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The implications of :- The Millenium Ecosystem Assessment

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Title: The implications of :- The Millenium Ecosystem Assessment


1
The implications of -The Millenium Ecosystem
Assessment The State of the Environemnt Report
in Asia and the Pacific in 2005for Economic
Development in the region -and the need for
Environmental Fiscal Reform
  • Martin Hollands
  • The Cambridge Centre for Conservation Policy

2
The relationship between conservation and the
economy is changing.
  • Traditionally
  • Conservation happened in Protected Areas
  • Business outside
  • There is a growing realization that Conservation
    cant deliver if just in Protected Areas we
    need a sustainable relationship between people
    and the environment outside Pas as well as people
    and businesses are dependent on biodiversity
  • There is a shared need for sustainable
    development
  • Sustainable profits for business
  • Sustained natural systems and biodiversity
  • Sustained Livelihoods

3
This has led to an evolution in the relationship
between conservation and the business sector
  • No understood relationship
  • Business as the damagers
  • Government philanthropic support
  • Responsible operations risks opportunities
    recognized by companies and investors - brand
    value, new markets
  • Internalisation of environmental factors into
    business and economic systems
  • Environmental Policy Changes
  • Fiscal environmental reform

4
So what has brought about the change ?
  • Conservationists have for a long time said the
    environment is important, its being damaged -
    and we need to look after it better
  • But the justifications have only been effective
    with a small group of people
  • The issues are not seen as comparable with the
    main policy drivers especially economic
    development
  • Conservationists have argued that people need
    the environment but their views are seen as
    self serving
  • The UN asked the scientific community to test the
    claims that were made so that policy makers knew
    how to respond for genuine human well-being
  • They focused on the importance of Environmental
    Services in delivering the MDGs

5
The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment
  • The most comprehensive analysis to date of the
    many and complex ways in which people depend on
    and affect the natural environment
  • Prepared by 1360 experts from 95 countries,
    review comments from 850 experts and governments
  • The central focus is human well-being and
    ecosystem services
  • Looked at how changes in ecosystem services have
    affected human wellbeing, how changes may affect
    people in future decades, and response options
    that might be adopted.
  • Called for by UN Secretary General in 2000,
    authorized by governments through 4 conventions
  • Partnership of UN agencies, conventions,
    business, NGOs
  • It will influence investments, the regulations
    and public opinion
  • The WBCSD are showing strong interest in the need
    to address the recommendations of the MEA.

6
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7
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8
MEA Conclusions
  • Human livelihoods and well-being are dependent on
    a range of ecosystem services
  • Ecosystems are being damaged to the extent that
    their ability to provide these services is being
    compromised
  • 60 are being degraded / used unsustainably
  • The degradation of ecosystem services often
    causes significant harm to human well-being and
    represents a loss of a natural asset or wealth of
    a country
  • Only 4 services have been enhanced in the past 50
    years, three of these involve food production
    crops, livestock, and aquaculture. The fourth is
    carbon sequestration.
  • Ecosystem services that are freely available
    today are under threat because the very fact that
    they are freely available has often meant that no
    funds have been released to maintain them, so
    they will disappear or become more costly in the
    future.
  • Loss of ecosystem services will also affect the
    attitudes of customers, shareholders, investors,
    policy makers and regulators.

9
Direct drivers growing in intensity
  • Most direct drivers of degradation in ecosystem
    services remain constant or are growing in
    intensity in most ecosystems

10
What are the changes that will have an economic
impact ?
Water scarcity Climate change Habitat change
Biodiversity loss and invasive species
Overexploitation of oceans Nutrient overloading.
11
State of the Environment in Asia and the Pacific
  • Although regional consumption pressures are
    smaller, per person, than the global average, the
    biologically productive area required to support
    current consumption levels already exceeds the
    available area, in at least 18 countries of the
    region.
  • Ecological deficits in many countries across
    the region show quantitatively that many are
    over-exploiting their own natural resource base,
    and/or through trade, are using the natural
    resource base of other countries to support their
    consumption patterns and economic growth.
  • Because the natural resource endowment remains
    relatively constant or declines under
    environmental pressure, the size of the human
    population that can be sustainably supported
    based on the current consumption patterns and
    prevailing technologies, is decreasing.
  • UNESCAP 2006

12
What are the underlying causes of the problems ?
  • Loss of wealth due to ecosystem degradation is
    not reflected in economic accounts
  • The environment is treated as an externality in
    economic systems
  • Environmental services are seen as Public Goods
    and are not paid for
  • This means they do not generate the funds for
    their management
  • We do not make planning decisions at a Systems
    level
  • As they do not generate income to resource owners
    almost any alternative is seen as better when any
    are seen Developments are allowed that include
    significant residual impacts

13
Required Responses
  • Institutions
  • Integration of ecosystem management goals within
    other sectors and within broader development
    planning frameworks
  • Increased transparency and accountability of
    government and private-sector performance
  • Economics
  • Elimination of subsidies that promote excessive
    use of ecosystem services (and, where possible,
    transfer these subsidies to payments for
    non-marketed ecosystem services)
  • Greater use of economic instruments and
    market-based approaches in the management of
    ecosystem services (where enabling conditions
    exist)

14
  • So lets think of this as an economic not an
    environmental issue

15
Most business runs on a simple model
Inputs / materials
For the model to work it requires funds to flow
to balance the flow of goods
Factory

Business

Taxes will flow from all of these to governments
but for public services NOT to subsidize
components of the model
Consumer

16
Why doesnt this work for the environment ?
Inputs / Materials
Water Food Landscape for recreation Pollination F
uel Soil nutrient cycling Flood erosion
control
Factory
Environment
Business
Clearly it wouldnt make sense for businesses to
destroy factory environment Responsible
Operations should be a given
Consumer
17
We want the products for nothing and hope others
will pay the costs
Inputs
Does that look like a viable model ?
Factory
How should Society respond ?
Environment
Government NGOs Donors
Business
Consumer

18
There are many ways to rectify the problem
Inputs
1. Corporate donations ( CSR )
2. Direct payments for Environmental
Services
Factory
3. Taxes
Environment
4. Tightened planning control
Government NGOs Donors
Business
Consumer

19
  • The Business sector is already realizing the
    risks and opportunities this presents
  • Business simply cannot function if ecosystems
    and the services they deliver like water,
    biodiversity, food, fibre and climate regulation
    are degraded or out of balance.
  • Björn Stigson, President, WBCSD
  • The awareness that your business is
    fundamentally
  • dependent on the ecosystems around it for its
  • livelihood is crucial for starting to address
    these
  • issues. Without that, you are really only
    scratching
  • on the surface.
  • Edmund Blamey, Interface Europe
  • Commitments to Net positive RioTinto
  • Offsets - BBOP
  • Governments seem a little slower..

20
How can ( green ) taxes help ?
  • Current taxes frequently include perverse
    incentives
  • Taxes can be restructured to reduce practices we
    want to discourage
  • Taxes systems can encourage sound practices
  • Key targets Transport / Energy / Waste
  • Taxes can encourage RD in alternatives
  • Tax deductions for environmental investment

21
Governments as surrogate purchasers of
environmental services
  • If governments dont want to force users to fully
    internalize the environmental costs and benefits
    they can act as intermediate or surrogate
    purchaser through increasing taxes
  • Businesses pay higher taxes on goods that depend
    on the environment
  • BUT this only covers half the need governments
    would also have to increase the budgets to ensure
    that environmental systems can be managed
    sustainably

22
Thank you for listening.
  • Martin Hollands
  • The Cambridge Centre for Conservation Policy
  • martin.hollands_at_conservationpolicy.org
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