Eco-System Capital
Valuing ecosystem services: theory,
practice, and the need for a transdisciplinary synthesis. (Liu et. al. 2010).
Presented by Thetis Skondra
A: Eco-System Services
Benefits people obtain from ecosystems
Examples
Provisionary services: e.g. food and water
Regulating services: regulation of floods,
draughts, diseases
Supporting services: soil formation, nutrient
cycling
Cultural services: recreation and spiritual
A: Eco-System Services
Supply Side
Demand Side
degradation in
regard to
providing
service
Increase as
population and
standard of
living increase
B: Ecosystem Services become
scarce
Reason: lack of valuation
Challenge: acknowledgement of this value
C: What is ecosystem services
evaluation?
1. Anthropogenic concept
2. The wellbeing of humanity and the wellbeing
of earth are interdependent
3. Ecosystem services have an economic value
BUT this is not the only focus for ESV
4. Nature is vital for many reasons to human
survival and wellbeing
C: What is ecosystem services
evaluation?
1. Ecosystems have intrinsic and utilitarian
value
Examples:
2. Efficient allocation
Important goals for the
management of ecosystem
services.
1. Assessing and ensuring that the scale or
magnitude of human activities are
sustainable
2. Distributing resources and property rights
fairly.
3. Efficiently allocating the resources
constrained and defined by 1 & 2 above in
order to maximize utility.
Valuation of eco system services must be
performed
From multiple perspectives
Using multiple methods
Against multiple goals
Framework for ESV
Eco-system structures and processes are
influenced by biophysical drivers
Methodology for EVS
Revealed preference approaches
1. Market methods
2. Travel cost
3. Hedonic methods
4. Production approaches
State preference approaches
1. Contingent valuation
2. Conjoint analysis
Cost-based approaches
1. Replacement cost
2. Avoidance cost
History of ESV research
1960s:
Common challenges but separate answers
1970s:
Breaking the disciplinary boundaries - Georgescu
Roger
1980s
Moving beyond multi-disciplinary ESV research
Attempt to build a common language for ecological
and economic systems
History of ESV research
1990s to present
Moving towards trans-disciplinary ESV
research
1.
2.
3.
4.
Conjoint analysis
Meta analysis
Group valuation
Multiple criterion decision analysis
ESV in Practice
ESV in natural resource damage assessments
ESV in cost-benefit analysis cost-effectiveness
analysis framework
ESV in natural capital accounting
ESV in payment for ecosystem services
Debate on the use of ESV
1. Comparisons of natural capital to physical and
human capital in regard to their contribution to
human welfare
2. Monitor the quantity and quality of natural
capital over time in regard to its contribution to
human welfare
3. Provide for evaluation of projects that enhance
or degrade natural capital