Readings

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Readings Invasions Pimentel et al. 2000. Environmental and economic costs of nonindigenous species in the United States. BioScience 50:53-65. Environmental Economics R. Costanza et al.1997. The Value of the World's Ecosystem Services and Natural Capital. Nature 387:253-260.

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Readings. Invasions Pimentel et al. 2000. Environmental and economic costs of nonindigenous species in the United States. BioScience 50:53-65. Environmental Economics R. Costanza et al. 1997. The Value of the World's Ecosystem Services and Natural Capital. Nature 387:253-260. Resources. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Readings

Page 1: Readings

Readings

Invasions– Pimentel et al. 2000. Environmental

and economic costs of nonindigenous species in the United States. BioScience 50:53-65.

Environmental Economics– R. Costanza et al.1997. The Value of the

World's Ecosystem Services and Natural Capital. Nature 387:253-260.

Page 2: Readings

Resources

– Steve Hackett (HSU) links to economic and environmental economic websites: http://www.humboldt.edu/~envecon/resources.html

– EPA’s national center for Environmental Economics: http://yosemite1.epa.gov/ee/epa/eed.nsf/pages/homepage

Page 3: Readings

Outline• Introduction to environmental

economics• “free market” economics• Valuing non-market commodities• Approaches to ameliorating market

failure• Case study: guest speaker Becky Niell

– Simulation model of vegetation dynamics linking costs, benefits, and vegetation

Page 4: Readings

Environmental economics• What is it?

• What does it include?

Page 5: Readings

Environmental economics• What is it?

– Expansion of traditional economics to include non-market values

– Risk assessment and cost-benefit analyses

• What does it include?– Includes non-market values (esthetic,

cultural, emotional), ecosystem services, environmental health and safety concerns, sustainable development, carbon accounting etc.

Page 6: Readings

“Free Market” economics• Market provides mechanism to allocate

resources to best (highest valued) uses• Prices provide information about values• Ideally, resources are allocated in a way

that optimizes efficiency • However, does not always optomize for

environmental resources:– Information is incomplete, some resources

have no market, future discounting devalues conservation, “tragedy of the commons”

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Valuing environmental resources

• What are environmental (non-market) values?

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Valuing environmental resources

• What are some environmental values?

– Health, wellbeing– Intrinsic values of wilderness and

wildlife– “Ecosystem services”– “natural capital”– Future potential values (e.g. new

discoveries)

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How to place values on resources?

• $ value on non-direct costs and benefits – Estimate cost to use technology to perform

actions conducted by ecosystems (e.g. water or air filtration)

– Estimate costs of amelioration (e.g. healthcare costs VS prevention of environmental pollution)

– Surveys: ask people what things are worth (“what would you pay to maintain ecosystem X”)

Page 10: Readings

How to place values on resources?

• $ value on non-direct costs and benefits – Estimate cost to use technology to perform

actions conducted by ecosystems (e.g. water or air filtration)

– Estimate costs of amelioration (e.g. healthcare costs VS prevention of environmental pollution)

– Surveys: ask people what things are worth (“what would you pay to maintain ecosystem X”)

Page 11: Readings

Non-market values in range and forest

ecosystems• What are some values that might

apply? How would you account for them?

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“Market Failure” caused by non-market resources

– Market failure= non-optimal allocation of resources.

– How can it be remedied? Account for non-monetary values, or bypass market mechanism and impose policy.

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Can non-monetary values be accounted for by

traditional economics?

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Can non-monetary values be accounted for by

traditional economics?

• Yes: we can translate all values into common metric ($) and can assess using free-market economics

Page 15: Readings

Can non-monetary values be accounted for by

traditional economics?

• Yes: we can translate all values into common metric ($) and can assess using free-market economics

• No: some things have no $ value. Some decisions (environmental and social policy) must be made outside the realm of the market

Page 16: Readings

Case study: modeling costs, management, and

vegetation• Simulation model predicting

outcomes of various management strategies

• non-market values (e.g. environment values) must be considered external to the model to make management decisions