Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDeja Fiske Modified over 9 years ago
2
MEASURING ENVIRONMENTAL VALUE IN NONMONETARY TERMS: A REVIEW Richard Cole Institute for Water Resources U. S. Army Corps of Engineers May 2008
3
Background Issues: GPRA requires measurement of program progress in achievement –This includes environmental achievements –OMB prefers monetary measurement Most measurement has been non-monetary Different metrics have proliferated Metric relationship to value is often unclear –Confuses cooperation and coordination –Impedes achievement of national goals The Corps has long sought improved metrics The review was conducted for that purpose
4
Objectives: Review... Values classification Measurement of environmental value in government Measurement of environmental value in nongovernment Common elements of measurement
5
TOTAL VALUE INSTRUMENTAL VALUE Services & Resources (INTRINSIC VALUE) USE VALUE OPTION VALUE NONUSE VALUE BEQUEST VALUE (Heritage Value) TOTAL ECONOMIC VALUE + NON-INTRUMENTAL VALUE Linked to Obligations (Not a resource concept) Value Classification (NRC 2005): Use value is economically measured Nonuse value is economically controversial-- Corps policy forbids Intrinsic value is not tradable—thus not accountable in WRPA framework RECOGNIZED IN LAW
6
GOVERNMENT MEASUREMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL VALUE: Most agency authority is programmatic Value is established in statuatory goals –Goals indicate public desire for more or better –Achievement is measured using diverse performance indicators Links between measure and value added are often unclear Typically includes an unsorted mix of use and nonuse values
7
Recommended Indicators (NRC 2000) Extent and Status Indicators Land cover Land use Ecological Capital Total species diversity Native species diversity Nutrient runoff Soil organic matter Ecological Functioning Carbon storage Production capacity Net primary production Lake trophic status Stream oxygen Nutrient-use efficiency Nutrient balance
8
Natural Capital Ecosystem Value Natural Service Ecosystem Function Ecosystem Structure* Resource Management Public Desire PUBLIC NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT FOR ECOSYSTEM VALUE ADDED *Note: Species are key because they drive and maintain ecosystem function
9
STATUTES AGENCY AUTHORITIES SET OBJECTIVES (STANDARDS) PUBLIC DESIRE (DEMAND) ACHIEVE OBJECTIVES PERFORMANCE INDICATORS REPRESENTATION ANNUAL BUDGET AUTHORIZATION STATUTORY GOALS REEVALUATION PUBLIC BENEFIT GOVERNMENT OBJECTIVE ACHIEVEMENT CYCLE
10
National Environmental Policy Act: Goal of beneficial development Goal of natural and cultural heritage protection Advises full compensation of replaceable resources –Advises compensation for lost use value Advises avoidance of irreplaceable resources –Advises their nonuse protection –Resource rarity (scarcity) is important –Resource distinction is important –Cumulative risk to resources is important
11
Endangered Species Act: Objective is to recover and sustain species viability One of the few laws that serves nonuse value Listing decisions are made based on biological criteria—rarity, threats, distinction Natural heritage is an explicit target
12
Corps Ecosystem Restoration Planning Policy: NER Objective Contributions: Are valued changes in ecological resources Are not cultural, aesthetic or water quality Cannot be measured in monetary terms* Are functions of habitat improvement Ecosystem Restoration Study Objective: Contributions are desired outputs Restored via a more natural [naturalistic] ecosystem state –Self-regulating and sustainable –With high biodiversity Targets “biologically desirable species” & native species * Nonuse value cannot be measured in monetary terms
13
Measurement In The Corps: The justifying benefit must not be economic The benefits metric must apply across plans Different metrics are allowed among projects Many incommensurate metrics have been used The links from metrics to value is often unclear Cannot simply sum-up benefits across projects
14
HabitatCommunity Ecosystem Physical Environment Abiotic Resources Biotic Resources Value added (Benefits) Direct Use Value (economic) Direct Non-Use Value (non-monetary) Benefits Flow From Restoration : The ecosystem context is essential Restoration measures applied Support system Indirect Value CommunityHabitat
15
Environmental NGOs: Value is determined by mission and bylaws These indicate membership’s desired output These are translated into measurable objectives Many NGOs invest in a mix of use and nonuse value Biodiversity conservancies invest primarily in nonuse values
16
Conservation NGO Ranking Criteria: Rarity—basic; genes, species, ecosystems Threat—used when sources/trends known Distinctiveness—used when known--endemism Species Richness—used when rarity not known Representativeness—used with richness Function—keystone influence (for species focus) Utility— economic gain (for species focus) Feasibility (Cost)—basic; costs and risks. Notes: Ecosystems are identified by species composition A security criterion combines rarity and threat
17
R(D)(T) Score = Used where much knowledge, such as in the United States Score = S(X) R = rarity of species in system (where data exist); = ecosystem geographical area (where few data) T = threat to species and ecosystem integrity D= distinctiveness of species and ecosystem C= cost, including management for sustainability S= species richness X= representativeness of species in area restored Used where little knowledge, such as in equatorial areas Two Common Approaches: C C
18
CONCLUSIONS: Most environmental value is indicated in nonmonetary metrics Most indicators include values that can be measured in monetary terms The Corps must separate monetary and nonmonetary values The ESA, private conservancies and the Corps have natural heritage interest in common Resource scarcity, distinction (irreplaceable), risk of failure and costs are common elements for determining value.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.