Economic values for ecosystem services: A global synthesis and way forward

Brander, L.M., Groot, R de, Schagner, J.P., Guisado-Goni, V., Hoff, V van ’t, Solomonides, S., McVittie, A., Eppink, F., Sposato, M., Do, L., Ghermandi, A. and Sinclairj, M., (2024). Economic values for ecosystem services: A global synthesis and way forward. Ecosystem Services, 66 101606-n/a

Document type:
Article

Metadata
Links
Versions
Statistics
  • Sub-type Journal article
    Author Brander, L.M.
    Groot, R de
    Schagner, J.P.
    Guisado-Goni, V.
    Hoff, V van ’t
    Solomonides, S.
    McVittie, A.
    Eppink, F.
    Sposato, M.
    Do, L.
    Ghermandi, A.
    Sinclairj, M.
    Title Economic values for ecosystem services: A global synthesis and way forward
    Appearing in Ecosystem Services
    Volume 66
    Publication Date 2024-04-01
    Place of Publication Amesterdam
    Publisher Elsevier
    Start page 101606
    End page n/a
    Language eng
    Abstract This paper presents a global synthesis of economic values for ecosystem services provided by 15 terrestrial and marine biomes. Information from over 1,300 studies, yielding over 9,400 value estimates in monetary units, has been collected and organised in the Ecosystem Services Valuation Database (ESVD). This is a substantial expansion of data since the de Groot et al. (2012) description of the ESVD and provides an important juncture to explore developments in the use of valuation methods and the contexts in which valuations are conducted. In this paper we provide summary values for 23 ecosystem services from 15 biomes to represent the magnitude, variation and gaps in economic values. To enable the comparison and synthesis of values, estimates in the ESVD are standardised to a common set of units (Int$/ha/year at 2020 price levels). This data provides a basis for value transfers to inform decision-making in current policy contexts but requires due consideration and adjustment for context specific determinants of value. Although the coverage of the ESVD is global, the geographic distribution of data is not even. There is a particularly high representation of European ecosystems and relatively little information for Russia, Central Asia and North Africa. Therefore, the data are not globally representative of biophysical and socio-economic contexts. The distribution of data across ecosystem services is also far from even, with some services very well represented (e.g. recreation, wild fish and wild animals, ecosystem and species appreciation, air filtration and global climate regulation) and others with almost no value estimates (e.g. disease control, water baseflow maintenance, rainfall pattern regulation). In the past decade, there has been a notable increase in demand for information on the economic value of ecosystem services from both public and private institutions to improve the conservation and management of natural capital. The literature is developing to meet this demand but there is a need for targeted and refined valuation research to ensure sufficient certainty, comparability, and representativeness of the data, and to enable transferability and fill knowledge gaps. This paper concludes by identifying avenues for future development to further increase the amount, quality, representativeness and application of data on economic values for ecosystem services.
    Keyword Ecosystem services
    Economic value
    Monetary units
    Ecosystem services valuation database (ESVD)
    Copyright Holder Elsevier
    Copyright Year 2024
    Copyright type All rights reserved
    DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoser.2024.101606
  • Versions
    Version Filter Type
  • Citation counts
    Google Scholar Search Google Scholar
    Access Statistics: 37 Abstract Views  -  Detailed Statistics
    Created: Thu, 19 Sep 2024, 05:52:03 JST by Haideh Beigi on behalf of UNU INWEH