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| View Larger Image | Nature and the Marketplace: Capturing The Value Of Ecosystem Services by Geoffrey Heal
| | List Price: | $27.50 |  | | Available: | Usually ships in 24 hours |  | |  | | Sales Rank: | 609779 | | Studio: | Island Press |  | | Binding: | Paperback | | Number Of Pages: | 203 | | Publication Date: | October 01, 2000 | | Publisher: | Island Press |
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EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Book Description
In recent years, scientists have begun to focus on the idea that healthy, functioning ecosystems provide essential services to human populations, ranging from water purification to food and medicine to climate regulation. Lacking a healthy environment, these services would have to be provided through mechanical means, at a tremendous economic and social cost. Nature and the Marketplace examines the controversial proposition that markets should be designed to capture the value of those services. Written by an economist with a background in business, it evaluates the real prospects for various of nature's marketable services to "turn profits" at levels that exceed the profits expected from alternative, ecologically destructive, business activities. The author: - describes the infrastructure that natural systems provide, how we depend on it, and how we are affecting it
- explains the market mechanism and how it can lead to more efficient resource use
- looks at key economic activities-such as ecotourism, bioprospecting, and carbon sequestration-where market forces can provide incentives for conservation
- examines policy options other than the market, such as pollution credits and mitigation banking
- considers the issue of sustainability and equity between generations
.Nature and the Marketplace presents an accessible introduction to the concept of ecosystem services and the economics of the environment. It offers a clear assessment of how market approaches can be used to protect the environment, and illustrates that with a number of cases in which the value of ecosystems has actually been captured by markets. The book offers a straightforward business economic analysis of conservation issues, eschewing romantic notions about ecosystem preservation in favor of real-world economic solutions. It will be an eye-opening work for professionals, students, and scholars in conservation biology, ecology, environmental economics, environmental policy, and related fields. |
CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 4.0 based on 1 review)
| trading pollution permits  Heal explains how one might put a value on an ecosystem, or parts thereof. It's a relatively recent approach that attempts to avoid a tragedy of the commons with respect to the environment, be it local or even global.
A very useful idea described is the trading of pollution permits. The latter are rights to pollute. The premise is that instead of a government trying to mandate a minimum pollution level, it lets a free market determine this, by giving monetary value to permits. So that a company has incentive to develop or use innovative ways to minimise its pollution. Hence being able to sell any net gains to others. This also avoids the government trying to set a value on a permit.
The book suggests that carbon permits might be crucial in battling global warming. June 28, 2006 | |
SIMILAR PRODUCTS |
| | The New Economy of Nature: The Quest To Make Conservation Profitable by Gretchen Daily, Katherine Ellison
| | Nature's Services: Societal Dependence On Natural Ecosystems by John Peterson Myers, Joshua Reichert, Sandra Postel, Kamaljit Bawa, Les Kaufman, Charles H. Peterson, Stephen Carpenter, David Tillman, Paul Dayton, Susan Alexander, Kalen Lagerquist, Larry Goulder, Pamela Matson, Harold Mooney, Rosamond Naylor, Peter Vitousek, John Harte, Gretchen Daily
| | Valuing Ecosystem Services: Toward Better Environmental Decision-Making by Committee on Assessing and Valuing the the Services of Aquatic and Related Terrestrial Ecosystems, National Research Council
| | Field Notes from a Catastrophe: Man, Nature, and Climate Change by Elizabeth Kolbert
| | Economics: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions) by Partha Dasgupta
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