| One of the fastest ways to get additional income into
remote rural communities is to use the Fair Trade scheme for marketing
their existing products. However, whilst the Fair Trade system has
many advantages for increasing incomes in communities in developing
countries, the scheme was not developed with any specific conservation
benefit in mind. The Rainforest Alliance has developed a similar
scheme, which has additional restrictions on how the crops can be
grown (non use of herbicides and pesticides). However, even this
scheme does not link price to the wider conservation performance of
the whole village. Indeed there is one village in the Cusuco National
Park buffer zone at the Op Wall Honduras site, which has achieved
Rainforest Alliance approved prices for its coffee products, yet this
village is the one most involved with illegal hunting in the adjacent
reserve! To overcome this problem the Operation Wallacea Trust has
trade marked a new scheme called Wildlife Conservation Products where
communities can receive Fair Trade equivalent prices for their
commodities only if they have signed one of these conservation
agreements. If there is evidence that village members are continuing
to hunt or log then the scheme is suspended until the community can
exert the necessary pressure to prevent this activity. However, the
payment of prices significantly above market rates in these
communities provides a strong positive incentive for ensuring 'their'
forest is protected. |
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