SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  47
Ecosystem Service Valuation
Environmental Economics Fall 2013
Maggie Winslow, Ph.D.
What are Ecosystem Services?
• Benefits people obtain from ecosystems
DIRECT USE VALUES INDIRECT USE VALUES NON-USE VALUES
Provisioning Regulating/Support Cultural
Crops/ Livestock Maintenance of air quality Existence value, Bequest value
Animal skins
Regional/ local/ global climate
regulation
Ethical and spiritual values
Capture fisheries/
Aquaculture
Water purification and waste
treatment
Educational and inspirational
values
Freshwater
Regulation of water timing
and flows
Timber and other wood
fibers/ Biomass
Erosion control and sediment
retention
Biochemicals, natural
medicines, and
pharmaceuticals / Genetic
Resources
Natural hazard mitigation
/Flood control
Ornamental resources Disease mitigation
Cultural Maintenance of soil quality
Recreation and ecotourism Pest mitigation / Pollination
Categorization of Ecosystem Services
Classifying Ecosystem Services – Some Fit
Multiple Categories
Stillwater Sciences. 2011. Overview of ecosystem services quantification tools and proposed format for site tool development. Prepared by
Stillwater Sciences, Berkeley, California for Sustainable Conservation, San Francisco, California.
Ecosystem Services Can Have Multiple Functions
http://agbiodiversity.com/AgBiodviersityProject/Howbiodiversitysupportsfarmprofits/tabid/133/Default.aspx
Carson and Mitchell (1993)
WRI Survey: Are Ecosystem Services Being
Addressed in Environmental Decision Making?
A 2010 online survey by WRI of 171 environmental
consultants, government employees, NGOs found:
• 79% of respondents knew about ecosystem services
• 40% have seen ecosystem services addressed in
environmental assessment
– Freshwater is the main service that is addressed
• Main perceived barrier is lack of guidance on
how to address ecosystem services
Importance of ES for Decision Makers
• Ecosystems are being degraded at a high rate –
climate change exacerbating this.
• Demand for ecosystem services is increasing
– Population growth
– Improved in living standards
• ES are growing scarcer
• What gets measured gets managed - Our policy
decisions often do not incorporate the value of
ecosystem services
• Ecosystem Service Valuation (ESV)
Multiple Purposes for ESV in Relation to
Policy Making
Monitor changes in natural capital and the impact
of this on human welfare ex. Natural Capital Accounting
Natural Resource Damage Assessment
Evaluation of proposed policies/developments
Cost-
Benefit
Analysis
Cost-
Effectivenes
s Analysis
Multi-
criteria
Analysis
Cost-Benefit, or Benefit-Cost, Analysis
Given that a policy will require some inputs and
produce some outputs, it will also have costs
and create benefits. Comparing the costs and
benefits in monetary terms is what benefit-
cost analysis amounts to.
Benefit-cost analysis can help determine which
policy/program/project is more efficient than
the other, or alternatively which one is more
cost-effective.
Example of ESV and CBA
• UK Cost Benefit Analysis of proposed marine
reserves
– 11 relevant ecosystem services identified
– 7 were valued due to available information
– Benefit transfer method
• NPV of benefits range – US$16.4 to $36.1 billion
• NPV of costs range – US$0.6 and $1.9 billion
• Benefit to cost ratio is ~10:1, not all benefits
even included
Hussain et al., 2010
Cost-Effectiveness Analysis
• Goal is already determined. Analysis is used
to find the least expensive means to achieve
this goal.
Cost Effectiveness Analysis Example: A Watershed Approach to Improve
Water Quality: Case Study of Clean Water Services’ Tualatin River
Program, Clean Water Services (CWS), Portland OR’s public water
resources utility.
Faced with the need to lower effluent water temperatures
in order to maintain its permits to discharge water into the
Tualatin River, CWS considered two alternatives:
1. Build a new facility - $60
million, annual operating
costs of $2 million
Benefit: it does the job,
no environmental
benefits were identified
2. Ecosystem Restoration and
Maintenance - $5 million
Benefit – it does the job, it saved
money, 1.6 mil trees/shrubs
planted resulting in thermal
credits of 295 mil kilocalories per
day, restored salmon habitat,
upland scrub habitat, carbon
sequestration, increased
biodiversity, recreation
opportunities.
Multi-Criteria Analysis
• Monetary information is used as one input in
the decision making process.
Historic U.S. Federal Use of ESV
Comprehensive Environmental Responses, Compensation
and Liability Act (CERCLA) (Superfund): 1980 – allowed for
ecosystem damage assessment.
Executive Order 12911 (1981) required cost benefit analysis
be applied to new regulations
1991 EPA convened an Ecosystem Valuation Forum- focused
on how to improve linkages between ecology and economics
ESV used by USFS, mostly in CBA related to forest planning
and water resources
Federal Level Progress in ESV
• EPA’s National Center for Environmental Economics (NCEE),
established 2000.
• Government sponsored $4.5 million tools competition
• USDA’s Office of Environmental Markets, which as of January
1, 2011 is part of the Office of the Chief Economist.
• Guidelines for Preparing Economic Analyses published by the
NCEE in 2011
PCAST Report 2011
SUSTAINING ENVIRONMENTAL CAPITAL:
PROTECTING SOCIETY AND THE ECONOMY
Executive Office of the President
President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology
JULY 2011
PCAST Report: Federal agencies
thatimplementbiodiversity and ecosystem
conservation programs should prioritize
expenditures based on cost efficiency.
• Federal agencies collectively currently spend
more than $10 billion annually on ecosystem
restoration activities.
• Much more careful targeting could achieve
greater environmental benefits at the same
cost.
PCAST: Federal agencies with responsibilities
relating to ecosystems and their services (e.g.,
EPA, NOAA, DOI, USDA) should be tasked with
improving their capabilities to
– develop valuations for the ecosystem services affected by
their decision-making and
– factor the results into analyses that inform their major
planning and management decisions.
• The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB), OSTP, and CEQ should ensure that the
methodologies are developed collaboratively across
agencies.
Example of Federal Requirement for
ESV
• In relation to federal infrastructure
investments: “all types of benefits and
costs, both market and non-market, should be
considered. To the extent that environmental
and other non-market benefits and costs can
be quantified, they shall be given the same
weight as quantifiable market benefits and
costs.”
- Executive Order 12893, 1994
California Water Quality Control Board
• Regulate activities in order to: “attain the
highest water quality which is reasonable,
considering all demands being made and to be
made on those waters and the total values
involved, beneficial and detrimental,
economic and social, tangible and intangible.”
However…
• There has been little enforcement of these
requirement to consider broader valuation of
ecosystem services.
International ESV Initiatives
– TEEB: The Economics of Ecosystems and
Biodiversity series – UNEP, European
Commission
– WAVES: Wealth Accounting and Valuation of
Ecosystem Services – World Bank, UN, many
national governments and NGO
– The Millennium Assessment, UNEP: ~2000
experts, 4 year project to survey the world’s
ecosystems’ health
Private:
– Companies calculating the value of their
impacts on ES – ex. Puma
Puma Environmental P&L Statement
2010
• € 94 million of GHG emissions and water consumption
• € 51 million caused by land use change for the production of raw
materials, air pollution and waste along its value chain.
Only € 8 million of the € 145 million total derive from PUMA’s core
operations such as offices, warehouses, stores and logistics while the
remaining € 137 million fall upon PUMA’s supply chain.
These costs, which will not affect PUMA’s net earnings, will serve as an
initial metric for the company when aiming to mitigate the footprint of
PUMA’s operations and all supply chain levels.
http://safe.puma.com/us/en/2011/11/puma-completes-first-environmental-profit-and-loss-
account-which-values-impacts-at-e-145-million/
Local/Regional Policy-related Drivers of
Interest in ESV
(Scarlett & Boyd, 2011)
Revenue streams to
support conservation,
restoration and
sustainable practices
Savings for basic
community services such
as clean water,
protection from floods
and fires, erosion and
storm water control, etc.
Opportunities for cost-
effective regulatory
compliance Avoidance or
elimination of costs
associated with the
loss of ecosystems
and their services
Enhancement of the
resiliency of communities
in a changing world
Multi-Step Process in Ecosystem Service
Valuation Related to Policy Changes
Economic
Value of
Changes
Impact on
Human
Welfare
Changes in
Ecosystem
Services
Ecosystem
Impacts
Policy
Change
An introductory guide to valuing ecosystem services, DEFRA, 2007
Methods for Assigning Monetary Value to Ecosystem
Services
Revealed-preference Stated-preference Cost-based
Market methods: Valuations are
directly obtained from what
people must be willing to pay for
the service or good.
Contingent valuation: People
are directly asked their
willingness to pay or accept
compensation for some change
in ecological service.
Replacement costs: The loss of a
natural system service is
evaluated in terms of what it
would cost to replace that
service.
Production approaches: Service
values are assigned from the
impacts of those services on
economic out-puts (e.g.,
increased shrimp yields from
increased area of wetlands).
Conjoint analysis: People are
asked to choose or rank different
service scenarios or ecological
conditions that differ in the mix
of those conditions. Also called
“choice experiments”.
Avoidance or Damage costs: A
service is valued on the basis of
costs avoided, or of the extent to
which it allows the avoidance of
costly averting behaviors,
including mitigation.
Travel cost: Valuations of site-
based amenities are implied by
the costs people incur to enjoy
them
Hedonic methods: The value of
a service is implied by what
people will be willing to pay for
the service through purchases in
related markets, such as housing
markets. (from Farber et al. 2006, pg. 120)
Revealed Preference Methods Example: Water Quality
Violations and Avoidance Behavior: Evidence from Bottled
Water Consumption (Zivin et al. 2011)
• Looked at bottled water purchases in locations
that experienced water quality violations.
• They find a 22% increase in bottled water sales
from a microorganism violation, a 26% increase
in response to nitrate violations, and a 17%
increase from an element/chemical violation.
• Get an estimate of about $60 million a year of
avoidance behavior in the U.S.
Hedonic Pricing Method Example
• Author(s): Boxall, P. C., W. H. Chan and M. L.
McMillan
• Title: "The Impact of Oil and Natural Gas Facilities
On Rural Residential Property Values: A Spatial
Hedonic Analysis"
• Source of Study: Resource and Energy
Economics, 2005-01-01
• Web Link:
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6VFJ
-4FK42HM-
1/2/02a35e67e71d3242e00100177f37becc
Summary Boxall et al. 2005
• This study estimated the effect of oil and gas facilities
on rural residential properties near Calgary, Alberta.
• Data were gathered using real estate listing database
for the period January 1994 to March 2001.
• The average reduction in price levels associated with
industry characteristics ranged from (CDN 2001) $
3,487 - $ 20,942.
• The estimated reduction in property value ranged from
4 to 8 percent if property was located within 4 km of
industry facilities.
• This study has helped aid the decision making process
in siting of oil and gas facilities and provided merits for
compensation in lost property value.
CV Example – Carson and Mitchell (1993)
Benefits or Value Transfer
Use the ecosystem service values from one or a
series of studies to estimate the values in a
similar area or situation.
Ex. Measuring Natural Capital: The Value of
New Jersey’s Ecosystem Services and
Natural Capital, 2006
Using the benefits transfer approach:
• Wetlands – $9.4 billion/yr (2004 dollars) for freshwater wetlands and $1.2
billion/yr for saltwater wetlands
• Marine ecosystems – $5.3 billion/yr for estuaries and tidal bays and about
$389 million/yr for other coastal waters, excluding the value of fish and
shellfish
• Forests cover – $2.2 billion/yr, excluding the value of timber
• Urban green space covers – estimated $419 million of ecosystem services
annually, principally aesthetic and recreational amenities.
The total value of these ecosystem services is $19.4 billion/year.
Gund Institute, 2006
Ex. Ecosystem service value in dollars per acre per year
Databases for Benefit Transfer
• EVRI: Environmental
Valuation Reference
Inventory (Environment
Canada with support
from USEPA and DEFRA)
– Searchable database of
~2400 studies with
summaries included.
• EarthEconomics, non-
profit, Tacoma WA
– Researches Library
EVRI Studies
Current Web-based Tools
• InVEST: Integrated Valuation of Environmental Services and
Tradeoffs
• ARIES: Artificial Intelligence for Ecosystem Services
Current Web-based Tools Cont.
• EarthEconomics:
– ESV: Ecosystem Valuation Toolkit
– SERVES: Simple and Effective Resource for Valuing
Ecosystem Services
• Others
– regionally focused or
– cover just one or two ecosystem services
• Consulting firms have proprietary tools – ex.
EcoMetrix, EcoAim, ESValue
Present Situation
• More tools under development
• Existing tools
– Not compatible
– Use different metrics
– Use different valuation techniques and philosophies
• EPA and other agencies are developing guidelines
for ESV
• Some services receive little attention
Policy Debate Over Using ESV
• Practical: Is some number better than no
number? How to deal with uncertainty?
– How much accuracy is needed?
– ESV helps inform decisions but does not
make decisions.
• Philosophical: Don’t ecosystems have
untold value?
– But will these be included if no number is
attached?
Obstacles and Limitations
• Provisioning and flow of ES cut across policy-
relevant boundaries
• Challenging to conduct ES research that is
applicable in policy contexts.
– Requires integration of multiple disciplines
– Methodology issues can affect credibility of
valuation estimates
• CBA is sometimes precluded by legislative
standards
• Lack of consensus on goals of environmental
regulations
Final Thoughts
Ecosystem services are increasingly important
•Due to climate change – more floods, ocean surges,
drought
•Due to fresh water depletion
•Ecosystems being depleted/destroyed
•Population growth
Ecosystem service valuation is a decision support tool.
Mistake to think that ESV tools are just about quantifying and
producing numbers. There is a lot of strategy, framing,
training, tactics that must happen to support the numbers.
Can be useful even if it does not cover all relevant ecosystem
services.
Primary References
Bagstad, K.J., Semmens, D., Winthrop, R., Jaworski, D., and Larson, J. (2012). Ecosystem Services Valuation to
Support Decisionmaking on Public Lands — A Case Study of the San Pedro River Watershed , Arizona
Scientific Investigations Report 2012 − 5251. Arizona.
Barbier, E. B. (2011b). Challenges in valuing ecosystem services. World Forum 2011.
Carson, R. T., & Mitchell, R. C. (1993). The Value of Clean Water; The Public’s Willingness to Pay for
Boatable, Fishable, and Swimmable Quality Water. Water Resources Research, 29(7), 2445–2454.
Daily, G. C., Polasky, S., Goldstein, J., Kareiva, P. M., Mooney, H. a, Pejchar, L., Ricketts, T. H., et al. (2009).
Ecosystem services in decision making: time to deliver. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 7(1), 21–
28.
Iovanna, R., & Griffiths, C. (2006). Clean water, ecological benefits, and benefits transfer: A work in progress at
the U.S. EPA. Ecological Economics, 60(2), 473–482. doi:10.1016/j.ecolecon.2006.06.012
Liu, S., Costanza, R., Farber, S., & Troy, A. (2010). Valuing ecosystem services: theory, practice, and the need for
a transdisciplinary synthesis. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1185, 54–78.
Scarlett, L., & Boyd, J. (2011). Ecosystem Services : Capabilities, (March).
Tallis, H., &Polasky, S. (2009). Mapping and valuing ecosystem services as an approach for conservation and
natural-resource management. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1162, 265–83.

Contenu connexe

Tendances

Ecosystem Services
Ecosystem ServicesEcosystem Services
Ecosystem Servicesmuskokee
 
Forests, Climate Change and REDD+: A brief introduction
Forests, Climate Change and REDD+: A brief introductionForests, Climate Change and REDD+: A brief introduction
Forests, Climate Change and REDD+: A brief introductionCIFOR-ICRAF
 
Benefits of urban forest slides
Benefits of urban forest slidesBenefits of urban forest slides
Benefits of urban forest slidesNG Hui
 
Implementing Ecosystem Services in Public Decision Making
Implementing Ecosystem Services in Public Decision MakingImplementing Ecosystem Services in Public Decision Making
Implementing Ecosystem Services in Public Decision MakingWorld Resources Institute (WRI)
 
Lesson 4 Ecosystem functions and ecosystem services
Lesson 4   Ecosystem functions and ecosystem servicesLesson 4   Ecosystem functions and ecosystem services
Lesson 4 Ecosystem functions and ecosystem servicesDr. P.B.Dharmasena
 
Economics of Ecosystem and Biodiversity
Economics of Ecosystem and BiodiversityEconomics of Ecosystem and Biodiversity
Economics of Ecosystem and BiodiversityIndia Water Portal
 
Ecosystem services for biodiversity conservation and sustainable agriculture
Ecosystem services for biodiversity conservation and sustainable agricultureEcosystem services for biodiversity conservation and sustainable agriculture
Ecosystem services for biodiversity conservation and sustainable agricultureExternalEvents
 
Economic valuation of forest ecosystem
Economic valuation of forest ecosystemEconomic valuation of forest ecosystem
Economic valuation of forest ecosystemVinodManikraoMhaiske
 
Payment for Ecosystem Services Pilot Implementation in Mae Sa-Kog Ma Biospher...
Payment for Ecosystem Services Pilot Implementation in Mae Sa-Kog Ma Biospher...Payment for Ecosystem Services Pilot Implementation in Mae Sa-Kog Ma Biospher...
Payment for Ecosystem Services Pilot Implementation in Mae Sa-Kog Ma Biospher...CIFOR-ICRAF
 
Sustainable land use management
Sustainable land use managementSustainable land use management
Sustainable land use managementCHANDRA KUMARI
 
Payment for ecosystem services (pes) for
Payment for ecosystem services (pes) forPayment for ecosystem services (pes) for
Payment for ecosystem services (pes) forDarshana Senarath
 
Provincial and local forest policy review
Provincial and local forest policy reviewProvincial and local forest policy review
Provincial and local forest policy reviewAnandJha108
 
community based natural resource management
community based natural resource managementcommunity based natural resource management
community based natural resource managementDr Rajeev Kumar
 
Community based natural resource management
Community based natural resource managementCommunity based natural resource management
Community based natural resource managementKherlen Shinebayar
 
Ecosystem services and conservation
Ecosystem services and conservationEcosystem services and conservation
Ecosystem services and conservationBasic Biology
 

Tendances (20)

Ecosystem Services
Ecosystem ServicesEcosystem Services
Ecosystem Services
 
Forests, Climate Change and REDD+: A brief introduction
Forests, Climate Change and REDD+: A brief introductionForests, Climate Change and REDD+: A brief introduction
Forests, Climate Change and REDD+: A brief introduction
 
Benefits of urban forest slides
Benefits of urban forest slidesBenefits of urban forest slides
Benefits of urban forest slides
 
Implementing Ecosystem Services in Public Decision Making
Implementing Ecosystem Services in Public Decision MakingImplementing Ecosystem Services in Public Decision Making
Implementing Ecosystem Services in Public Decision Making
 
What are ecosystem services
What are ecosystem servicesWhat are ecosystem services
What are ecosystem services
 
Lesson 4 Ecosystem functions and ecosystem services
Lesson 4   Ecosystem functions and ecosystem servicesLesson 4   Ecosystem functions and ecosystem services
Lesson 4 Ecosystem functions and ecosystem services
 
Travel cost model warawut
Travel cost model warawutTravel cost model warawut
Travel cost model warawut
 
Economics of Ecosystem and Biodiversity
Economics of Ecosystem and BiodiversityEconomics of Ecosystem and Biodiversity
Economics of Ecosystem and Biodiversity
 
Ecosystem services for biodiversity conservation and sustainable agriculture
Ecosystem services for biodiversity conservation and sustainable agricultureEcosystem services for biodiversity conservation and sustainable agriculture
Ecosystem services for biodiversity conservation and sustainable agriculture
 
EIA
EIAEIA
EIA
 
Environmental impact assessment
Environmental impact assessmentEnvironmental impact assessment
Environmental impact assessment
 
Economic valuation of forest ecosystem
Economic valuation of forest ecosystemEconomic valuation of forest ecosystem
Economic valuation of forest ecosystem
 
Payment for Ecosystem Services Pilot Implementation in Mae Sa-Kog Ma Biospher...
Payment for Ecosystem Services Pilot Implementation in Mae Sa-Kog Ma Biospher...Payment for Ecosystem Services Pilot Implementation in Mae Sa-Kog Ma Biospher...
Payment for Ecosystem Services Pilot Implementation in Mae Sa-Kog Ma Biospher...
 
Sustainable land use management
Sustainable land use managementSustainable land use management
Sustainable land use management
 
Payment for ecosystem services (pes) for
Payment for ecosystem services (pes) forPayment for ecosystem services (pes) for
Payment for ecosystem services (pes) for
 
Provincial and local forest policy review
Provincial and local forest policy reviewProvincial and local forest policy review
Provincial and local forest policy review
 
Integrated environmental management
Integrated environmental managementIntegrated environmental management
Integrated environmental management
 
community based natural resource management
community based natural resource managementcommunity based natural resource management
community based natural resource management
 
Community based natural resource management
Community based natural resource managementCommunity based natural resource management
Community based natural resource management
 
Ecosystem services and conservation
Ecosystem services and conservationEcosystem services and conservation
Ecosystem services and conservation
 

Similaire à Valuing Ecosystem Services Expanded, Winslow

AECOM natural capital and ecosystem services April 2016
AECOM natural capital and ecosystem services April 2016AECOM natural capital and ecosystem services April 2016
AECOM natural capital and ecosystem services April 2016Robert Spencer
 
Balancing water needs
Balancing water needsBalancing water needs
Balancing water needsIwl Pcu
 
Iw eco presentation_training_economic_valuation_partnerswebinar_15sept2020
Iw eco presentation_training_economic_valuation_partnerswebinar_15sept2020Iw eco presentation_training_economic_valuation_partnerswebinar_15sept2020
Iw eco presentation_training_economic_valuation_partnerswebinar_15sept2020iweco-project
 
Ecosystem Valuation and Water Risk: Ed Pinero
Ecosystem Valuation and Water Risk: Ed Pinero Ecosystem Valuation and Water Risk: Ed Pinero
Ecosystem Valuation and Water Risk: Ed Pinero U.S. Water Alliance
 
Blake Lapthorn green breakfast with URS Global
Blake Lapthorn green breakfast with URS GlobalBlake Lapthorn green breakfast with URS Global
Blake Lapthorn green breakfast with URS GlobalBlake Morgan
 
Economics of biodiversity_MKettunen
Economics of biodiversity_MKettunenEconomics of biodiversity_MKettunen
Economics of biodiversity_MKettunenMarianne Kettunen
 
Role of SEEA Framework for Valuation of Natural Resources
Role of  SEEA Framework for Valuation of Natural ResourcesRole of  SEEA Framework for Valuation of Natural Resources
Role of SEEA Framework for Valuation of Natural ResourcesMohdFaisalKhan10
 
ICC_3.5_Ecosystem_Services_v3.pptx
ICC_3.5_Ecosystem_Services_v3.pptxICC_3.5_Ecosystem_Services_v3.pptx
ICC_3.5_Ecosystem_Services_v3.pptxBIDYANATHJHA3
 
Payments for peatland ecosystem services in the Natural Environment White Paper
Payments for peatland ecosystem services in the Natural Environment White PaperPayments for peatland ecosystem services in the Natural Environment White Paper
Payments for peatland ecosystem services in the Natural Environment White PaperAberdeen CES
 
Chapter 9 sustainibility of water resources
Chapter 9 sustainibility of water resourcesChapter 9 sustainibility of water resources
Chapter 9 sustainibility of water resourcesMohammed Salahat
 
Chapter9sustainibilityofwaterresources 130630060726-phpapp01
Chapter9sustainibilityofwaterresources 130630060726-phpapp01Chapter9sustainibilityofwaterresources 130630060726-phpapp01
Chapter9sustainibilityofwaterresources 130630060726-phpapp01Cleophas Rwemera
 
T12 majdi gouja nena exec summary
T12 majdi gouja nena exec summaryT12 majdi gouja nena exec summary
T12 majdi gouja nena exec summaryNENAwaterscarcity
 
Water and Green Economy_MKettunen
Water and Green Economy_MKettunenWater and Green Economy_MKettunen
Water and Green Economy_MKettunenMarianne Kettunen
 
philippines-ecosystemaccounting.pptx
philippines-ecosystemaccounting.pptxphilippines-ecosystemaccounting.pptx
philippines-ecosystemaccounting.pptxKareen Joy Manglicmot
 
Incentivizing Investments and Ensuring Cost Recovery for Operating Wastewater...
Incentivizing Investments and Ensuring Cost Recovery for Operating Wastewater...Incentivizing Investments and Ensuring Cost Recovery for Operating Wastewater...
Incentivizing Investments and Ensuring Cost Recovery for Operating Wastewater...Oswar Mungkasa
 

Similaire à Valuing Ecosystem Services Expanded, Winslow (20)

AECOM natural capital and ecosystem services April 2016
AECOM natural capital and ecosystem services April 2016AECOM natural capital and ecosystem services April 2016
AECOM natural capital and ecosystem services April 2016
 
Balancing water needs
Balancing water needsBalancing water needs
Balancing water needs
 
Potential ‘value’ of ecosystem services vis-à-vis cost of project implementat...
Potential ‘value’ of ecosystem services vis-à-vis cost of project implementat...Potential ‘value’ of ecosystem services vis-à-vis cost of project implementat...
Potential ‘value’ of ecosystem services vis-à-vis cost of project implementat...
 
Iw eco presentation_training_economic_valuation_partnerswebinar_15sept2020
Iw eco presentation_training_economic_valuation_partnerswebinar_15sept2020Iw eco presentation_training_economic_valuation_partnerswebinar_15sept2020
Iw eco presentation_training_economic_valuation_partnerswebinar_15sept2020
 
Envmt economics
Envmt economicsEnvmt economics
Envmt economics
 
Ecosystem Valuation and Water Risk: Ed Pinero
Ecosystem Valuation and Water Risk: Ed Pinero Ecosystem Valuation and Water Risk: Ed Pinero
Ecosystem Valuation and Water Risk: Ed Pinero
 
Blake Lapthorn green breakfast with URS Global
Blake Lapthorn green breakfast with URS GlobalBlake Lapthorn green breakfast with URS Global
Blake Lapthorn green breakfast with URS Global
 
Economics of biodiversity_MKettunen
Economics of biodiversity_MKettunenEconomics of biodiversity_MKettunen
Economics of biodiversity_MKettunen
 
Role of SEEA Framework for Valuation of Natural Resources
Role of  SEEA Framework for Valuation of Natural ResourcesRole of  SEEA Framework for Valuation of Natural Resources
Role of SEEA Framework for Valuation of Natural Resources
 
ICC_3.5_Ecosystem_Services_v3.pptx
ICC_3.5_Ecosystem_Services_v3.pptxICC_3.5_Ecosystem_Services_v3.pptx
ICC_3.5_Ecosystem_Services_v3.pptx
 
Payments for peatland ecosystem services in the Natural Environment White Paper
Payments for peatland ecosystem services in the Natural Environment White PaperPayments for peatland ecosystem services in the Natural Environment White Paper
Payments for peatland ecosystem services in the Natural Environment White Paper
 
Nadia Scialabba - Methods and metrics
Nadia Scialabba - Methods and metricsNadia Scialabba - Methods and metrics
Nadia Scialabba - Methods and metrics
 
Chapter 9 sustainibility of water resources
Chapter 9 sustainibility of water resourcesChapter 9 sustainibility of water resources
Chapter 9 sustainibility of water resources
 
Chapter9sustainibilityofwaterresources 130630060726-phpapp01
Chapter9sustainibilityofwaterresources 130630060726-phpapp01Chapter9sustainibilityofwaterresources 130630060726-phpapp01
Chapter9sustainibilityofwaterresources 130630060726-phpapp01
 
Ecosystem approach and iwrm by s. diop
Ecosystem approach and iwrm by s. diopEcosystem approach and iwrm by s. diop
Ecosystem approach and iwrm by s. diop
 
T12 majdi gouja nena exec summary
T12 majdi gouja nena exec summaryT12 majdi gouja nena exec summary
T12 majdi gouja nena exec summary
 
My seminar
My seminarMy seminar
My seminar
 
Water and Green Economy_MKettunen
Water and Green Economy_MKettunenWater and Green Economy_MKettunen
Water and Green Economy_MKettunen
 
philippines-ecosystemaccounting.pptx
philippines-ecosystemaccounting.pptxphilippines-ecosystemaccounting.pptx
philippines-ecosystemaccounting.pptx
 
Incentivizing Investments and Ensuring Cost Recovery for Operating Wastewater...
Incentivizing Investments and Ensuring Cost Recovery for Operating Wastewater...Incentivizing Investments and Ensuring Cost Recovery for Operating Wastewater...
Incentivizing Investments and Ensuring Cost Recovery for Operating Wastewater...
 

Plus de maggiewinslow

Economics of Energy Efficiency
Economics of Energy EfficiencyEconomics of Energy Efficiency
Economics of Energy Efficiencymaggiewinslow
 
Energy Efficiency Economics
Energy Efficiency EconomicsEnergy Efficiency Economics
Energy Efficiency Economicsmaggiewinslow
 
Dynamic Efficiency and Hotelling's Rule
Dynamic Efficiency and Hotelling's RuleDynamic Efficiency and Hotelling's Rule
Dynamic Efficiency and Hotelling's Rulemaggiewinslow
 
Economics of Environmental Regulation
Economics of Environmental RegulationEconomics of Environmental Regulation
Economics of Environmental Regulationmaggiewinslow
 
GDP and Ecological Economics winslow
GDP and Ecological Economics winslowGDP and Ecological Economics winslow
GDP and Ecological Economics winslowmaggiewinslow
 
Winslow ecological econonomics
Winslow ecological econonomicsWinslow ecological econonomics
Winslow ecological econonomicsmaggiewinslow
 
Winslow ecological economics fa2011
Winslow ecological economics fa2011Winslow ecological economics fa2011
Winslow ecological economics fa2011maggiewinslow
 

Plus de maggiewinslow (9)

Economics of Energy Efficiency
Economics of Energy EfficiencyEconomics of Energy Efficiency
Economics of Energy Efficiency
 
Energy Efficiency Economics
Energy Efficiency EconomicsEnergy Efficiency Economics
Energy Efficiency Economics
 
Energy Economics
Energy EconomicsEnergy Economics
Energy Economics
 
Dynamic Efficiency and Hotelling's Rule
Dynamic Efficiency and Hotelling's RuleDynamic Efficiency and Hotelling's Rule
Dynamic Efficiency and Hotelling's Rule
 
Economics of Environmental Regulation
Economics of Environmental RegulationEconomics of Environmental Regulation
Economics of Environmental Regulation
 
Rethinking Econ 101
Rethinking Econ 101Rethinking Econ 101
Rethinking Econ 101
 
GDP and Ecological Economics winslow
GDP and Ecological Economics winslowGDP and Ecological Economics winslow
GDP and Ecological Economics winslow
 
Winslow ecological econonomics
Winslow ecological econonomicsWinslow ecological econonomics
Winslow ecological econonomics
 
Winslow ecological economics fa2011
Winslow ecological economics fa2011Winslow ecological economics fa2011
Winslow ecological economics fa2011
 

Dernier

TrustArc Webinar - Stay Ahead of US State Data Privacy Law Developments
TrustArc Webinar - Stay Ahead of US State Data Privacy Law DevelopmentsTrustArc Webinar - Stay Ahead of US State Data Privacy Law Developments
TrustArc Webinar - Stay Ahead of US State Data Privacy Law DevelopmentsTrustArc
 
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...Drew Madelung
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking MenDelhi Call girls
 
Presentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreter
Presentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreterPresentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreter
Presentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreternaman860154
 
Tata AIG General Insurance Company - Insurer Innovation Award 2024
Tata AIG General Insurance Company - Insurer Innovation Award 2024Tata AIG General Insurance Company - Insurer Innovation Award 2024
Tata AIG General Insurance Company - Insurer Innovation Award 2024The Digital Insurer
 
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected Worker
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected WorkerHow to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected Worker
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected WorkerThousandEyes
 
Histor y of HAM Radio presentation slide
Histor y of HAM Radio presentation slideHistor y of HAM Radio presentation slide
Histor y of HAM Radio presentation slidevu2urc
 
Apidays Singapore 2024 - Building Digital Trust in a Digital Economy by Veron...
Apidays Singapore 2024 - Building Digital Trust in a Digital Economy by Veron...Apidays Singapore 2024 - Building Digital Trust in a Digital Economy by Veron...
Apidays Singapore 2024 - Building Digital Trust in a Digital Economy by Veron...apidays
 
Powerful Google developer tools for immediate impact! (2023-24 C)
Powerful Google developer tools for immediate impact! (2023-24 C)Powerful Google developer tools for immediate impact! (2023-24 C)
Powerful Google developer tools for immediate impact! (2023-24 C)wesley chun
 
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organization
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organizationScaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organization
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organizationRadu Cotescu
 
A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)
A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)
A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)Gabriella Davis
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking MenDelhi Call girls
 
04-2024-HHUG-Sales-and-Marketing-Alignment.pptx
04-2024-HHUG-Sales-and-Marketing-Alignment.pptx04-2024-HHUG-Sales-and-Marketing-Alignment.pptx
04-2024-HHUG-Sales-and-Marketing-Alignment.pptxHampshireHUG
 
Factors to Consider When Choosing Accounts Payable Services Providers.pptx
Factors to Consider When Choosing Accounts Payable Services Providers.pptxFactors to Consider When Choosing Accounts Payable Services Providers.pptx
Factors to Consider When Choosing Accounts Payable Services Providers.pptxKatpro Technologies
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking MenDelhi Call girls
 
Exploring the Future Potential of AI-Enabled Smartphone Processors
Exploring the Future Potential of AI-Enabled Smartphone ProcessorsExploring the Future Potential of AI-Enabled Smartphone Processors
Exploring the Future Potential of AI-Enabled Smartphone Processorsdebabhi2
 
A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024
A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024
A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024Results
 
Real Time Object Detection Using Open CV
Real Time Object Detection Using Open CVReal Time Object Detection Using Open CV
Real Time Object Detection Using Open CVKhem
 
2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...
2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...
2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...Martijn de Jong
 
Finology Group – Insurtech Innovation Award 2024
Finology Group – Insurtech Innovation Award 2024Finology Group – Insurtech Innovation Award 2024
Finology Group – Insurtech Innovation Award 2024The Digital Insurer
 

Dernier (20)

TrustArc Webinar - Stay Ahead of US State Data Privacy Law Developments
TrustArc Webinar - Stay Ahead of US State Data Privacy Law DevelopmentsTrustArc Webinar - Stay Ahead of US State Data Privacy Law Developments
TrustArc Webinar - Stay Ahead of US State Data Privacy Law Developments
 
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking Men
 
Presentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreter
Presentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreterPresentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreter
Presentation on how to chat with PDF using ChatGPT code interpreter
 
Tata AIG General Insurance Company - Insurer Innovation Award 2024
Tata AIG General Insurance Company - Insurer Innovation Award 2024Tata AIG General Insurance Company - Insurer Innovation Award 2024
Tata AIG General Insurance Company - Insurer Innovation Award 2024
 
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected Worker
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected WorkerHow to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected Worker
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected Worker
 
Histor y of HAM Radio presentation slide
Histor y of HAM Radio presentation slideHistor y of HAM Radio presentation slide
Histor y of HAM Radio presentation slide
 
Apidays Singapore 2024 - Building Digital Trust in a Digital Economy by Veron...
Apidays Singapore 2024 - Building Digital Trust in a Digital Economy by Veron...Apidays Singapore 2024 - Building Digital Trust in a Digital Economy by Veron...
Apidays Singapore 2024 - Building Digital Trust in a Digital Economy by Veron...
 
Powerful Google developer tools for immediate impact! (2023-24 C)
Powerful Google developer tools for immediate impact! (2023-24 C)Powerful Google developer tools for immediate impact! (2023-24 C)
Powerful Google developer tools for immediate impact! (2023-24 C)
 
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organization
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organizationScaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organization
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organization
 
A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)
A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)
A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Greater Kailash - I Women Seeking Men
 
04-2024-HHUG-Sales-and-Marketing-Alignment.pptx
04-2024-HHUG-Sales-and-Marketing-Alignment.pptx04-2024-HHUG-Sales-and-Marketing-Alignment.pptx
04-2024-HHUG-Sales-and-Marketing-Alignment.pptx
 
Factors to Consider When Choosing Accounts Payable Services Providers.pptx
Factors to Consider When Choosing Accounts Payable Services Providers.pptxFactors to Consider When Choosing Accounts Payable Services Providers.pptx
Factors to Consider When Choosing Accounts Payable Services Providers.pptx
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Diplomatic Enclave Women Seeking Men
 
Exploring the Future Potential of AI-Enabled Smartphone Processors
Exploring the Future Potential of AI-Enabled Smartphone ProcessorsExploring the Future Potential of AI-Enabled Smartphone Processors
Exploring the Future Potential of AI-Enabled Smartphone Processors
 
A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024
A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024
A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024
 
Real Time Object Detection Using Open CV
Real Time Object Detection Using Open CVReal Time Object Detection Using Open CV
Real Time Object Detection Using Open CV
 
2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...
2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...
2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...
 
Finology Group – Insurtech Innovation Award 2024
Finology Group – Insurtech Innovation Award 2024Finology Group – Insurtech Innovation Award 2024
Finology Group – Insurtech Innovation Award 2024
 

Valuing Ecosystem Services Expanded, Winslow

  • 1. Ecosystem Service Valuation Environmental Economics Fall 2013 Maggie Winslow, Ph.D.
  • 2. What are Ecosystem Services? • Benefits people obtain from ecosystems
  • 3. DIRECT USE VALUES INDIRECT USE VALUES NON-USE VALUES Provisioning Regulating/Support Cultural Crops/ Livestock Maintenance of air quality Existence value, Bequest value Animal skins Regional/ local/ global climate regulation Ethical and spiritual values Capture fisheries/ Aquaculture Water purification and waste treatment Educational and inspirational values Freshwater Regulation of water timing and flows Timber and other wood fibers/ Biomass Erosion control and sediment retention Biochemicals, natural medicines, and pharmaceuticals / Genetic Resources Natural hazard mitigation /Flood control Ornamental resources Disease mitigation Cultural Maintenance of soil quality Recreation and ecotourism Pest mitigation / Pollination Categorization of Ecosystem Services
  • 4. Classifying Ecosystem Services – Some Fit Multiple Categories Stillwater Sciences. 2011. Overview of ecosystem services quantification tools and proposed format for site tool development. Prepared by Stillwater Sciences, Berkeley, California for Sustainable Conservation, San Francisco, California.
  • 5. Ecosystem Services Can Have Multiple Functions http://agbiodiversity.com/AgBiodviersityProject/Howbiodiversitysupportsfarmprofits/tabid/133/Default.aspx
  • 7. WRI Survey: Are Ecosystem Services Being Addressed in Environmental Decision Making? A 2010 online survey by WRI of 171 environmental consultants, government employees, NGOs found: • 79% of respondents knew about ecosystem services • 40% have seen ecosystem services addressed in environmental assessment – Freshwater is the main service that is addressed • Main perceived barrier is lack of guidance on how to address ecosystem services
  • 8. Importance of ES for Decision Makers • Ecosystems are being degraded at a high rate – climate change exacerbating this. • Demand for ecosystem services is increasing – Population growth – Improved in living standards • ES are growing scarcer • What gets measured gets managed - Our policy decisions often do not incorporate the value of ecosystem services • Ecosystem Service Valuation (ESV)
  • 9. Multiple Purposes for ESV in Relation to Policy Making Monitor changes in natural capital and the impact of this on human welfare ex. Natural Capital Accounting Natural Resource Damage Assessment Evaluation of proposed policies/developments Cost- Benefit Analysis Cost- Effectivenes s Analysis Multi- criteria Analysis
  • 10. Cost-Benefit, or Benefit-Cost, Analysis Given that a policy will require some inputs and produce some outputs, it will also have costs and create benefits. Comparing the costs and benefits in monetary terms is what benefit- cost analysis amounts to. Benefit-cost analysis can help determine which policy/program/project is more efficient than the other, or alternatively which one is more cost-effective.
  • 11. Example of ESV and CBA • UK Cost Benefit Analysis of proposed marine reserves – 11 relevant ecosystem services identified – 7 were valued due to available information – Benefit transfer method • NPV of benefits range – US$16.4 to $36.1 billion • NPV of costs range – US$0.6 and $1.9 billion • Benefit to cost ratio is ~10:1, not all benefits even included Hussain et al., 2010
  • 12. Cost-Effectiveness Analysis • Goal is already determined. Analysis is used to find the least expensive means to achieve this goal.
  • 13. Cost Effectiveness Analysis Example: A Watershed Approach to Improve Water Quality: Case Study of Clean Water Services’ Tualatin River Program, Clean Water Services (CWS), Portland OR’s public water resources utility. Faced with the need to lower effluent water temperatures in order to maintain its permits to discharge water into the Tualatin River, CWS considered two alternatives: 1. Build a new facility - $60 million, annual operating costs of $2 million Benefit: it does the job, no environmental benefits were identified 2. Ecosystem Restoration and Maintenance - $5 million Benefit – it does the job, it saved money, 1.6 mil trees/shrubs planted resulting in thermal credits of 295 mil kilocalories per day, restored salmon habitat, upland scrub habitat, carbon sequestration, increased biodiversity, recreation opportunities.
  • 14. Multi-Criteria Analysis • Monetary information is used as one input in the decision making process.
  • 15. Historic U.S. Federal Use of ESV Comprehensive Environmental Responses, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA) (Superfund): 1980 – allowed for ecosystem damage assessment. Executive Order 12911 (1981) required cost benefit analysis be applied to new regulations 1991 EPA convened an Ecosystem Valuation Forum- focused on how to improve linkages between ecology and economics ESV used by USFS, mostly in CBA related to forest planning and water resources
  • 16. Federal Level Progress in ESV • EPA’s National Center for Environmental Economics (NCEE), established 2000. • Government sponsored $4.5 million tools competition • USDA’s Office of Environmental Markets, which as of January 1, 2011 is part of the Office of the Chief Economist. • Guidelines for Preparing Economic Analyses published by the NCEE in 2011
  • 17. PCAST Report 2011 SUSTAINING ENVIRONMENTAL CAPITAL: PROTECTING SOCIETY AND THE ECONOMY Executive Office of the President President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology JULY 2011
  • 18. PCAST Report: Federal agencies thatimplementbiodiversity and ecosystem conservation programs should prioritize expenditures based on cost efficiency. • Federal agencies collectively currently spend more than $10 billion annually on ecosystem restoration activities. • Much more careful targeting could achieve greater environmental benefits at the same cost.
  • 19. PCAST: Federal agencies with responsibilities relating to ecosystems and their services (e.g., EPA, NOAA, DOI, USDA) should be tasked with improving their capabilities to – develop valuations for the ecosystem services affected by their decision-making and – factor the results into analyses that inform their major planning and management decisions. • The Office of Management and Budget (OMB), OSTP, and CEQ should ensure that the methodologies are developed collaboratively across agencies.
  • 20. Example of Federal Requirement for ESV • In relation to federal infrastructure investments: “all types of benefits and costs, both market and non-market, should be considered. To the extent that environmental and other non-market benefits and costs can be quantified, they shall be given the same weight as quantifiable market benefits and costs.” - Executive Order 12893, 1994
  • 21. California Water Quality Control Board • Regulate activities in order to: “attain the highest water quality which is reasonable, considering all demands being made and to be made on those waters and the total values involved, beneficial and detrimental, economic and social, tangible and intangible.”
  • 22. However… • There has been little enforcement of these requirement to consider broader valuation of ecosystem services.
  • 23. International ESV Initiatives – TEEB: The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity series – UNEP, European Commission – WAVES: Wealth Accounting and Valuation of Ecosystem Services – World Bank, UN, many national governments and NGO – The Millennium Assessment, UNEP: ~2000 experts, 4 year project to survey the world’s ecosystems’ health Private: – Companies calculating the value of their impacts on ES – ex. Puma
  • 24. Puma Environmental P&L Statement 2010 • € 94 million of GHG emissions and water consumption • € 51 million caused by land use change for the production of raw materials, air pollution and waste along its value chain. Only € 8 million of the € 145 million total derive from PUMA’s core operations such as offices, warehouses, stores and logistics while the remaining € 137 million fall upon PUMA’s supply chain. These costs, which will not affect PUMA’s net earnings, will serve as an initial metric for the company when aiming to mitigate the footprint of PUMA’s operations and all supply chain levels. http://safe.puma.com/us/en/2011/11/puma-completes-first-environmental-profit-and-loss- account-which-values-impacts-at-e-145-million/
  • 25.
  • 26. Local/Regional Policy-related Drivers of Interest in ESV (Scarlett & Boyd, 2011) Revenue streams to support conservation, restoration and sustainable practices Savings for basic community services such as clean water, protection from floods and fires, erosion and storm water control, etc. Opportunities for cost- effective regulatory compliance Avoidance or elimination of costs associated with the loss of ecosystems and their services Enhancement of the resiliency of communities in a changing world
  • 27. Multi-Step Process in Ecosystem Service Valuation Related to Policy Changes Economic Value of Changes Impact on Human Welfare Changes in Ecosystem Services Ecosystem Impacts Policy Change
  • 28. An introductory guide to valuing ecosystem services, DEFRA, 2007
  • 29. Methods for Assigning Monetary Value to Ecosystem Services Revealed-preference Stated-preference Cost-based Market methods: Valuations are directly obtained from what people must be willing to pay for the service or good. Contingent valuation: People are directly asked their willingness to pay or accept compensation for some change in ecological service. Replacement costs: The loss of a natural system service is evaluated in terms of what it would cost to replace that service. Production approaches: Service values are assigned from the impacts of those services on economic out-puts (e.g., increased shrimp yields from increased area of wetlands). Conjoint analysis: People are asked to choose or rank different service scenarios or ecological conditions that differ in the mix of those conditions. Also called “choice experiments”. Avoidance or Damage costs: A service is valued on the basis of costs avoided, or of the extent to which it allows the avoidance of costly averting behaviors, including mitigation. Travel cost: Valuations of site- based amenities are implied by the costs people incur to enjoy them Hedonic methods: The value of a service is implied by what people will be willing to pay for the service through purchases in related markets, such as housing markets. (from Farber et al. 2006, pg. 120)
  • 30. Revealed Preference Methods Example: Water Quality Violations and Avoidance Behavior: Evidence from Bottled Water Consumption (Zivin et al. 2011) • Looked at bottled water purchases in locations that experienced water quality violations. • They find a 22% increase in bottled water sales from a microorganism violation, a 26% increase in response to nitrate violations, and a 17% increase from an element/chemical violation. • Get an estimate of about $60 million a year of avoidance behavior in the U.S.
  • 31. Hedonic Pricing Method Example • Author(s): Boxall, P. C., W. H. Chan and M. L. McMillan • Title: "The Impact of Oil and Natural Gas Facilities On Rural Residential Property Values: A Spatial Hedonic Analysis" • Source of Study: Resource and Energy Economics, 2005-01-01 • Web Link: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6VFJ -4FK42HM- 1/2/02a35e67e71d3242e00100177f37becc
  • 32. Summary Boxall et al. 2005 • This study estimated the effect of oil and gas facilities on rural residential properties near Calgary, Alberta. • Data were gathered using real estate listing database for the period January 1994 to March 2001. • The average reduction in price levels associated with industry characteristics ranged from (CDN 2001) $ 3,487 - $ 20,942. • The estimated reduction in property value ranged from 4 to 8 percent if property was located within 4 km of industry facilities. • This study has helped aid the decision making process in siting of oil and gas facilities and provided merits for compensation in lost property value.
  • 33.
  • 34. CV Example – Carson and Mitchell (1993)
  • 35. Benefits or Value Transfer Use the ecosystem service values from one or a series of studies to estimate the values in a similar area or situation.
  • 36. Ex. Measuring Natural Capital: The Value of New Jersey’s Ecosystem Services and Natural Capital, 2006 Using the benefits transfer approach: • Wetlands – $9.4 billion/yr (2004 dollars) for freshwater wetlands and $1.2 billion/yr for saltwater wetlands • Marine ecosystems – $5.3 billion/yr for estuaries and tidal bays and about $389 million/yr for other coastal waters, excluding the value of fish and shellfish • Forests cover – $2.2 billion/yr, excluding the value of timber • Urban green space covers – estimated $419 million of ecosystem services annually, principally aesthetic and recreational amenities. The total value of these ecosystem services is $19.4 billion/year. Gund Institute, 2006
  • 37. Ex. Ecosystem service value in dollars per acre per year
  • 38. Databases for Benefit Transfer • EVRI: Environmental Valuation Reference Inventory (Environment Canada with support from USEPA and DEFRA) – Searchable database of ~2400 studies with summaries included. • EarthEconomics, non- profit, Tacoma WA – Researches Library
  • 39.
  • 41. Current Web-based Tools • InVEST: Integrated Valuation of Environmental Services and Tradeoffs • ARIES: Artificial Intelligence for Ecosystem Services
  • 42. Current Web-based Tools Cont. • EarthEconomics: – ESV: Ecosystem Valuation Toolkit – SERVES: Simple and Effective Resource for Valuing Ecosystem Services • Others – regionally focused or – cover just one or two ecosystem services • Consulting firms have proprietary tools – ex. EcoMetrix, EcoAim, ESValue
  • 43. Present Situation • More tools under development • Existing tools – Not compatible – Use different metrics – Use different valuation techniques and philosophies • EPA and other agencies are developing guidelines for ESV • Some services receive little attention
  • 44. Policy Debate Over Using ESV • Practical: Is some number better than no number? How to deal with uncertainty? – How much accuracy is needed? – ESV helps inform decisions but does not make decisions. • Philosophical: Don’t ecosystems have untold value? – But will these be included if no number is attached?
  • 45. Obstacles and Limitations • Provisioning and flow of ES cut across policy- relevant boundaries • Challenging to conduct ES research that is applicable in policy contexts. – Requires integration of multiple disciplines – Methodology issues can affect credibility of valuation estimates • CBA is sometimes precluded by legislative standards • Lack of consensus on goals of environmental regulations
  • 46. Final Thoughts Ecosystem services are increasingly important •Due to climate change – more floods, ocean surges, drought •Due to fresh water depletion •Ecosystems being depleted/destroyed •Population growth Ecosystem service valuation is a decision support tool. Mistake to think that ESV tools are just about quantifying and producing numbers. There is a lot of strategy, framing, training, tactics that must happen to support the numbers. Can be useful even if it does not cover all relevant ecosystem services.
  • 47. Primary References Bagstad, K.J., Semmens, D., Winthrop, R., Jaworski, D., and Larson, J. (2012). Ecosystem Services Valuation to Support Decisionmaking on Public Lands — A Case Study of the San Pedro River Watershed , Arizona Scientific Investigations Report 2012 − 5251. Arizona. Barbier, E. B. (2011b). Challenges in valuing ecosystem services. World Forum 2011. Carson, R. T., & Mitchell, R. C. (1993). The Value of Clean Water; The Public’s Willingness to Pay for Boatable, Fishable, and Swimmable Quality Water. Water Resources Research, 29(7), 2445–2454. Daily, G. C., Polasky, S., Goldstein, J., Kareiva, P. M., Mooney, H. a, Pejchar, L., Ricketts, T. H., et al. (2009). Ecosystem services in decision making: time to deliver. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 7(1), 21– 28. Iovanna, R., & Griffiths, C. (2006). Clean water, ecological benefits, and benefits transfer: A work in progress at the U.S. EPA. Ecological Economics, 60(2), 473–482. doi:10.1016/j.ecolecon.2006.06.012 Liu, S., Costanza, R., Farber, S., & Troy, A. (2010). Valuing ecosystem services: theory, practice, and the need for a transdisciplinary synthesis. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1185, 54–78. Scarlett, L., & Boyd, J. (2011). Ecosystem Services : Capabilities, (March). Tallis, H., &Polasky, S. (2009). Mapping and valuing ecosystem services as an approach for conservation and natural-resource management. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1162, 265–83.

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. Even using lowest benefit value, the b) An ex ante ecological economic assessment of the benefits arising from marine protected areas designation in the UK. Ecological Economics 69: 828–838
  2. Competition - for “Enhancing Ecosystem Services from Agricultural Lands: Management, Quantification, and Developing Decision Support Tools”Leadership by CEQ and OMB in 2010 of a series of conversations, which is useful for estimating the value of reduced health risks and improved environmental quality.
  3. One example – the Federal Climate Change Adaptation Task Force’s guiding principles for public and private decision makers includes a recommendation to apply ecosystem-based approaches that increase ecosystem resilience and protect critical ecosystem services (The White House, 2012).
  4. (from Farber et al. 2006, pg. 120)
  5. – basic bibliographic information– information about the location of the study along with population and site data– fields that describe the environmental asset being valued, the stressors on the environment, and the specific purpose of the study– technical information on the actual study, along with the specific techniques that were used to arrive at the results– the monetary values that are presented in the study as well as the specific units of measure
  6. Natural Capital Project (Stanford) –
  7. Natural Capital Project (Stanford) –
  8. We are making a value judgment if ecosystems will be affected by a policy decision. ESV makes this explicit.
  9. PLUS “valuing multiple ecosystem services typically multiplies the difficulty of evaluation” Chief Challenge: “lies in providing an explicit description and adequate assessment of the links between the structure and functions of natural systems, the benefits (i.e., goods and services) derived by humanity, and their subsequent values” (p. 73)