Natur Cymru

A full version of this article appears in the
magazine.
In a world which knows the price of everything and the value of
nothing, it’s not surprising that many naturalists and ecologists
have a suspicion of economics. But although we may have resisted
the idea of giving a financial value to a species or habitat
(because it makes them easier to buy and sell), the emerging field
of ecosystem service valuation may be our best response to our
current economic model which attaches no value to nature.
Ecosystem function emerged as a science in the 1960s, and by the
1990s the idea of giving an economic value to the services that
ecosystems provide was becoming a focus of academic research.
Nutrient cycling, climate regulation, pest and disease control,
pollination, biological and genetic diversity and water
purification are all ecosystem services, as are aesthetic,
recreational and spiritual resources. The value of these services
is not recognised by commercial markets, or quantified like
industrial outputs, and so doesn’t contribute to official measures
of economic progress. But because our global economy is entirely
dependent on these life-support systems, their total value to the
economy is in one sense infinite. Neglecting this knowledge may
ultimately compromise the sustainability of humans on the
planet.
A new report, Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity,
recognises the economic value of biodiversity to the millions of
people directly dependent on natural resources for their
livelihoods. It also shows how the loss of biodiversity is now
affecting regional economies in many ways, from the depletion of
fish stocks to agricultural pollution of river basins. The author,
Pavan Sukhdev, a senior figure in Deutsche Bank, said "we are
trying to navigate uncharted and turbulent waters with an old and
defective economic compass and this is affecting our ability to
forge a sustainable economy in harmony with nature." The next phase
of the work will examine how to improve our economic models and
policies to ensure the flow of ecosystem services, protect
biodiversity and improve the well-being of present and future
generations.
So what are the lessons for Wales? Research suggests that our
woodlands are worth hundred of pounds per hectare per annum just as
carbon sinks, and our wetlands a similar amount as watershed
protection. Other research suggests that every £1 invested in
enhancing and conserving these ecosystem services produces £100 of
economic benefits. The future of agriculture, as the 2020 Report
for the Welsh Assembly Government concluded, looks very different
if we factor in the value of ecosystems: we must move towards a
proper valuation of environmental goods and services.
We face a number of big infrastructure projects here in Wales,
which current valuation methods judge to be of ‘overriding public
interest’. Take the case of the Severn barrage, which many
politicians and business people want to see built to stimulate
economic development and contribute to renewable energy targets.
The Government has begun a Feasibility Study into the tidal power
options, including a Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA), and
will look at the economics of carbon abatement, the relative costs
and benefits of the alternative technologies and the cost of
providing compensatory habitat. But these assessments currently
don’t look at the present or future economic value of the
environmental resource that will be lost. It will look in great
detail at the impact of the development on the environment, but
however great that impact, it will be traded for what is seen as a
greater economic good unless we can demonstrate an even greater
economic loss.
The Severn estuary and its tributaries are a spawning ground for
eels and salmonid fish which are critical components of ecosystems
many thousands of miles out in the Atlantic ocean. The consensus
amongst fisheries biologists is that the barrage would cause the
local extinction of these populations. Loss of these keynote
species would be significant, but by creating a highly modified and
impoverished habitat, the barrage would also prevent other species
emerging to take their place as key species in the system. Ensuring
ecosystem resilience (particularly of those systems that are major
carbon sinks) is every bit as important as reducing carbon
emissions. It is perhaps ironic that in the whole debate about
climate change, an inanimate element, carbon, now has a price – but
no living thing does.
As the threats to our natural world become ever greater, so
conservationists are obliged to seek more innovative and
far-reaching approaches. Addressing the root causes of biodiversity
loss, rather than the symptoms, can offer solutions to seemingly
intractable problems. We are learning to think beyond protected
areas, and to plan on bigger scales, across whole landscapes and
eco-regions. Similarly, addressing the root cause of climate change
by understanding our relationship with ecosystems will be more
effective than simply fixing the symptoms. For both of these,
economic valuation is an important new shield in the battle to
defend the natural world and our own survival in it.
Morgan Parry is Director, WWF Cymru.