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    Costa Rica Is a World Example against Deforestation Doubling Its Forests after Changing the Production Model

    Conservation is a state policy in the country and subsidies have been maintained throughout the last decades

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    The image we have of Costa Rica today is that of a natural paradise full of national parks and protected areas. But it was not always like this. 50 years ago โ€œTicoโ€ (Costa Rican) forests disappeared at a rate of 50,000 hectares a year. The impulse of agriculture and livestock was devastating everything. The ecological conscience began, however, to appear in documentaries such as Agony of the Mountain (1973) in which they asked โ€œCan we stop the massacre of our forests?โ€

    Experience has shown that it could. Since the 1980s, Costa Rica has doubled its number of forests and today more than half of its territory is covered by a green blanket: forest area.

    It was thanks to the expansion of national parks (there are more than 30 and dozens of protected areas) and the creation of innovative programs to also involve the private sector in conservation, in a country where most of the forests are private. All this occurred in parallel to a change in the production model, which went from being monopolized by livestock and agriculture to turning, among other sectors, for tourism.

    One of the tools that was implemented in the 90s was the Environmental Payment for Service (PSA). Its name says it all. It basically consists of rewarding the owner of a farm for planting trees or for conserving them. Within these two large categories there are various modalities.

    Harvest trees to save the forest

    Rodolfo Salazar, for example, inherited from his father a farm in which 70 percent of the land was forest. The older generation would not have had any doubts about what to do: โ€œCut down the trees and plant crops.โ€ However, planted in front of a Ceiba tree with an immeasurable diameter and 30 meters high, he admits that he could not cut down such a specimen.

    The solution came to him with a forest management plan, one of the options offered by the Costa Rican government. Based on the principle that what the forest grows can be cut down, they studied their regenerative capacity, counted all the specimens over 50 centimeters in diameter and concluded that they could cut down 5 trees per hectare. After 15 years, a new assessment of the forest would be made and a certain number of trees could be โ€œharvestedโ€ again. In the meantime, he receives money to conserve the rest, for the environmental services rendered.

    โ€œNot only does the owner win, the whole planet also winsโ€

    โ€œNot only the owner wins, the whole planet also winsโ€ summarizes Gilber Solano, who acts as a forestry agent, supervising on behalf of the state a hundred of these projects in the department of San Carlos, in the north of the country.

    Looking at the dense vegetation of the Salazar familyโ€™s forest, which barely allows the sunโ€™s rays to enter, no one would say that ten years ago they cut down dozens of large trees. โ€œThe day after the felling, there were large clearings, but in a matter of months everything began to be covered with vegetation and the trees that were smaller began to grow more quicklyโ€ says Rodolfo.

    Gilber also explains it. โ€œThe dynamics of the forest starts from a clearing. Controlled logging reactivates it and makes it more efficient in terms of oxygen release and carbon sequestration.โ€

    New business opportunities

    The extracted wood also opened up new business opportunities for the Salazars. They started with a sawmill, then they used the sawdust to grow ornamental plants and now they are starting to make furniture.

    Something similar happened with Josรฉ Luis Rodrรญguez, a former rancher turned into an enthusiastic reforester. Where his cows used to graze, he has planted various species of timber trees. The last ones, made of teak. He had to let them grow for 15 or 20 years and in return received his payment for environmental services. The deadline has already passed, you could cut them down and extract the wood because no one is going to pay you to keep them. But it will not do. He cut off a part and didnโ€™t like the result. โ€œIt generates a lot of destruction, look how this has beenโ€ he says in front of a completely bare piece of land. And he adds: โ€œThere was a family of congos (monkeys) and they left with the noise of the logging and that saddens me.โ€

    Instead of taking economic advantage of the wood, he has decided to take advantage of the shade of the trees to put vanilla and cocoa. โ€œDoes the program work? โ€“ he wonders โ€“ I say. In my case, yes. I see trees everywhere, I see biodiversity everywhere. And the change, that I no longer like to cut down.โ€

    Preserve, state policy

    Conservation is a state policy in Costa Rica and the Payment for Environmental Services has been maintained throughout the last decades, no matter who governs.

    Recently, the country received the Earthshot Prize, awarded by the Duke of Cambridge, Prince William, and which is endowed with 1.3 million dollars, for this reforestation program that Costa Rica now wants to transfer to the sea. Over the years, the PSA has enjoyed fairly stable funding, which comes in part from a tax on hydrocarbons.

    โ€œAt first people were reluctant to join the program, they continued to see the forest as a potential land for crops, but over the years the demand has increased and today we can only meet 20 percent of the requests we receiveโ€ says Arnulfo Sรกnchez responsible for the Costa Rican Forest Financing Fund (Fonafifo) in San Carlos.

    Financial difficulties have also worsened in recent years. The country is going through a serious fiscal crisis that has forced funds to be diverted to other items and with the pandemic, fuel tax collection has collapsed. Arnulfo assumes that next year will also be difficult for the budget. โ€œRight now we can only maintain current contracts. We are not incorporating any new ones, or renewing those that have expired.โ€

    It is urgent, according to Arnulfo, to find new ways of financing that guarantee the sustainability of the program. There are owners who are already telling them that if they are not paid to conserve it, they will have to go back to looking for other uses for the forest. There is a serious risk of pushback. In the last 30 years, Costa Rica doubled its number of forests. In the previous 30 he was on the verge of ending them. โ€œHow?โ€ That 1970s documentary wondered: Will Costa Rica once again stop the massacre of its forests?

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