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The Natural Capital Framework

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Title: The Natural Capital Framework


1
The Natural Capital Framework
  • Presentation to the Seminar
  • Environmental Economics and Natural Capital
  • In the series
  • Sustaining Future Ecosystem Services From
    Understanding to Action
  • By
  • Professor Paul Ekins
  • Professor of Energy and Environment Policy,
    Kings College London
  • National Liberal Club, London
  • Wednesday 16th April 2008

2
CRITINC Project
  • DG Research Framework 5
  • Making Sustainability Operational Critical
    Natural Capital And The Implications Of A Strong
    Sustainability Criterion (CRITINC)
  • Ekins, P., Simon, S., Deutsch, L., Folke, C. de
    Groot, R. 2003 A Framework for the Practical
    Application of the Concepts of Critical Natural
    Capital and Strong Sustainability in Special
    Section of Ecological Economics, edited by Paul
    Ekins, Carl Folke Rudolf de Groot, Vol.44
    No.2-3, pp.165-185

3
SRDTOOLS Project
  • DG Research Framework 6
  • Methods and tools for evaluating the impact of
    cohesion policies on sustainable regional
    development (SRDTOOLS)
  • Arose out of DG REGIO evaluation of contribution
    of structural funds to sustainable development
    (SD) which
  • Used 4-capitals model of SD, which
  • Enabled identification of UNsustainable
    development
  • Structured dialogue in recognisably economic
    language
  • Identified trade-offs between different
    dimensions of SD BUT did not identify how
    decisions should be made about trade-offs
  • Ekins, P., Dresner, S. Dahlström, K. 2008
    (forthcoming) The 4-Capitals Method of
    Sustainable Development Evaluation in European
    Environment, Special Issue on Sustainable
    Development Evaluation, edited by Paul Ekins and
    Simon Dresner

4
The Concept of Capital and 4-Capital Framework
  • Capital stocks (assets) provide a flow of goods
    and services which contribute to human
    well-being. The stock value is the net present
    value of the flow
  • Four types of capital recognised
  • Manufactured Capital produced assets used to
    produce other goods and services, e.g. buildings,
    transport infrastructure, machines
  • Natural Capital traditional natural resources
    (timber, water, minerals) and other natural
    assets such as biodiversity, climate, ecosystems
  • Human Capital health, wellbeing and productive
    potential of individuals
  • Social Capital social networks that support
    efficient and cohesive societies, e.g. social
    trust, norms, political and legal structures

5
Capital and Sustainability
  • Places Environment in recognisable economic
    framework on an equal basis with other factors of
    production (cf externality concept)
  • Capital and sustainability in the provision of
    goods and services, capital depreciates for
    sustainability it must be replenished
    (investment)
  • Economic, social, environmental sustainability
  • Weak and strong sustainability (substitutability
    between capitals)
  • Potential for unsustainable development lies in
    loss of one or more capital stocks, or in
    trade-offs made between different forms of
    capital, and extent to which
  • Any decline represents a breach of some critical
    threshold (breach of which threatens system
    integrity), and if not, whether
  • Any decline in one form is compensated by
    increases in other forms

6
Natural Capital
  • Characteristics, Values and Functions of Nature
  • Characteristics air, water, land, habitats
  • Values ecological (conservation, existence),
    social (human health, personal, community,
    option), economic (production, consumption,
    employment)
  • Functions
  • Natural capital can only be inferred from the
    performance of environmental functions
  • Environmental function the capacity of natural
    processes and components to provide goods and
    services that satisfy human needs (directly
    and/or indirectly) (de Groot 1992, p.7).
  • de Groot Regulation, Habitat, Production,
    Information
  • CRITINC Life support, source of resources, sink
    for wastes, maintenance of human health, other
    contributions to human welfare (e.g. amenity)

7
Environmental sustainability
  • Sustainability capacity for continuance
  • Environmental sustainability maintenance of
    important environmental functions
  • Importance
  • Not substitutable, irreversible loss,
    immoderate losses
  • Maintenance of health, evidence of threat,
    economic sustainability

8
Environmental sustainabilitymaintaining
important environmental functions

-
Biosphere
  • Functions of Nature
  • Life Support
  • Source
  • Sink
  • Functions for Humans
  • Economy
  • Human health
  • Human welfare

9
Critical Threshold Analysis
  • Environmental Sustainability possible to
    articulate principles (e.g. sustainable use of
    environmental functions) based on scientific
    evidence and derive environmental thresholds and
    standards.
  • Identification of
  • Critical thresholds (change of state)
  • Critical trends (may refer to state or pressure)
  • Policy targets
  • Analytic questions
  • What critical thresholds are currently being
    breached?
  • What critical trends threaten to breach critical
    thresholds in the future (traffic lights
    representation)?
  • What policy targets have been adopted in relation
    to these critical thresholds and what is their
    relation to them?
  • What policies have been implemented or proposed
    to meet the policy targets?
  • Do these policies seem adequate, either to
    achieve the policy targets or to address the
    criticality or both?
  • What is the relationship between these issues of
    criticality and issues of quality of life?

10
Criteria for Environmental Sustainability (1)
  • Non-substitutable, irreversible, immoderate cost
    (Ciracy-Wantrup) Safe minimum standard (Bishop)
  • Maintenance of biodiversity 
  • Renewal of renewable resources 
  • Daly
  • Limit the human scale (throughput) to the earths
    carrying capacity.
  • Efficiency (not throughput) increasing
    technological progress
  • Renewable resource harvest less than regeneration
    rate waste emissions less than assimilative
    capacities
  • Non-renewable resource exploitation rate less
    than the rate of creation of renewable
    substitutes.

11
Criteria for Environmental Sustainability (2)
  • Prevention of destabilisation of global
    environmental features such as climate patterns
    or the ozone layer 
  • Maintenance of biodiversity 
  • Renewal of renewable resources 
  • Maintenance of a minimum life-expectancy of
    non-renewable resources 
  • Ensuring that emissions into air, soil and water
    do not exceed their critical load for ecosystems
    nor lead to adverse effects on human health 
  • Conservation of landscapes of special human or
    ecological significance 
  • Avoidance of risk of potentially catastrophic
    events

12
Functions and Sustainability Principles
TYPE OF FUNCTION SUSTAINABILITY PRINCIPLE (related to an environmental theme)
Sink 1. Prevent global warming, ozone depletion 5. Respect critical loads for ecosystems
Source 3. Renew renewable resources 4. Use non-renewables prudently
Life Support 2. Maintain biodiversity (especially species ecosystems) 7. Apply the Precautionary Principle
Human Health and Welfare 5. Respect standards for human health 6. Conserve landscape/amenity
13
Measurement Indicators and CRITINC Framework
  • Indicators
  • Frameworks, e.g Quality of Life Counts, 15
    Headline, 139 supporting indicators, economic,
    social, environmental
  • National wealth, weak sustainability, World Bank
    Genuine Savings (rich countries are sustainable)
  • Top 60 indicators in ten policy fields
  • Sustainability Gaps
  • Physical standard, physical SGAP, monetary SGAP
    (MSGAP) (MSGAP/GDP - unsustainability intensity)
  • Years-to-Sustainability
  • CRITINC framework SGAP plus economic and social
    indicators

14
Sustainability Gap Calculations
15
The CRITINC Methodology
  • Identification of the function(s) under threat or
    investigation, and their placement in the
    relevant category (source, sink, life-support or
    human health and welfare).
  • Relation of the functions back to the natural
    capital from which they emanate.
  • Preparation of the various environmental impact
    matrices.
  • Derivation of sustainability standards for the
    functions, if possible, or trends in those cases
    where sustainability standards cannot be
    identified.
  • Where standards have been identified, calculation
    of the SGAPs in relation to them.
  • Description of the economic or social aspiration
    that is putting the function under threat or
    pressure, in terms of the benefit that its
    realisation would yield. Investigation of
    alternative ways of partially or wholly achieving
    the aspiration.
  • Application of a system of decision-analysis,
    such as multi-criteria analysis, to give insights
    into the implications of closing the SGAPs

16
SRDTOOLS A nested approach to assessing
sustainable development
17
Choosing assessment methodsTaking account of
complexity
18
Thank you
  • Paul.Ekins_at_kcl.org.uk
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