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Biodiversity Conservation: Information Problems and Regulatory Choices

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Title: Biodiversity Conservation on Private Lands: Information Problems and Regulatory Choices Author: Tun Lin Last modified by: Fondazione Created Date – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Biodiversity Conservation: Information Problems and Regulatory Choices


1
Biodiversity Conservation Information Problems
and Regulatory Choices
  • Timo Goeschl and Tun Lin
  • University of Cambridge

2
Introduction
  • 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

3
The 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.

4
The Total Economic Value
5
State 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.

6
The 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.

7
Marginal Benefits and Costs
MC
MB,MC
p
MB
Biodiversity
B
  • For optimal choice, marginal costs of
    conservation are as important as marginal benefits

8
Marginal Benefits and Costs
Benefits in EURO
MC
MC
MB
Biodiversity
B
B
Information insufficiencies ? not knowing
sufficiently well MB and MC ? Suboptimal
Regulation
9
This 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

10
Information 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

11
Information 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).

12
Information 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

13
Information 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

14
Policy responses
  • Land acquisition
  • Without compensation
  • With compensation
  • Subcase land use restrictions
  • Environmental raxes / removal of subsidies
  • Contracts

15
Policy choice
16
Land 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

17
No 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.

18
Compensation
  • 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).

19
Policy 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.

20
Contracting
  • 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.

21
Contracting
  • 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

22
Problems 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.

23
Problems 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

24
Conclusions
  • 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.
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