also collect a small portion of been considered effective in encouraging the re- the used bottles and return them to the beer mak- cycling of certain types of solid waste. The fol- ers through bottle dealers. In addition, a number lowing are success stories from Japan and Taiwan of local governments and consumer coop- (China). eratives have also organized deposit-refund Japan is one of the most successful countries schemes for beverage cancs. in terms of recycling solid waste. For years the In 1989 Taiwan (China) established a deposit- Japanese government has strongly supported re- refund system to recycle polyethylene terephtha- cycling programs (there is a recycling law) and late (PET), the plastic commnonly used in soft drink the concept of recycling has been well accepted bottles. There are 104 manufacturers of PET by the public and industry. As of 1989/90, the bottles in Taiwan (China) making some 260 mil- country recycled 92 percent of beer bottles, 50 lion bottles each year. Under the system mem- percent of waste paper, 43 percent of aluminum bers of the industry have formed a foundation cans, 45 percent of steel cans (now 70 percent, that administrates a joint recycling fund to cover according to Sanpat Times, 12 January 1996), and costs of collection and recycling of the bottles. The 48 percent of glass bottles. Besides government fund is replenished from a deposit on the sale of support and public attitudes in favor of recycling, each bottle. Those returning PET bottles to col- deposit-refund systems have provided consider- lection locations receive a refund of NT$2.00, able incentives for recycling and contributed sig- around US$0.08 per bottle. There are 14,000 col- nificantly to the achievement. Taking the recycle lection locations available (about one for every of beer bottles as an example, the system oper- 1,600 persons). By delivering bottles to recycling ates as follows: Beer makers levy a deposit fee on plants the collectors receive NT$0.50 (or US$0.02) each 20-bottle case of beer. As of 1992 the fee was per bottle. By 1992 the PET recycling rate was 80 300 yen, 100 of which is for the bottles and the percent. other 200 for the container. The deposit is passed on from manufacturers to wholesale dealers and Source: O'Connor (1994); Pani (1994). CHAPTER 5 Creating Markets Cote d'lvoire: Experience with a Concession for Water Supply Specific approach: property rights or decentralization The watchword in private water supply in West service-sector reorganization, SODECI won a Africa is an acronym, SODECI. The company be- countrywide concession contract for water opera- gan operating the C6te d'Ivoire capital's water tions and investments. The grant is a tribute to its system thirty years ago and now manages more accomplishments. First, it has succeeded in pro- than 300 piped water supply systems across the viding service that comes close to industrial coun- country. Its 300,000 individual connections, in- tries' standards. Second, the cost of SODECI water creasing by 5-6 percent a year, already reach some to consumers is no higher than in neighboring 70 percent of the nation's 4.5 million urban resi- countries in similar economic conditions or in dents -2 million in Abidjan, and the rest in settle- members of the CFA franc zone, where tariffs ments of 5,000 to 400,000 people. rarely cover capital and operation and mainte- A high percentage of its urban customers are nance costs, and service lags behind. poor, users whom SODECI values as a matter of While 46 percent of its capital comes from policy. To facilitate service to them, it forgoes di- SAUR, a French water company, and 2 percent rect hook-up charges on three out of four of its from the Ivorian government, private Ivorian domestic connections. The policy works. SODECI interests own a majority of SODECI's shares and has a 98 percent or better collection rate from its collect the dividends those shares pay. Its bonds private (as opposed to government) customers are one of the main items traded on Abidjan's fi- and a profitable track record. nancial market, and its performance as a private From its original concession to supply water firm supplying a public service could well be a in Abidjan, the company took on lease arrange- model elsewhere in West Africa and beyond. ments to produce and distribute water in other municipalities. Recently, in the course of a broader Source: World Bank (1996c). 37 38 Five Years after Rio: Innovations in Environmental Policy Phoenix, Arizona, United States: Privatization of Solid Waste Services Specific approach: property rights or decentralization Jn the late 1970s Phoenix had a sanitation lprivatization process public works learned how workforce of approximately 480 personnel ser- to improve its service quality both from its par- vicing a city of 700,000 people. The budget for ticipation in the bidding process and from solid this operation, inflated to today's dollars, would waste services delivered by the private sector. be about $80 million annually. Today Phoenix has After losing the first two rounds of bids, public a population of more than a million people, yet services won the next three successive bids. the total sanitation workforce is 330 people, with The competitive privatization approach has an annual budget of $43.3 million. These results served Phoenix well. Regardless of whether the were achieved by adopting a competitive priva- public or the private sector is responsible for de- tization process. livering solid waste services, the privatization In order to reduce its expenses on solid waste process has improved productivity, driven the services, the city council asked the management implementation of leading-edge waste technol- of public works to privatize a portion of the col- ogy, and proven a winner in cost-savings. lection service. Public works was allowed to par- ticipate in the bidding process. Through the Source: Donovan (1994). Creating Markets 39 Singapore: Auctionable Permits for the Consumption of Ozone-Depleting Substances Specific approach: tradable permits In Singapore, a sophisticated auction mechanism ing the 50 percent that was allocated on the basis has been introduced in order to trade the permits of historic consumption. for the consumption of ozone-depleting sub- There is a sufficiently large number of bidders stances. Each quarter the national quotas of to establish competitive conditions, as indicated by ozone-depletingsubstances Et rte allocatd qotwn o therapidincreaseinquotapriceduringthefirstfew ozone-depleting substances are allocated between rounds of bidding -before firms had made a seri- importers and users, half on the basis of historic ous effort at conservation and substitution. Com- consumption and half through auction. Import- pared to traditional command and control measures ers and users must register to participate in a ten- such as fixed quotas and prices, the auction ap- der process conducted by sealed bid, in which proach is efficient, in terms of the costs at both indi- each firm indicates the amount of ozone-deplet- vidual and society levels, and easy to implement. ing substances it would like to purchase and its The auction also allows the government to capture offer substce.Bids arithn wu ked by puriche and the a sizable portion of the quota rents, which can then offer price. Bids are then ranked by price and the be used to subsidize recycling services and encour- lowest winning bid (that is, the one that clears age alternative technologies. the market) serves as the quota price for the full allotment of ozone-depleting substances, includ- Source: Markandya and Shibh (1995). 40 Five Years after Rio: Innovations in Environmental Policy Joint Implementation and Its Application in the Americas Specific approach: international offset systems Stemming from the UN Framework Convention gram encouraging organizations in the United on Climate Change adopted during the 1992 Earth States and other countries to implement projects Summit in Rio, "joint implementation" (JI), also that reduce, avoid, or sequester greenhouse gas called "activities implemented jointly" (AIJ), is a emissions. A number of Lalin American countries new cost-effective approach to reduce emissions have also shown strong interest in supporting the of greenhouse gases. It is defined as international JI concept. Costa Rica has established a national arrangements through which an entity of one JI program. Several other Latin American coun- country partially meets its commitment to reduce tries, notably Belize, Bolivia, Guatemala, El Sal- greenhouse gas emission levels by undertaking vador, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, and cost effective emissions mitigating projects in an- Panama, are exploring waiys to create national other country. In particular, JI provides a devel- programs and policies. oped country with an opportunity to implement To date USIJI has approved 22 JI projects, 17 greenhouse gas emissions reduction activities in of which are in Latin American countries (8 in a developing country at a lower cost than could Costa Rica, 3 in Honduras, 2 in Belize, and one be achieved by the first country solely within its each in Bolivia, Mexico, Nicaragua, and Panama). own borders. From a JI investor's standpoint, JI T hese projects are mainly in two sectors: land use means cost effective emissions mitigation options, aLnd energy. They apply a variety of technologies a sound investment potential, and an opportu- aLnd practices, including ienergy efficiency im- nity to explore investments abroad. From the host provements; wind, geotherimal, hydroelectric, and country's standpoint, JI is an environmentally solar energy; coal to natural gas fuel switching; sound mechanism to attract foreign capital, which methane gas capture; and forest preservation and is otherwise unavailable, and obtain modern, reforestation. For example, the forest restoration clean, efficient technologies. project in Costa Rica will sequester five million Since the Rio conference, the United States has metric tons of carbon by restoring 58,500 hectares been actively engaged in initiating and imple- of abandoned or marginal pasture to primary dry menting JI projects. In October 1993 the United and wet forest. States announced the U.S. Initiative on Joint Implementation (USIJI), a voluntary pilot pro- Source U.S. Initiative on Joint [mplementation (1996). CHAPTER 6 Using Environmental Regulations Malaysia: Experience in Effluent Control in the Palm Oil Industry Specific approach: stanidards and charges he Malaysian experience in effluent con- treated effluent to 5,000 mg/l in 1978/79, to 500 trol in the palm oil industry demonstrates mg/ I by 1981, and to 100 mg/ I by 1984 onward. that a set of well-designed environmental In addition to the standards effluent charges policies can be very effective in controlling indus- are levied on the biological oxygen demand load trial pollution in a developing country. discharged. Palm oil mills were given one year The Malaysian government's effort to reduce (1978) of paying a low fee for the biological oxy- the effluent from the palm oil industry has been gen demand load exceeding a standard of 5000 implemented through a licensing system, which mg/l in recognition of the initial difficulties the mainly consists of effluent standards and effluent industry would face. A much stricter biological charges. Progressively stringent effluent stan- oxygen demand standard (100 mg/l in 1984 on- dards were stated in a government environmen- ward) and hence higher effluent charges were im- tal quality regulation and were implemented in posed after that. The charges are MR100 (US$40) four stages. Specifically, after being given one year per ton for biological oxygen demand loads above to install treatment facilities, palm oil mills were the standard and MR10 per ton for biological oxy- required to reduce their wastewater discharges, gen demand loads equal to or less than the stan- taking biological oxygen demand (BOD) concen- dard. Meanwhile, polluters were required to pay tration as the key parameter, from 25,000 mg/l un- a nonrefundable MR100 annual license-process- Table 6.1 Malaysia: experience in effluent control in the palm oil industry 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1984 1989 Biological oxygen demand 5,000 2,000 1,000 500 250 100 100 standards (mg/i) No. of mills 131 140 147 157 167 186 254 Crude palm oil production (1,000 tons) 1,786 2,188 2,573 2,822 3,511 3,715 6,057 Biological oxygen demand 563 690 850 1,000 1,100 1,640 1,693 generated (tons/day) Biological oxygen demand load 563 222 130 58 35 4 5 discharged (tons/day) % reduction in biological oxygen demand 0 67.8 84.7 94.2 96.8 99.8 99.7 load generated 41 42 Five Years after Rio: Innovations in Environmental Policy ing fee. The mills that succeeded in developing cent increase in the number of palm oil mills and technologies to reduce biological oxygen demand a jump of crude palm oil production from 1.8 were rewarded by being charged at a lower rate. million tons to 6.1 million tons, the daily biologi- The results of policy implementation are very cal oxygen demand load re leased to public water encouraging. The palm oil industry has made bodies fell steadily from 563 tons a day in 1978, steady progress towards meeting the target of 100 to 58 tons in 1981, and to only 5 tons in 1989. Stud- mg/l biological oxygen demand. A progressive ies also show that these policies did not result in reduction in the total biological oxygen demand loss of competitiveness for the palm oil industry. load discharged was recorded (see table 6.1). For example, between 1978 and 1989 despite a 93 per- Source: Markandya and Shibli (1995). Using Environmental Regulations 43 Israel: Quotas and Charges for Irrigation Water Use Specific approach. quotas and charges Compared with other water-scarce countries in Figure 6.1 Irrigated area and water application rate in the world, Israel has achieved remarkable results Israel, selected years 1951 to 1985 in the efficient use of irrigation water. Israel's Thousands of hectares m3/ha policies to improve water efficiency consist 250 0oo0 mainly of annual allocations of water and water 200 Water Imatred charges. ra508w Irrigation water is allocated based on an an- l 8 nual quota. The quota is fixed and licensed based l00 6000 on the area cultivated, the crop mix, and water 50 requirements of each crop. There are norms and 0 4000 maximum quantities of water allowed for differ- 0 951 1956 1973 985 ent crops, as determined by field estimates. The Source. Bhat.a, Ctti, ad Winpenny 1995. allocation system provides an incentive for wa- ter efficiency since farmers must sustain their of water supplied increased due to greater hy- farms on the allocated volume and any wasteful draulic losses in overloaded pipelines. practices may cause farmers to reduce their irri- The results from water quota and charge poli- gated area or pay penalties for overconsumption. cies have been a steady decline in the average Charges for irrigation water are based on a water application rate per hectare and a notable progressive block rate structure. In July 1990, for increase in irrigation efficiency. Between 1951 and example, water charges were as follows: 80 per- 1985ease water efficion rateen from and cent of allocated volume was charged at $0.125 1985 the water application rate fell from 8,200 m3 per cubic meter, the remaining 20 percent was per hectare to 5,200 m3 per hectare, a 36 percent charged at $0.20 per cubic meter, and consump- reduction (see figure 6.1). Irrigation water use in tion above the allocated limit was charged at $0.26 this period increased by 200 percent, whereas the per cubic meter. Seasonal pricing is also prac- area under irrigation increased by 380 percent. ticed. During peak months, a 40 percent premium is charged because the energy required per unit Source: Bhatia, Cestti, and Winpenny (1995). CHAPTER 7 Engaging the Public Australia: Eco-Labeling and Energy Saving Specific approach: information disclosure In order to improve the energy efficiency of house- Although its effect on improving energy use hold appliances, a number of countries have intensity is indirect, the labeling scheme works adopted the energy efficiency labeling scheme as effectively. It provides manufacturers (retailers) an enviromnmental polcy instrument. The experience with incentives to produce (sell) less energy - in- of energy labehngainNew mstrumth Wales, Atralian tensive products. For example, within one year of energy labeling in New South Wales, Australian of the introduction of the labeling scheme, the presents a success story. energy efficiency of refrigerators in showrooms The Australian energy efficiency labels are care- increased by about 15 percent, mainly due to fully designed to clearly present information. Spe- changes in the composition of refrigerators being cifically, the labels contain information on energy offered. One Australian producer of refrigerators consumption in two ways. First, a figure is used to has introduced between 15 and 20 new, energy- digitally indicate the specific energy consumption efficient models since labeling began in the late accrdig t stndad tst. Scon, afamlia, es-1980s. Ant improvement in energy efficiency has according to standard tests. Second, a familiar, eas- also been observed in the markets of dish wash- ily intelligible star rating system is adopted. As for ers and air conditioners. hotels, the more stars there are on a label the better the appliance is in terms of energy efficiency. Source: Kraemer (1995). 45 46 Five Years after Rio: Innovations in Environmental Policy Indonesia: Public Disclosure Program Specific approach: infornation disclosure ost developing countries are hampered With the help of the World Bank the Program in their pursuit of sustainable develop- for Pollution Control, Evaluation, and Rating ment by lack of information, institu- (called PROPER) was introduced to the public in tional capacity, and funding. In these countries June 1995. Based on the government's evaluation sophisticated instruments such as taxes, charges, 'f its environmental performance a plant is as- and tradable permits often cannot work well, signed a color rating (gold., green, blue, red, and Therefore, there is a need for appropriate, inno- llack) by PROPER. A blue rating is given to fac- vative, and cost-effective environmental poli- tories that are in compliance with national regu- cies and programs. Indonesia's public disclosure tatory standards, gold is reserved for world-class program is an example,of this. performers, and black for factories that have made s U * ~~~~~~~~~~no attempt to control pollution and are causing Faced with acute pollution problems, short- so damage. Gree n and d are inbten. age~~~~~~~~~~ ofevrnetlpotcinfnig. n serious damage. Green and red are in between. age of environmental protection fundng, and In the pilot phase of PROPER, 187 plants were weak enforcement of regulations, the Indonesian rtd 1 fteepat eertda e n government has experimented with a program for as black. Red and black plants were privately rating and publicly disclosing the environmental anotified and given until December 1995 to im- performance of Indonesian factories. The aim of prove their performance. Preliminary results the program is to have a low-cost but effective show that PROPER has a positive impact on fac- means of putting public pressure on factories and tories' environmental performance. By December providing incentives for factories to adopt cleaner 1 995-the time of full disclosure -the number of technologies. The pressure, through public dis- black plants had been reduced from 6 to 3, and the closure, on factories with poor environmental number of red plants from 115 to 108. performance is applied by the government, the community, and the market. Source: Afsah, Laplante, and Wheeler (1996). Engaging the Public 47 The Philippines: The EcoWatch Project Specific approach: infornation disclosure Eco-labeling is increasingly used as an effective straight and conduct at least two environmental instrument to make production and consumption programs such as waste reduction and recycling patterns more environmentally sound. The Nor- projects. dic countries, for example, have used eco-label- The rating results will be announced in the ing (the Nordic Swan) since 1989 for their media (newspapers, television, and radio) in an industrial products. Australia also adopted an attempt to provide firms with a strong incentive energy efficiency star rating system in the late to improve their environmental performance. 1980s (see Australia: Eco-labelmng and Energy Sav- So far broad guidelines for the color coding ing). The results of these eco-labeling pro{,rams methodology have been established. A list of 259 are very encouraging. Since the Rio conference, priority wastewater dischargers have been iden- eco-labeling has taken place in the developing tified and about 100 have been rated for the first world. The recent development of the EcoWatch EcoWatch announcement scheduled for late project in the Philippines represents this trend. March 1997. A critical step in the design of the On December 7,1996, President Ramos, wit- project was to include the industry representa- nessed by the Department of Environment and tives in the elaboration of the program from the Natural Resource and the Laguna Lake Develop- beginning with the result that the private sector, ment Authority, signed a memorandum of agree- through the signing of the EcoWatch project ment with twenty three industry associations agreement, committed to support the imple- (representing some 2,000 companies) formally mentation of the project and its mainstreaming launching an eco-labeling campaign, the indus- throughout the country. An additional five prov- trial EcoWatch Project. The project is designed to inces are scheduled to introduce EcoWatch dur- provide a strong incentive to industries to com- ing the next year. ply with environmental regulations and to reward The EcoWatch Project is supported by a Pol- those industries whose environmental perfor- lution Management Information System, which mance exceeds standard requirements. is being developed with World Bank assistance. The project specifically allows the govern- The system will also support the environmental ment to set up an environmental grading system user fee program (see Philippines: Introduction of to categorize the environmental performance of wastewater discharge fees), which is being imple- these firms using a five-color (gold, blue, green, mented concurrently, thereby reaping the brown, and black) labeling system. A black label benefit from the synergy between various instru- will be used for firms with no pollution control ments of the country's new environmental policy or causing serious damages to the environment, mix. blue for firms that meet all environmental stan- dards and required procedures (such as self-re- Source: The Universit of the Philippines and Engineer- porting of pollution data), and gold for firms that ing Research and Development Foundation, Inc. (1996); meet environmental standards for three years Areas (1996). 48 Five Years after Rio: Innovations in Environmental Policy Kenya: Community-Managed Water Utilities Specific approach: public participation The communities of Murugi-Mugumango and Other penalties play a role in keeping the sys- Ngorika in Kenya stand out as examples of suc- tems commercially viable. Both communities cessful community-owned water utilities run have stringent rules regarding nonpayment of along commercial lines. Both utilities started out fees or illegal connection to the water system. In as small, self-help water groups in the mid 1970s Ngorika a member who bypasses a meter may be and evolved into sophisticated water societies expelled from the society for life, be forced to pay with more than 1,000 members each. The monthly a large fine, or have to p]lead her or his case be- revenues for the Murugi-Mugumango Water So- fore the general members to be reconnected. Non- ciety are approximately Ksh 35,000-40,000, suffi- members are taken to court. Ngorika has had no cient to cover their monthly expenditures of Ksh cases of illegal connection since the society's de- 30,000-35,000. While the Ngorika Water Society velopment, as compared with the earlier illegal is smaller and less well established than Murugi- veon as ompared th Mugumango, its monthly revenues of Ksh 8,000- connection rate of 20 perc ent 10,000 are also sufficient to cover monthly Both wtr societiestuse disconnection as the expenditures (Ksh 7,000-8,000). In addition, both penalty for nonpayment of fees, but they try to communities have consistently expanded the sys- be flexible on this issue. They will accept partial tems and operations over time, building offices, payments on outstanding balances, and they re- employing staff, and widening distribution. frain from disconnecting if a member explains Two factors contribute to the success of these his or her difficulties before defaulting. communities' operations. First, both water soci- Reconnection fees are high, which discourages eties received timely management training from members from taking advantage of leniency. nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and Both water societies are flourishing. In 1985, technical assistance (for construction design and when Technoserve's (an NGO) management as- supervision) from the Ministry of Water Devel- sistance contract with Murugi-Mugumango opment. Second, these organizations worked with ended, the water society had Ksh 500,000 in the the societies to develop a commercial framework bank and about 20 km ol main and distribution (based on paying for water) and a full set of rules, pipeline with more than fifty individual connec- bylaws, and guidelines. Members defined the ob- tions. Since then 60 km of main piping have been jectives of society and delineated the rights and laid and 1, 160 members have obtained metered responsibilities of each member of the water co- connections to the system. The society has built operative and the penalties for noncompliance. an office complex, employs 18 permanent staff, These member-created rules foster ownership and has total liquid and property assets of almost and responsibility to the water system. For ex- ample, both water societies require that each h 800,000 Ngorika is a younger organization, member contribute a certain amount of labor as but in 1990 it had almost 60 km of main and dis- partial payment of fees. Cash payment in lieu of tribution pipe, as well as 36 km of connecting pipe. labor is actively discouraged by financially pe- It had 320 individual connections serving 456 nalizing those who pay in cash. In Ngorika an people before the society's formation in 1988. individual would need to pay Ksh 100 in cash to satisfy a day of labor valued at Ksh 25. Source: Narayan (1995). Engaging the Public 49 The Philippines: Nongovernmental Organization Participation in Conservation of Protected Areas Specific approach: public participation In 1994 the Philippines received a $20.8 million protected area system (a total of 1.25 million ha. grant from Global Environmental Facility (GEF) of land, wetland, and water areas). Protected Area to conduct a seven-year project to conserve the management boards (consisting of local govern- nation's biodiversity heritage. Recognizing that ments, NGOs, and indigenous people represen- national government alone cannot protect biodi- tatives) have been established for nine of these versity, the project was initially designed to form ten areas. Meanwhile, NIPA has recruited local partnerships between the public and private sec- NGOs to assist with field activities, community tors by integrating the assistance of nongovern- organizing, and strengthening of protected area mental organizations (NGOs) into the management boards. Progress in these areas is management of protected areas (PA) at national positive, and there is increased community and local levels awareness at the reserve level of the need for con- Recommended by the government, a consor- servation and sustainable development activities. tium of national environmental NGOs and nu- NGO participation, however, is not a pana- merous other community-based NGOs, the NGO cea for all previous administrative problems in for Integrated Protected Areas, Inc. (NIPA), has protected area management. The preliminary re- been designated to be the recipient of a $17 mil- sults of the project implementation have shown lion GEF grant (that is, 81 percent of the total) for similar problems to those that plague govern- its role in PA management. The key roles of the ment. Multiple layers of administration and NIPA include recruiting and coordinating local management have hindered effective project NGO support activities, providing technical as- management and contributed to delays in deci- sistance, monitoring implementation, and assist- sionmaking. There is reluctance for NIPA to pri- ingintheestablishmentandimplementationofa oritize activities and to make decisions, livelihood fund that will be used to support vil- particularly those that may jeopardize relation- lage socioeconomic projects and employment ac- ships with the local NGOs. tivities to reduce pressures on the protected areas. This arrangement is being implemented at 10 Source: Global Environment Facility (1994); The World priority protected areas of the national integrated Bank (1997b). 50 Five Years after Rio: Innovations in Environmental Policy Senegal: Creating Incentives for Farmer Participation Specific approach: public participation Early efforts in Senegal to transfer irrigation sys- would be allowed to enter the schemes only with tem management to farmers by establishing vil- farmers' permission. To irnprove farmers' man- lage units showed little success because of unclear agement capacity, manuals were prepared for plans, timetables, and provisions for transfer, and each system; and training in basic literacy as well because of the failure to provide control or incen- as technical and financial skills for organizational tives for the farmers. leaders was incorporated. Farmers were willing Recognizing these problems the 1990 Bank- to pay at least part of the training costs. assisted Irrigation IV Project required total trans- Although the long-term sustainability of the fer of operation and maintenance to farmeis as a project is difficult to assess at this stage, the ac- precondition for financing rehabilitation works. complishments to date are impressive. Before the Getting farmers to agree to take over these sys- transfer, assessed fees covered only 17 to 21 per- tems required considerable negotiation, partic- cent of maintenance and replacement costs, and larly because they perceived existing irrigation ls than a quarter of these were actualy collected. As a result, maintenance suffered, electricity of- fees as too high, let alone the additional costs and ten was not paid for, and system reliabi]Lity was responsibilities of covering full operations and tewanopidfradsyemelbhyws maintesponsibilitiesof expensering fulloperahonsvery poor. After the transfer, farmers paid fees maintenance expenses. o four times as high, covering full operation and Increasing the control of farmers over irriga- maintenance costs and a replacement fund for tion services was the key factor that convinced capital. The benefit to the I armers was greatly im- them to agree to assume responsibility for sys- proved irrigation reliability. Moreover, because tem management and cost recovery. Farmers de- they were able to monitor lhe pump operators and manded the right to hire their own staff, choosing had an incentive to save on energy costs, electric- agency operators only if they had performed well, ity requirements were reduced by half. Savings and even then reducing their salaries from the full to the government included huge reductions in civil service package. 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Environment De- Publishing House. partment, Washington, D.C. 10 Enabling the Safe Use of Biotechnology: Principles and Practice 11 Biodiversity and Agricultural Intensification: Partnersfor Development and Conservation 12 Rural Development: From Vision to Action (forthcoming) 13 Integrated Pest Management: Strategies and Policies for Effective Implementation 14 Rural Finance: Issues, Design, and Best Practices (forthcoming) 15 The Economics of Involuntary Resettlement (forthcoming) 16 Social Assessmentsfor Better Development: Case Studies in Russia and Central Asia 17 Expanding the Measure of Wealth: Indicators of Environmentally Sustainable Development 18 Five Years After Rio: Innovations in Environmental Policy Related ESD Publications Monitoring Environmental Progress: A Report on Work in Progress Nurturing Development: Aid and Cooperation in Today's Changing World Toward Sustainable Management of Water Resources Water Supply, Sanitation, and Environmental Sustainability: The Financing Challenge The World Bank Participation Sourcebook * - * - D 9 78.821 33 2 1 19 5 7 9 780821 339572