Title: Impasse in Biodiversity Conservation Policy: An Institutional Analysis
1Impasse in Biodiversity Conservation Policy An
Institutional Analysis
- by
- Arild Vatn
- Department of Environment and Development,
- Norwegian University of Life Sciences
- Lecture at the international workshop Making
Sense of Ecosystem Services Ecosocial and
Institutional Perspectives - Koli, Finland, August 25-27
2The structure of the presentation
- What is an institutional analysis
- Why is protecting biodiversity so hard?
- From traditional conservation to payments for
ecological services the new trend - The Nordic experience
31. What is an institutional analysis?
- An institutional analysis contains an evaluation
of how (alternative) institutions - influence distribution of access to resources
(power and interest configurations) - influence the form of and capacity to
communicate, coordinate and transact
specifically the level of transaction costs - influence motivational structures and behavior
- In the relation to these issues Which values and
interests are protected and which interests are
formed plays a crucial role
4(No Transcript)
5What is an institutional analysis? (cont.)Forms
of institutions
- Structural and functional aspects
- Conventions
- S Categories of objects or situations
- F Coordinating behavior (small c coordination)
- Norms
- S Behavioral prescriptions (should/should not
etc.) - F Creating common values/negotiating or avoiding
conflict (large C coordination) - Formal rules
- S Legal structures, formal controls and
punishments - F Regulating conflicts (large C coordination)
- Institutions influence
- Access to resources (rights)
- Levels of coordination/transaction costs
- Perception
- Rationality and preferences
6What is an institutional analysis?
(cont.)Institutions as rationality contexts
- Following from the above The institutional
structure influences the logic (or meaning) of
contexts or situations - Plural rationality
- Individual rationality I rationality
- What is best for the individual egoism
- Fostered by structures like markets and firms
- Social rationality We rationality
- What is best for the group may imply personal
sacrifice. Solidarity vs. altruism - How the group is defined is crucial here.
Solidarity turning into us and them
72. Why is biodiversity protection so hard?
- The international society has produced a series
of conventions and treaties concerning
biodiversity conservation, e.g., - The Ramsar Convention (1975)
- Bonn Convention (1979)
- Bern Convention (1979)
- The Convention on Biodiversity (1992)
- The Cartagena protocol (2000)
- Losses of species in the order of 100 1000
times the normal - The EU (and Norway) has decided to halt
biodiversity loss by 2010. That is by no way
going to happen
82. Why is biodiversity protection so hard?
(cont.)What is causing the losses?
- A difficult problem
- Institutions ? the interest structures vs.
- the characteristics of the natural system
dynamics - Interest structure
- Institutional separation Individualized rights ?
atomizing - Free rider problems
- The characteristics of the problem
- Interrelated resources/interconnected processes
- Complexity The resilience irreversibility
threshold nexus - Demands integrative institutions
92. Why is biodiversity protection so hard?
(cont.)What is causing the losses? (cont.)
- No single explanation. Complementary and
competing explanations - A difficult problem!
- Undefined or unclear property rights
- Population growth
- Economic growth
- High alternative value
- Pollution
- Weak protection policies
- Lacking capacity/willingness to pay
- Weak ability to find solutions that make it
possible to combine use and protection better
102. Why is biodiversity protection so hard?
(cont.)From state regulations to market
solutions?
- The dominant solution has been state regulations
mainly in the form of reserves and national
parks. Some counter forces - General reduced legitimacy for state action -
neo-liberalism - Increased conflicts over set aside protection
- Reduced funding
- Many of the easy objects are already protected
- We observe a move towards Payments for
Environmental Services (PES). From state to
market? The present ideology Subsidies are bad
while payments are good. - The tendency to shift from one Solution to
another Solution the ideology of the time
and lack of ability to adapt to local conditions
113. Payments for ecological services (PES)
- Some e.g., Engel et al. (2008) see PES as a
Coasean solution i.e., as a transaction between
individual parties. It is a market solution to
the problem of externalities - As such it is opposed to the standard Pigovian
solution where the state secures internalization
through taxes (negative) or subsidies (positive)
external effects - Wide variety of applications Local biological
and water resources to global climate change
(e.g., the CDM) - It is said to be more efficient as
- Buyers and sellers directly decide the price
(defines the value) - One avoids state bureaucracies
- Attracts more resources
123. Payments for ecological services (PES)
(cont.)Criteria for PES
- Along the above Wunder (2005) sets up the
following criteria for a PES system - a voluntary transaction
- a well-defined environmental service (ES)
- is being bought by a (minimum one) ES buyer
- from a (minimum one) ES provider
- if and only if the ES provider secures ES
provision (conditionality) - What we observe is that
- the state is the dominant buyer on behalf of
e.g., tax payers. Hence, voluntariliness is not a
distinct feature - The role of an intermediary between the buyer and
provider (state, NGOs). Not well-defined goods
and actors involved - So it seems not to be Coase vs. Pigou
- The distinction between MES (markets for
environmental services) and PES, with PES as the
broader concept including MES
133. Payments for ecological services (PES)
(cont.)Evaluating PES Rights and transaction
costs
- Distribution of rights
- PES seems to accept the right to present
practices. Pays for investing in protection
activities beyond that base line. A tendency to
favor poor rural people. Still, not necessarily a
way to reduce poverty. Moreover, the effect of
PES could be shifted rights/access to land - Transaction costs (TCs)
- TCs may consume all potential gains from trade
Wunder et al. (2008) document especially high set
up costs - Therefore we observe intermediaries to be the
dominant actor not the buyers/providers - Therefore we often see that collectives (tax
payers) pay collectives (communities) with the
state as intermediary. Not standard markets. Less
efficient? No (not neces-sarily) Often rather
low precision, but also lowered TCs
143. Payments for ecological services (PES)
(cont.)Evaluating PES Existing institutions
- The role of existing institutional structures
- Existing institutions and values are important.
Interferences may already be regulated by
specific rules e.g., the Andean water vision.
Monetary payments may in some contexts not fit at
all - The role of local power structures
- Those already having interests in protection
activities are (dominantly) the ones
participating in PES schemes
153. Payments for ecological services (PES)
(cont.)Evaluating PES Motivational aspects
- Monetary payments may mean different things
- Measures the value of an ES
- Is an incentive to produce ES
- Is a compensation for efforts to produce ES
(reciprocity) - Payments not necessarily commodification. The
format of the payment influences how it is
perceived. - The incentive problem ? pay for one service, you
must pay for all? - Introducing money may sometimes reduce effort ?
induces a move from social to individual
rationality - Experience form experiments
- The Greek Case of water management the
difference of within and between group payments - The potential payment impasse
164. The Nordic experience
- Results from a comparative study in Finland,
Norway and Sweden trying to explain the variation
in conflict level observed. Data mainly from 2004 - The study developed by a team at UMB (Ã…s/Norway)
in cooperation with researchers from Joensuu and
Umeå/Alnarp - Sample 345 forest owners that had been
participating in protection processes where land
was set aside for full protection - Data collected by master students
174. The Nordic experience (cont.) General
attitudes towards protection
A Protection important to secure future economic
values B Unethical to make species go extinct C
All species have a right to exist D Species
extinction is not a serious environmental
problem E Protecting biodiversity is important
for future generations I Important to protect
biological diversity in forests
1 Fully disagree 5
Fully agree
184. The Nordic experience (cont.) Attitudes
towards other values in the forest
- Here the picture is less clear
- Traditional forest/use values (jobs, income,
use of a renewable resource) has still a rather
strong position - More important for Finnish and Norwegain than
Swedish forest owners
194. The Nordic experience (cont.) Attitudes
towards protection of own forest
O Accept protection on own property if fully
compensted P Do not accept protection on own
property because it will reduce the value for
future generations Q Do not accept protection
because it is not a good way to utilize a
renewable resource Â
204. The Nordic experience (cont.) Attitudes
towards the protection process
Distribution in percent 1very satisfied 5very
dissatisfied
- Differences in processes
- Norway the process run by the environmental
authorities, while in Finland and Sweden the
forest administration dominantly made the front
line - More flexible solutions in Finland and Sweden
214. The Nordic experience (cont.) What explains
the different conflict levels
- Data analyzed using multipple logit with
attitude to protection in own forest as dependent
variable - Significant variables
- Country ? Norwegian forest owners lower
acceptance - Attitudes to protection ? The more positive to
protection in general, the more positive to
protection on own property - Societal values related to use (job creation )
? more positive to protection in own forest!!? - Future use ? less positive to protection in own
forest - Prosess ? the more negative to the process the
more negative to protection on own poperty - Insignificant variables Characteristics of the
owner (age, education, sex etc.) income from the
forest size of property perception of who owns
the biodiversity
224. The Nordic experience (cont.) Process
influences attitudes to protection
- 1The process resulted in much increased
understanding - 5 The process resulted in much reduced
understanding
234. The Nordic experience (cont.) Challenges
- The relationships between an acceptable process,
a legitimate rights definition and the necessary
capacity to protect biodiversity - Forced vs. voluntary solution
- Conflict level ? voluntary
- Costs ? voluntary (??)
- Who pays ? The Degrader (Polluter) Pays or
Provider gets - Quality and quantity of the protection forced
- Is there space for combining participation and
state forced solutions?