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Dive into the research topics where Arturo Balderas Torres is active.

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Featured researches published by Arturo Balderas Torres.


Carbon Balance and Management | 2011

Dealing with locally-driven degradation : a quick start option under REDD+

Margaret Skutsch; Arturo Balderas Torres; Tuyeni H. Mwampamba; Adrian Ghilardi; Martin Herold

The paper reviews a number of challenges associated with reducing degradation and its related emissions through national approaches to REDD+ under UNFCCC policy. It proposes that in many countries, it may in the short run be easier to deal with the kinds of degradation that result from locally driven community over-exploitation of forest for livelihoods, than from selective logging or fire control. Such degradation is low-level, but chronic, and is experienced over very large forest areas. Community forest management programmes tend to result not only in reduced degradation, but also in forest enhancement; moreover they are often popular, and do not require major political shifts. In principle these approaches therefore offer a quick start option for REDD+. Developing reference emissions levels for low-level locally driven degradation is difficult however given that stock losses and gains are too small to be identified and measured using remote sensing, and that in most countries there is little or no forest inventory data available. We therefore propose that forest management initiatives at the local level, such as those promoted by community forest management programmes, should monitor, and be credited for, only the net increase in carbon stock over the implementation period, as assessed by ground level surveys at the start and end of the period. This would also resolve the problem of nesting (ensuring that all credits are accounted for against the national reference emission level), since communities and others at the local level would be rewarded only for increased sequestration, while the national reference emission level would deal only with reductions in emissions from deforestation and degradation.


Regional Environmental Change | 2013

The valuation of forest carbon services by Mexican citizens: the case of Guadalajara city and La Primavera biosphere reserve

Arturo Balderas Torres; Douglas C. MacMillan; Margaret Skutsch; Jonathan Cranidge Lovett

Adequate demand for, and recognition of, forest carbon services is critical to success of market mechanisms for forestry-based conservation and climate change mitigation. National and voluntary carbon-offsetting schemes are emerging as alternatives to international compliance markets. We developed a choice experiment to explore determinants of local forest carbon-offset valuation. A total of 963 citizens from Guadalajara in Mexico were asked to consider a purchase of voluntary offsets from the neighbouring Biosphere Reserve of La Primavera and from two alternative more distant locations: La Michilía in the state of Durango and El Cielo in Tamaulipas. Surveys were applied in market stall sessions and online using two different sampling methods: the snowball technique and via a market research company. The local La Primavera site attracted higher participation and valuation than the more distant sites. However, groups particularly interested in climate change mitigation or cost may accept cost-efficient options in the distant sites. Mean implicit carbon prices obtained ranged from


Ecological Economics | 2010

Analysis of the carbon sequestration costs of afforestation and reforestation agroforestry practices and the use of cost curves to evaluate their potential for implementation of climate change mitigation

Arturo Balderas Torres; Rob Marchant; Jon C. Lovett; Jim Christopher Rudd Smart; Richard Tipper

6.79 to


Ecosystem services | 2013

Payments for ecosystem services and rural development: Landowners' preferences and potential participation in western Mexico

Arturo Balderas Torres; Douglas C. MacMillan; Margaret Skutsch; Jonathan Cranidge Lovett

15.67/tCO2eq depending on the surveying methodology and profile of respondents. Survey application mode can significantly affect outcome of the experiment. Values from the market stall sessions were higher than those from the snowball and market research samples obtained online; this may be linked to greater cooperation associated with personal interaction and collective action. In agreement with the literature, we found that valuation of forest carbon offsets is associated with cognitive, ethical, behavioural, geographical and economic factors.


Forests | 2012

Splitting the difference: a proposal for benefit sharing in reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD+)

Arturo Balderas Torres; Margaret Skutsch


Forestry | 2013

Using basal area to estimate aboveground carbon stocks in forests: La Primavera Biosphere's Reserve, Mexico

Arturo Balderas Torres; Jonathan Cranidge Lovett


Forests | 2014

Potential for Integrating Community-Based Monitoring into REDD+

Arturo Balderas Torres


Forests | 2014

Integrating CBM into Land-Use Based Mitigation Actions Implemented by Local Communities

Arturo Balderas Torres; Lucio Acuña; José Vergara


Forests | 2013

Potential for Climate Change Mitigation in Degraded Forests: A Study from La Primavera, México

Arturo Balderas Torres; Ricardo Ontiveros Enríquez; Margaret Skutsch; Jon C. Lovett


Energy Policy | 2009

Review of the 2008 UNFCCC meeting in Poznań

Jon C. Lovett; Peter S. Hofman; Karlijn Morsink; Arturo Balderas Torres; Joy S. Clancy; Koos Krabbendam

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