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Basic concepts of ecological economics

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Basic concepts of ecological economics * * * Natural capital The whole endowment of land and resources available to us, including air, water, fertile soil, forests ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Basic concepts of ecological economics


1
Basic concepts of ecological economics
2
Natural capital
  • The whole endowment of land and resources
    available to us, including air, water, fertile
    soil, forests, fisheries, mineral resources and
    the ecological life support systems.

3
Value of capital
  • Capital stocks are the basis for generating flows
    of income through production of goods and
    services
  • Increasing size of capital stocks increases
    potential income flow

4
Accounting for change in capital
  • Depreciation wearing out, depletion, obsolesce
  • Investment producing new capital
  • New construction
  • New machinery
  • Planting trees
  • Discovery of new mineral stocks

5
Accounting for scale
6
Sustainable development
  • There are hundreds of definitions of sustainable
    development.
  • Sustainable development means different things to
    different people
  • The starting point for most people has been the
    definition prepared by the World Commission on
    Environment and Development (the Brundtland
    Commission) in its report Our Common Future
    (Oxford Oxford University Press, 1987)

Sustainable development is development that meets
the needs of the present without compromising the
ability of future generations to meet their own
needs.
7
Sustainable development
  • Sustainable development focuses on improving the
    quality of life for all of the Earth's citizens
    without increasing the use of natural resources
    beyond the capacity of the environment to supply
    them indefinitely. http//www.sdgateway.net/intro
    sd/definitions.htm

8
Ecological economics measures of sustainability
  • Net primary production ability to capture
    photosynthetic energy
  • Resilience ecosystem capacity to recover from
    adverse impact
  • Substitutability of human made capital for
    natural capital

9
When is development sustainable?
  • Two sustainability criterion
  • Weak sustainability humanmade capital can
    perfectly substitute for the loss of any natural
    capital
  • Strong sustainability limits to the substitution
    of humanmade capital for natural capital losses

10
Weak sustainability criterion
  • Development is sustainable so long as genuine
    capital growth occurs
  • Genuine capital growth occurs when investment in
    new capital gt depreciation of physical capital
    depletion of natural resource stocks
    environmental degradation

11
Weak sustainability criterion
  • Investment can include
  • New physical capital
  • RD to improve productivity of physical capital
  • Education to improve productivity of human
    capital
  • Exploration for discovery of new stocks of
    natural resources

12
Solved problem
  • GDP last year was 12 trillion, including
  • 2 trillion in new capital,
  • 1 trillion in RD,
  • 500 billion in exploration and development of
    new natural resource stocks and
  • 3 billion in human capital improvement.

13
Solved problem
  • Last year the economy incurred the following
    expenses in producing the 12 trillion GDP
  • 2 trillion in depreciation of physical capital,
  • 700 billion in depletion of natural resource
    stocks and
  • 500 billion in the degradation of the
    environment.
  • Did the economy experience genuine growth?

14
Strong sustainability criterion
  • Strong sustainability criterion based on
    recognition that
  • Natural resource stocks cannot be aggregated into
    one measure
  • Other forms of capital cannot always substitute
    for depletion of natural capital
  • Development will be constrained by the most
    limiting factor

15
Strong sustainability criterion
  • Strong sustainability principles
  • Maintain level of flows from renewable resources
  • Maintain flow of income from non-renewable
    resources
  • Safe minimum standard
  • Limits to environmental resilience
  • Precautionary principle

16
Safe minimum standard
  • Safe minimum standard
  • The principle that environmental policies on
    issues involving uncertainty should be set to
    avoid possible catastrophic consequences.

The reactor plant at Chernobyl
17
Precautionary principle
  • Minimum interference with the operation of
    natural systems given
  • Ecological complexity
  • Potential irreversibility
  • Scientific unknowns
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