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Inequitable gains and losses from conservation in a global biodiversity hotspot

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-01-08, 11:27 authored by Philip J Platts, Marije Schaafsma, R Kerry Turner, Neil D Burgess, Brendan Fisher, Boniface P Mbilinyi, Pantaleo KT Munishi, Taylor H Ricketts, Ruth D Swetnam, Antje Ahrends, Biniam B Ashagre, Julian Bayliss, Roy E Gereau, Jonathan MH Green, Rhys E Green, Lena Jeha, Simon L Lewis, Rob Marchant, Andrew R Marshall, Sian Morse-Jones, Shadrack Mwakalila, Marco A Njana, Deo D Shirima, Simon Willcock, Andrew Balmford

A billion rural people live near tropical forests. Urban populations need them for water, energy and timber. Global society benefits from climate regulation and knowledge embodied in tropical biodiversity. Ecosystem service valuations can incentivise conservation, but determining costs and benefits across multiple stakeholders and interacting services is complex and rarely attempted. We report on a 10-year study, unprecedented in detail and scope, to determine the monetary value implications of conserving forests and woodlands in Tanzania’s Eastern Arc Mountains. Across plausible ranges of carbon price, agricultural yield and discount rate, conservation delivers net global benefits (+US$8.2B present value, 20-year central estimate). Crucially, however, net outcomes diverge widely across stakeholder groups. International stakeholders gain most from conservation (+US$10.1B), while local-rural communities bear substantial net costs (-US$1.9B), with greater inequities for more biologically important forests. Other Tanzanian stakeholders experience conflicting incentives: tourism, drinking water and climate regulation encourage conservation (+US$72M); logging, fuelwood and management costs encourage depletion (-US$148M). Substantial global investment in disaggregating and mitigating local costs (e.g., through boosting smallholder yields) is essential to equitably balance conservation and development objectives.

History

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

86

Page range

381-405

Publication title

Environmental and Resource Economics

ISSN

0924-6460

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

File version

  • Published version

Language

  • eng

Item sub-type

Journal Article

Affiliated with

  • School of Engineering and The Built Environment Outputs