4 mark everard (uwe) the role of valuation work

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The role of valuation work in driving conservation decisions Dr Mark Everard Associate Professor of Ecosystem Services Reconciling nature and prosperity: a new paradigm

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Page 1: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

The role of valuation work in driving conservation decisions

Dr Mark EverardAssociate Professor of Ecosystem Services

Reconciling nature and prosperity: a new paradigm

Page 2: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

• Conflicts with today’s market model

• Ecosystem services

• What is valuation?

• Where has valuation helped?

• Why has valuation helped?

• A new paradigm of reconciliation

The role of valuation

Page 3: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

Ecosystems: living (geodiversity) and non-living (biodiversity) elements

Ecosystem functions: physical, chemical, biological, etc.

Ecosystem services: benefits to people

Values: economic and non-economic

The economy: subset of traded services

Ecosystems, functions, services, values and the economy

From Everard, 2003

Page 4: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work
Page 5: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

• Conflicts with today’s market model

• Ecosystem services

• What is valuation?

• Where has valuation helped?

• Why has valuation helped?

• A new paradigm of reconciliation

The role of valuation

Page 6: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

Background to ecosystem services

• What’s a wetland worth?

o First world economy crops

o Subsistence/informal economy

o Spiritual, cultural, aesthetic values, etc…

Page 7: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

What are ecosystem services?

“Ecosystem services are the benefits people obtain from ecosystems”

UN Millennium Ecosystem Assessment. (2005). Ecosystems and Human Well-being: Synthesis. (http://www.millenniumassessment.org/documents/document.356.aspx.pdf)

• Anthropocentric

• Systemic interconnections– All services

– All beneficiaries (sectors of society)

– All economic contexts (including uses)

Page 8: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

Provisioning services

Fresh water

Food (eg crops, fruit, fish, etc)

Fibre and fuel (eg timber, wool, etc)

Genetic resources (used for crop/stock breeding and biotechnology)

Biochemicals, natural medicines, pharmaceuticals

Ornamental resources (eg shells, flowers, etc)

Regulatory servicesAir quality regulation

Climate regulation (local temp. /precipitation, GHG sequestration, etc)

Water regulation (timing/scale of run-off, flooding, etc)

Natural hazard regulation (ie storm protection)

Pest regulation

Disease regulation

Erosion regulation

Water purification and waste treatment

Pollination

Cultural servicesCultural heritage

Recreation and tourism

Aesthetic value

Spiritual and religious value

Inspiration of art, folklore, architecture, etc

Social relations (eg. fishing, grazing, cropping communities)

Supporting servicesSoil formation

Primary production

Nutrient cycling (water recirculation in landscape)

Water recycling

Photosynthesis (production of atmospheric oxygen)

Provision of habitat

UN Millennium Ecosystem Assessment

Addenda services

PROVISIONING: Energy harvesting

REGULATORY: Salinity control, fire control

Integrating value systems

Page 9: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

Ecosystem services (MA classification)Provisioning (‘stuff’)

Regulatory(‘maintains’)

Cultural (‘enriches’)

Supporting(‘internal life support processes’)

Page 10: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

Ecosystem Services and Human Wellbeing

Page 11: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

What happens if we don’t value all services?

UK National Ecosystem Assessment. (2011). Synthesis of the Key Findings. (http://uknea.unep-wcmc.org/Resources/tabid/82/Default.aspx)

Page 12: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

• Nature is critically important to wellbeing and the economy

• The natural world is consistently undervalued

• Ecosystems and services have changed markedly over 60 years

• Some services (e.g. food production) have increased…

• …many other ecosystem services have declined

• About 30% of services are declining, and others degraded

• The UK population and its demands are growing

• This will place greater pressures on ecosystems

• Actions and decisions now have long-term consequences

• We need to recognise the value of ecosystem services

• Moving to sustainable development require a mix of responses

• We need to involve a range of different actors

Some key message from the UK NEA (2011)

UK National Ecosystem Assessment – Synthesis of the Key Findingshttp://sd.defra.gov.uk/2011/06/national-ecosystem-assessment-synthesis-report/

Page 13: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

The Natural Choice White Paper (11th June 2011)

• Driving principles

– Nature is of huge but generally overlooked value

– It is important to recognise these values

– It is necessary to ‘mainstream’ them across society

• Economic threads

– Ecosystem Markets Task Force (EMTF)

– Natural Capital Committee (NCC)

– General ‘mainstreaming’

– Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES)

‘Mainstreaming’ the value of nature

Page 14: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

• Conflicts with today’s market model

• Ecosystem services

• What is valuation?

• Where has valuation helped?

• Why has valuation helped?

• A new paradigm of reconciliation

The role of valuation

Page 15: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

• ‘Putting a price on nature’

• Accountancy

What is economic value?

• What nature DOES

• Integrated value systems

o “Apples with apples”

o Big/small, positive/negative?

• The default is ZERO!

Page 16: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

• Conflicts with today’s market model

• Ecosystem services

• What is valuation?

• Where has valuation helped?

• Why has valuation helped?

• A new paradigm of reconciliation

The role of valuation

Page 17: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

Managed realignment

Declining value farmed land

Costly ‘hard’ defence

‘Coastal squeeze’ Sea level rise

Unsustainable benefit:cost

Smaller set-back defence

Example ecosystem service benefits:• Natural energy dissipation• Flood storage• Carbon sequestration• Habitat for wildlife• Fish recruitment• Resilience• Shellfish/Salicornia harvesting

Multiple benefits for smaller costs

Some loss of farmed land

• WAREHAM HARBOUR coastal defence scheme options EFTEC study (see Defra 2007 An introductory guide to valuing ecosystem services)https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/an-introductory-guide-to-valuing-ecosystem-services

• ALKBOROUGH FLATS – Everard, M. (2009). (http://publications.environment-agency.gov.uk/pdf/SCHO0409BPVM-E-E.pdf)

• STEART PENINSULA – Da Silva, L.V. (2013). MSc Thesis (http://www.iccs.org.uk/wp-content/thesis/consci/2012/daSilva.pdf)

Page 18: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

New York City water supply• 1.2 billion US gallons (4.5 billion litres) water daily to 9 million people

– In 1905, Catskills Mountains identified as a prime source– In 1927, to additional sources in Delaware County

• By 1980s, pressures from– Agriculture, forestry, tourism, residential and industrial development

• Filtration plant– Capital: $US 4-6 billion (£2.1 and £3.2 billion) in 1990 prices– Operational: >$US 200 million (£160 million)

• CBA suggested ‘watershed protection programme’– Urban-rural watershed protection partnership– By 1997, comprehensive Memorandum of Agreement

• Total cost $US1.3 billion (£700 million)– True rural-urban partnership-based approach– Largest naturally filtered water supply in the world

Page 19: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

New Zealand: Nga Whenua Rahui• New Zealand losing ESs to urban-based economy

• Maori cultural values land differently to Western economies– Kaitiakitanga: safeguarding past legacy, current needs and future generations

• North Island Maori landowners– Markets to maintain livelihood and culture

• Maori Nga Whenua Rahui conservation reserve program– Enables landowners to retain/revert to native bush– Markets for biodiversity, erosion, water and carbon– Offsets impacts of urbanising economy

• Tribal cooperatives benefit from ES markets– Significant element of Maori economic growth

Funk, Jason. (2006). Maori farmers look to environmental markets in New Zealand. Ecosystem Marketplace, 24th January 2006. (http://www.ecosystemmarketplace.com/pages/dynamic/article.page.php?page_id=4097&section=home&eod=1)

Page 20: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

• South West Water £9million programme, 2010-2015

– Funding farmers to take additional measures

– Cleaner water at source, less ‘clean-up’ downstream

– Water carrying less silt up to 20% cheaper to treat

– OFWAT agree 65:1 benefit-to-cost ratio

• A ‘payments for ecosystem services’ (PES) scheme

– ‘Beneficiary pays’, additional to ‘polluter pays’

– Administered by the Westcountry Rivers Trust (NGO)

• Exploring multiple ‘packaged’ services…

– Erosion/dredging, metaldehyde, water storage, etc.

‘Upstream Thinking’

www.upstreamthinking.org

Page 21: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

Maximum Sustainable Yield• Maximum Sustainable Yield (MSY)

– Scientific meaning: theoretical maximum– Legal meaning: best science to underpin evolving management

• Historic untrammelled public right to fish– Open access; inexhaustibility of stock

• United Nations Convention on the Laws of the Sea (UNCLOS)– Extends coastal state sovereign rights (UK to 12 nautical miles)– Exclusive economic zone (EEZ) to 200 nautical miles– Duty to restore stocks to levels supporting MSY within EEZs

• EU commitment to manage to MSY– Historic over-allocation: 75% EU fish stocks overfished

• Ecosystem Approach (CBD, 1995)– Legal MSY can consider multiple services provided by fishery– Shifts focus from fishery as commercial resource to broader benefits

Appleby, T., Everard, M., Palmer, R. and Simpson, S. (2013). Plenty More fish in the Sea? http://eprints.uwe.ac.uk/22111/1/pmf_final2%20(3).pdf

Page 22: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

• Conflicts with today’s market model

• Ecosystem services

• What is valuation?

• Where has valuation helped?

• Why has valuation helped?

• A new paradigm of reconciliation

The role of valuation

Page 23: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

Everyone’s on the side of the angels!

Page 24: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

From silos to systems

Provisioning services

Fresh water

Food (eg crops, fruit, fish, etc)

Fibre and fuel (e.g. timber, wool, etc)

Genetic resources (used for crop/stock breeding and biotechnology)

Biochemicals, natural medicines, pharmaceuticals

Ornamental resources (e.g. shells, flowers, etc)

Regulatory services

Air quality regulation

Climate regulation (local temp. /precipitation, GHG sequestration, etc)

Water regulation (timing/scale of run-off, flooding, etc)

Natural hazard regulation (ie storm protection)

Pest regulation

Disease regulation

Erosion regulation

Water purification and waste treatment

Pollination

Cultural services

Cultural heritage

Recreation and tourism

Aesthetic value

Spiritual and religious value

Inspiration of art, folklore, architecture, etc

Social relations (eg. fishing, grazing, cropping communities)

Supporting services

Soil formation

Primary production

Nutrient cycling (water recirculation in landscape)

Water recycling

Photosynthesis (production of atmospheric oxygen)

Provision of habitat

Page 26: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

• Conflicts with today’s market model

• Ecosystem services

• What is valuation?

• Where has valuation helped?

• Why has valuation helped?

• A new paradigm of reconciliation

The role of valuation

Page 27: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

• Strengthso Bringing into the marketo Co-benefits

PES and other approaches

• Risks of narrow applicationo Potential for siloed ‘new’ marketso Commodifying nature

• Integrated valueso Valuing the system (not just fragmented products)

o Valuing what nature doeso Nature as the source of multiple benefits

Page 28: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

The land sparing model

Page 29: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

Co-existing with nature… and its benefits

Page 30: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

Ecosystem services (MA classification)

Provisioning (‘stuff’)

Regulatory(‘maintains’)

Cultural (‘enriches’)

Supporting(‘internal life support processes’)

Page 31: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

A practical example from the Tamar, UK

Westcountry Rivers Trust (www.wrt.org.uk)

• Potential service productiono Overlaying multiple data layers

• Highlighting service ‘hotspots’?o Where multiple services are providedo The most critical places for nature

• Overlaying on this current land useso Where are land uses degrading services?

• Where could be farmed intensively?• Sparing more beneficial services• ‘Sustainable intensification’?

• Visual representation to guide policy• Uptake into the policy environment• More services from the same landscape?

Page 32: 4  Mark Everard (UWE) The role of valuation work

The role of valuation work in driving conservation decisions

Dr Mark EverardAssociate Professor of Ecosystem Services

Reconciling nature and prosperity: a new paradigm