全球生物多样性热点地区保护带来的不平等收益与损失

Inequitable Gains and Losses from Conservation in a Global Biodiversity Hotspot

Environmental & Resource Economics · 2023
被引 8
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

基于坦桑尼亚东部弧山10年研究,发现森林保护虽带来全球净收益82亿美元,但当地农村社区净损失19亿美元,且生物重要性越高的森林不平等越严重。

Abstract

Abstract 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.

生物多样性保护生态系统服务价值利益分配不均东弧山脉