REDD+ Partnership Voluntary REDD+ Database Progress Report - ksrevenue 2025

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As of August 2022, 624 individual REDD+ projects and programs have been initiated with about two-thirds still active (Simonet et al., 2020). The majority are paid for by multilateral and bilateral donors, including the World Bank and the UN-REDD initiative.
Payments for ecosystem services (PES), also known as payments for environmental services (or benefits), are incentives offered to farmers or landowners in exchange for managing their land to provide some sort of ecological service.
Across 40 voluntary REDD+ projects in 9 countries, on average REDD+ interventions reduced deforestation and degradation relative to control pixels over the first 5 years of operation. The projects achieved greater reductions in deforestation and forest degradation where the threat of deforestation was greatest.
Payments for environmental services (also known as payments for ecosystem services or PES), are payments to farmers or landowners who have agreed to take certain actions to manage their land or watersheds to provide an ecological service.
REDD stands for Reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation in developing countries. The + stands for additional forest-related activities that protect the climate, namely sustainable management of forests and the conservation and enhancement of forest carbon stocks.

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REDD+ primarily aims at the implementation of activities by national governments to reduce human pressure on forests that result in greenhouse gas emissions at the national level.
Payment for ecosystem services (PES) is an incentive based mechanism while REDD+ performance-based forest management. Both are based on the same principle for incentivizing improved management. Within the overall PES framework, REDD+ features as one PES scheme on carbon.
In its simplest form, PES is a transaction between landholders and the beneficiaries of the services their land provides. Thus, downstream communities might pay upper-watershed landowners to plant riparian vegetation to ensure water quality or to halt deforestation to ensure flood protection.