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Published byJared Banks Modified over 9 years ago
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A Focus on Payments for Ecosystem Services Jeff Prestemon, with assistance from Evan Mercer
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Forest Disturbance and Management Economics Economics of natural disturbances—fire, hurricanes, pests, invasives— Holmes, Prestemon, Abt, Mercer Timber salvage economics—Prestemon, Holmes Climate change adaptation and mitigation—Holmes, Wear, Prestemon Forests and crime—Prestemon Policy and Program Evaluation Markets for ecosystem services—Mercer Taxes and forest management—Greene Policies and programs—Greene, Mercer Natural Resource Assessment and Forecasting Markets and trade—Prestemon, Wear, Holmes, Abt Bioenergy markets—Abt Regional, national, and international assessments—Wear, Prestemon, Abt, Holmes
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Ecosystem Services: the benefits people obtain from forests Marketable—e.g., hunting leases, water, carbon credits Non-marketable—e.g., habitat for non-game animal species, air filtration, esthetics
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Most ecosystem services are provided free of charge Production of ecosystem goods (such as timber or oil) are favored over the conservation of ecosystems and services. Forest land is undervalued Without a market and no government or private sector actions, many ecosystem services are under- provided compared to how they are valued. Markets can be developed Pay landowners for the services produced. But who pays? 4
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Drinking water providers Sewage treatment plants Developers Industrial polluters and energy companies Individual Citizens and Communities Federal, state and local governments
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2010 National Report on Sustainable Forests ▪ Indicator 6.27 Revenues from Forest Based Environmental Services (Mercer 2011) http://www.fs.fed.us/research/sustain/ http://www.fs.fed.us/research/sustain/ Taking Stock: Payments for Forest Ecosystem Services in the United States. (Mercer, Cooley and Hamilton 2011) ▪ Ecosystem Marketplace and USDA Forest Service. http://www.forest-rends.org/documents/files/doc_2673.pdf.http://www.forest-rends.org/documents/files/doc_2673.pdf
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Assess state of forest-based PES in the United States Focus on actual payments to landowners to manage (or reforest) their forestlands to produce ecosystem services
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Forest-based PES 2005-2007 At least $1.9 billion per year By Source: Private: 81% Government Agencies: 19% By Type Wetland Mitigation Banking: 38% ▪ 173 landowners Hunting Leases/fees: 22% Conservation Easements: 17% ▪ 1.8% of private landowners have them Carbon Offsets: 0.001%
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U.S. Forest Service funded grant Evan Mercer is working with Buck Kline (VA DOF) and Southern Group of State Foresters Seeks to develop a methodology for producing consistent measures of these payments across states, get this approach broadly adopted Contact: Evan Mercer, emercer@fs.fed.us, 919-549-4095
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