Title: Biodiversity Conservation: Information Problems and Regulatory Choices
1Biodiversity Conservation Information Problems
and Regulatory Choices
- Timo Goeschl and Tun Lin
- University of Cambridge
2Introduction
- Informational constraints are one of greatest
challenges to biodiversity policy making. - Biodiversity Value Information
- Conservation Cost Information
- The nature, type, and extent of informational
insufficiencies have profound impacts on choices
of regulatory measures
3The Benefits of Conservation
- Cornerstone of biodiversity policies
- Research objective
- To ascertain the economic value of
biodiversity - The initial quest for the TEV
- Ecological complexities of biodiversity can only
be partially reduced in economics - Complication Valuation of a non-market good.
4The Total Economic Value
5State of the valuation debate
- Debate has become
- more sophisticated in terms of valuation
categories considered - more professional in terms of methodologies
- more informed in terms of how to approach the
valuation of individual components of the TEV - However, the debate does not appear to
- converge either in terms of the total or
marginal value of biodiversity, - come closer to a meaningful aggregation of value
categories, and - Have become less acrimonious.
6The Costs of Conservation
- Question How can biodiversity conservation be
carried out most cost-effectively? - Cost components
- Opportunity cost of land
- Foregone benefits of alternative uses
- Relationship between conservation and other uses
- Management costs
- Direct costs of conservation activity
- Informational costs
- Revelation costs
- Research
- Costs will differ depending on instrument used.
7Marginal Benefits and Costs
MC
MB,MC
p
MB
Biodiversity
B
- For optimal choice, marginal costs of
conservation are as important as marginal benefits
8Marginal Benefits and Costs
Benefits in EURO
MC
MC
MB
Biodiversity
B
B
Information insufficiencies ? not knowing
sufficiently well MB and MC ? Suboptimal
Regulation
9This study reviews two closely-related aspects of
biodiversity conservation
- Informational Insufficiencies
- (of MB and MC curves)
- Biological Uncertainty
- Natural Variability
- Individual Information
- Monitoring Problem
- Policy Instruments
-
- Land Takings /Access Restriction
- Environmental Taxes/ Changes
- Contract
10Information Insufficiencies (1)
- Biological Uncertainty
- Very limited knowledge for biology process (e.g.
threshold values) results in the uncertain forms
of relationships in the system - Difficult to evaluate the value of biodiversity
enhancing activities - Modeling learning process (passive and active
learning, Dosi et. al. 1997) and information
discovery process
11Information Insufficiencies (2)
- Natural Variability
- Stochastic shocks from uncontrollable factors
such as climate change and invasion of some alien
species to local ecosystem - Modeling stochastic influence (e.g. Segerson,
1988).
12Information Insufficiencies (3)
- Hidden Individual Information
- Landowners to be regulated are diverse and
heterogenetic - Models starts with landowners either having
better information or being in a better position
to collect the information
13Information Insufficiencies (4)
- Monitoring Problems
- Regulators Inability to Monitor Input (Effort
Level) and Output (Impact) - A number of contributing factors equipment and
personnel limitations, or inability to enter the
polluters premises etc. - Monitoring problem sharpens when the number of
landowners increases
14Policy responses
- Land acquisition
- Without compensation
- With compensation
- Subcase land use restrictions
- Environmental raxes / removal of subsidies
- Contracts
15Policy choice
16Land acquisition
- Implies that the government becomes the
conservation manager. - Information on lands conservation value is
essential for acquisition decision and project
comparison. - General Wisdom
- Expensive to government
- Governments under-perform in production
activities - Implies higher than necessary opportunity costs
- Implies higher than necessary management costs
- Question of compensation
- Land Use Restriction
17No Compensation
- The absence of compensation reduces up-front
conservation costs to society more conservation - Problems
- Excess conservation beyond social optimum.
- Problematic incentives for landowners when
presence of biodiversity impacts negatively on
land values - No cooperation from landowners in prospecting for
biodiversity - Timing of development of land will be pushed
forward to preempt expropriation. - Lack of compensation is likely to undermine
conservation efforts.
18Compensation
- If compensation paid, conservation more expensive
up-front, but may result in more biodiversity
available. - Benefits
- Public needs to confront opportunity costs
explicitly. - Prevents looting of public goods by landowners
- Problems
- Very seldom based on land conservation values
because of insufficient information - If based on opportunity cost, incentive for
landowner to develop earlier in order to raise
size of payment (Blume, Rubinfeld, Shapiro
doctrine).
19Policy shift
- General shift in focus from public to private
land as locus of biodiversity conservation - Possible reasons
- Limitations of conservation opportunities on
public land. - Conservation opportunities on private land (e.g.
ESA in the USA). - Perceived failures of acquisition and regulation
policies. - General shift in preferences regarding the
optimal size of government.
20Contracting
- Landowner retains management.
- Generally preferred where conservation is
competing with other uses of the land. - Prime example Agriculture
- Government becomes principal in a regulatory
situation where a contract with an agent (the
landowner) is specified.
21Contracting
- Compared to land takings, contract is provide
public goods through private producers. - Compared to taxes, many contracts circumvent the
problem of evaluating the environmental goods
biodiversity by basing the contract payment on
opportunity costs - However, aforementioned informational constraints
still exist, especially hidden information and
monitoring problem
22Problems in contracting
- Asymmetric information
- Landowner often better informed about opportunity
cost of conservation than government gt will try
to extract better contractual terms. - Landowner often better informed about social
value of land. - Different ability of principal and agent to
collect information - Legal constraints
- Cost constraints.
23Problems in contracting
- Informational costs probably of significant
size. - Policy responses
- In general, more carrots than sticks optimal.
- Increases up-front cost of conservation
- Need for more sophisticated carrots
- Contracts with fixed and variable reward
component - Compensation for information revelation
- Insurance tools
- Tradable development rights
- Appearance of more exotic instruments
24Conclusions
- Information discovery as an integrated part of
conservation policy. - Better information improves regulation efficiency
- Instrument choice should explicitly take into
account the information structure. - An integrated framework that explicitly considers
efficiency trade-offs of different regulatory
measures under various informational structures
is essential.