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How to pay for ecosystem services

Andrew J. Plantinga, Katherine D. Millage, Erin O’Reilly, Tamaki Bieri, Nick D. Holmes, Jono R. Wilson, Darcy Bradley

2023Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

New investments in conservation are needed to halt and reverse the rapid and extensive changes to ecosystems driven by growing human demands for natural resources. A major barrier is matching viable financing solutions to conservation projects. Recent conservation finance studies catalog available financing options but do not provide adequate guidance on which financing pathways are suitable for a particular conservation project. Studies in the natural capital literature identify activities that best serve the conservator's objectives but typically fail to address the question of how to pay for them. We attempt to bridge these literature sources by providing a framework for identifying the specific conditions that must be satisfied by a project in order for an existing financing mechanism to be viable. Notably, our framework quickly reveals financing approaches that can be eliminated. We demonstrate the utility of this approach through conservation case studies on establishment of native forests, coral reef restoration, oyster restoration, and island biosecurity.

Topics & Concepts

Ecosystem servicesBusinessOrder (exchange)BiosecurityEnvironmental resource managementMatching (statistics)Natural resourceEnvironmental planningEcosystemFinanceEconomicsEcologyGeographyBiologyStatisticsMathematicsLand Use and Ecosystem ServicesCoral and Marine Ecosystems StudiesEconomic and Environmental Valuation
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