Valuing water purification services of forests: A production function approach using panel data from China's Sichuan province


Type
Article
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Abstract

jats:titleAbstract</jats:title>jats:pThe water purification functions of forests represent one of the most frequently invoked examples of nonmarket ecosystem services that are economically valuable. This study quantifies the monetary value of forests' water purification services in the form of the ensuing cost savings of municipal drinking water treatment, using a rich panel dataset from China's Sichuan province. Moreover, this study has undertaken a novel spatial piecewise approach to investigate the spatial patterns of such cost savings delivered by forests at different distances from the water intake point. The estimation results find that forests within a 2 km radius upstream from the water intake point have the most sizeable and statistically significant cost saving effect. For forests within a 3 km radius, this effect becomes somewhat smaller but remains statistically significant. Beyond a 4 km radius, this effect becomes notably smaller and statistically equal to zero. Our analysis facilitates the optimal spatial targeting of forest conservation.</jats:p>

Description
Keywords
fixed effects panel data model, forest, production function, spatial piecewise approach, valuation of ecosystem services, water purification
Journal Title
Environment and Development Economics
Conference Name
Journal ISSN
1355-770X
1469-4395
Volume Title
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Sponsorship
Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA)