Challenges and Institutional Barriers in Implementing Carbon Market Initiatives among Pastoralist Communities: Experiences from Ngaremara, Northern Kenya

Kiptoo Chemoiwo *

Department of Environmental Sciences and Education, Kenyatta University, Kenya.

Salome Muriuki

Department of Environmental Sciences and Education, Kenyatta University, Kenya.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

Carbon market initiatives have been promoted as mechanisms to enhance climate resilience and provide economic benefits to vulnerable communities. However, their successful implementation is often hindered by governance, institutional, and socio-cultural challenges. This study examines barriers to carbon market implementation among pastoralist communities in Ngaremara, Isiolo County, Kenya. Using a cross-sectional survey and qualitative responses from 367 households, the research analyzes stakeholder participation, benefit-sharing mechanisms, financial accessibility, and policy-related constraints affecting project success. Quantitative findings indicate that 62.9% of respondents reported conflicts over benefit-sharing, while 33.5% felt excluded from decision-making processes, and 70% cited difficulties accessing technical expertise and financial resources. Qualitative responses further revealed concerns about unclear policy frameworks, limited transparency in benefit distribution, and tensions between carbon project requirements and pastoralist grazing traditions. Socio-cultural factors such as trust deficits (52%) and perceived misalignment with local land-use practices (30.8%) further constrained project adoption. Statistical analysis confirmed a significant negative association between implementation challenges and livelihood outcomes (p < 0.001). The study concludes that governance weaknesses, inadequate financial structures, policy implementation gaps, and limited community engagement pose major obstacles to carbon market success in pastoralist regions. Addressing these barriers requires strengthening participatory governance, improving financial access, and designing culturally responsive climate finance mechanisms.

Keywords: participatory governance, financial accessibility, policy gaps, trust-building, traditional land-use systems, dryland adaptation


How to Cite

Chemoiwo, Kiptoo, and Salome Muriuki. 2026. “Challenges and Institutional Barriers in Implementing Carbon Market Initiatives Among Pastoralist Communities: Experiences from Ngaremara, Northern Kenya”. International Journal of Environment and Climate Change 16 (4):47-57. https://doi.org/10.9734/ijecc/2026/v16i45343.

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