We will be undertaking essential maintenance work on Apollo's infrastructure on Thursday 14 August and Friday 15 August, therefore expect intermittent access to Apollo's content and search interface during that time. Please also note that Apollo's "Request a copy" service will be temporarily disabled while we undertake this work.
Repository logo
 

Inequitable gains and losses from conservation in a global biodiversity hotspot

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Repository DOI


Change log

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.

Description

Acknowledgements: We thank the many villagers, townspeople and officials in Tanzania, who gave their time and knowledge to make this work possible. We dedicate this paper to the families and friends of George Jambiya, Seif S. Madoffe, Amani Mahundu, Boniface Mhoro, Stephen Ngowi and Sue White, all of whom contributed to earlier phases of this work.


Funder: Royal Society; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000288


Funder: David and Lucile Packard Foundation; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000008


Funder: EAMCEF


Funder: UN-TEEB

Journal Title

Environmental and Resource Economics

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0924-6460
1573-1502

Volume Title

86

Publisher

Springer

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Sponsorship
Leverhulme Trust (F/09364/B)
Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit (WM160065)
The authors were funded by the Leverhulme Trust (F/09364/B), the Royal Society and the Packard Foundation through the Valuing the Arc Programme (2007-2012), with subsequent funding from the Eastern Arc Mountains Conservation Endowment Fund (EAMCEF, 2015) and from the UN initiative on The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (UN-TEEB, 2017). Additionally, A.B. was supported by a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit award (WM160065).