Title: Jim Salzman May 18, 2005
1The Nuts and Bolts of
Creating Markets for Ecosystem Services
- Jim Salzman
May 18, 2005 - Duke Law School Nicholas School of
Environment Earth Sciences
2Why Such Poor Protection of Services?
- Services taken for granted
- Biophysical provision poorly understood
3Production of Goods
- Food
- Pharmaceuticals
- Energy
- e.g., biomass
- Industrial products
- waxes, oils, fragrances, dyes, latex, rubber,
etc. - Durable materials
- precursors to many synthetic products
- Genetic resources
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5Why Such Poor Protection of Services?
- Few markets for public goods and services
- Current price signals dont indicate sufficient
value to encourage protection and provision of
services - Value is landscape-specific
- Under-provision of public goods
6Why Such Poor Protection of Services?
- Policies and institutions do not encourage or
value management of ecosystems for service
provision - Ecological and political boundaries rarely
overlap - Challenge of extending authority beyond
traditional institutional boundaries
7The Policy Toolkit The 5 PsWater Quality from
Farm
- Prescription
- regulations requiring riparian fencing
- Penalties
- fines per metre of unfenced streambank
- Property
- tradable right to have unfenced streambank
- Persuasion
- pilot projects with fenced streambanks
8Ecosystem Service Payments
- B2B
- Perrier Vittel, MRFF
- Mitigation Markets
- Wetlands Mitigation Banking, CDM
- Direct Payment - Subsidy
- Direct Payment - Competitive
- CRP, Bushtender
- Hybrids
- Catskills, PSA
9Designing Policy Instruments to Protect
Ecosystem Services
- What is the service being provided?
- Who provides the service and who benefits?
- What level of service is provided?
- What level of service is needed?
- Who is paid?
- How are they paid?
10What is the service being provided?
- Can the problem be addressed by land management?
- Costa Rican hydropower gets at reservoir sediment
through service of sediment retention - MRFF gets at rising saline water tables through
evapotranspiration - For Catskills, what type of water purification?
11What is the service being provided?
- Can the services be bundled?
- Can we conserve biodiversity by maintaining a
forested watershed or reforesting for carbon? - Can an uneconomic service be bundled with a
marketable service?
12Who Provides the Service and Who Benefits?
- Must identify discrete groups of buyers and
sellers - Challenge of public goods
- Why biodiversity markets so hard to establish
- Why so many ES market examples involve water
- If service widely enjoyed by diffuse
beneficiaries, absent intervention unlikely a
market will arise
13Who Provides the Service and Who Benefits?
- Monopsony many sellers and few buyers
- Why water quality contracts in Costa Rica involve
dominant user in watershed (hydropower) - Why NY water authority must act on behalf of New
Yorks water consumers in negotiating with
catchment landowners
14What Level of Service is Provided?
- Importance of landscape context
- Necessity of robust assessment methodologies
- BushTender and RMFF
- Which land uses should be paid for?
15BushTender
- Reverse auctions for biodiversity conservation
- Calculation of Biodiversity and Habitat
Significance Scores - Combined with bid price and graphed
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17Macquarie River Food and Fibre
- Payment to upstream farmers to plant trees
- NSW State Forests acts as broker
- Steady income stream in marginal tree cropping
country - Uncertainty over effectiveness
18What Level of Service is Provided?
- Necessity of robust assessment methodologies
- How accurate and expensive is the field scoring?
- Importance of technically capable staff
- Is the service more like biodiversity or salinity?
19What Level of Service is Needed?
- Who gets paid?
- How much do we pay?
- How are they paid?
20Who gets paid?
- Payments to continue provision of services,
maintain land use - Catskills, Costa Rica
- Payments to change land use
- CRP, BushTender, Catskills, Perrier Vittel
- Cant pay everyone
21Creation of a Moral Hazard?
- If we pay for marginal improvements in service
provision, what message does it send?
22Farmer B
Farmer A
23Creation of a Moral Hazard?
- Even if we pay for marginal improvements in
service provision, what message does it send?
- Insurance or maintenance payments
- Likelihood of detrimental land use change
- Likelihood of delay in improving land use
24What Are Payments Indexed To?
- Value of service unit delivered (output)
- Capital and opportunity costs (input)
- Market decides
25Payment Conditions?
- Should payments be front-loaded, back-loaded, or
evenly spaced? - Who bears the risk of innocent loss?
26Length of Payments?
- The longer the better?
- Or as transitional assistance?
- Problems of hold-outs
- Length of commitment/budget security
27Ensuring Accountability
- Important in any case, private or public
- Clarity of goals what are you paying for?
- Valuation avoided costs?
- Clarity of means how are you getting it?
- What exactly are you paying them to do?
- Clarity of result what did you get?
- 11 million gallons of clean water per year
28Horses for Courses
29Horses for Courses
- Payments not always the preferred choice
- But, for any ES instrument, need to know
- Service to be provided
- Means of provision
- Provider of service
- Level of provision
30Horses for Courses
- Payments will be particularly attractive when
- Landscape management can provide sufficient
service levels - High avoided costs can be identified
- Consumer/public understanding of ES importance
- Discrete buyers and sellers
- Service provision levels can be cheaply and
adequately measured