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Part IV. Renewable Resources

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Title: Part IV. Renewable Resources


1
Part IV. Renewable Resources
  1. Fish
  2. Forests tropical
  3. Water
  4. Biodiversity

2
A. Tropical Forests
  • Chapter 13

3
Introduction
  • Tropical deforestation is an area of
    environmental degradation that has captured media
    attention perceived as a metaphor for and
    indicator of the decline in the biosphere.
  • While tropical deforestation is not a new
    phenomenon, the pace has increased.
  • This chapter examines the economic and ecological
    relationships that shape the answers to questions
    concerning tropical forest policy.

4
Introduction
  • As defined by the Food and Agricultural
    Organization, tropical forests are areas located
    between the Tropics of Capricorn and Cancer where
    at least 10 of the area is covered by woody
    vegetation.
  • Tropical rain forests receive over 100 inches of
    rain per year, with the wettest areas well over
    twice that amount.
  • Tropical dry forests are semi-arid with a mixture
    of grassland and forests.

5
Tropical Rain Forests
  • Dominated by broadleaved evergreens, with
    completely interlocking canopies, with some giant
    trees rising above the canopy.
  • These giant trees, called emergent trees, support
    the growth of vines that try to reach the
    sunlight.
  • Below the canopy there is an understory of
    shrub-like plants, and a series of non-woody
    plants that occupy the forest floor.

6
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7
Diversity
  • Rich diversity of species, with up to 95 of the
    world's plant and animal species found in rain
    forest habitat.
  • According to Perry (1990), as many as 10 to 30
    million yet to be discovered species live in the
    rain forest (only know about 2 million now).
  • Rain forest rivers are correspondingly more
    diverse than their temperate counterparts.

8
Tropical Dry Forests
  • The tropical dry forest has decidedly less rain
    and biomass per unit acre than the wet forest.
  • This also results in a greater ratio of nutrients
    in the soil than in the trees, although the ratio
    is still less than that in temperate forests.

9
Benefits of Tropical Forests
  • Primary importance source of ecological
    services, including the maintenance of
    hydrological and nutrient cycles, sequestration
    of carbon, and the provision of habitat for a
    variety of species, including humans.
  • An additional benefit harvested to supply wood,
    which can be used in construction of buildings or
    furniture, or the manufacture of paper and wood
    products.
  • Tropical dry forests serve as an important source
    of fuel for the majority of people who inhabit
    the tropics.

10
Global public good
  • One of the major market failures associated with
    management of rainforests involves the public
    good properties of the rainforest, which create
    social benefits that the landowners can not
    capture.
  • However, the domestic country tends to consider
    only domestic costs and benefits when making
    choices about rainforest use.
  • As a result, because tropical forests constitute
    a global public good, deforestation rates which
    are optimal from a forested countrys point of
    view may not be optimal from a global point of
    view.

11
Potential market failure
  • Tremendous potential for two-tiered market
    failure.
  • The rate of harvest within the country may exceed
    the socially optimal rate however, policies
    designed to correct this would likely not
    consider the benefits derived by citizens in
    other countries.
  • In other words, even if countries choose
    internally efficient policies to address market
    failure, they may not be globally efficient.

12
Activities that Lead to Deforestation
  • The 3 activities that are primarily responsible
    for tropical deforestation include
  • Cutting trees for timber
  • Cutting trees for fuel
  • Conversion of land to crop or range land
  • In addition, mining and urbanization are sources
    of deforestation, but not to the same extent as
    the other 3 activities.

13
Sustainable harvesting
  • While timbering is a major source of
    deforestation, sustainable harvesting could
    mitigate its impact.
  • Sustainable harvesting is a method of timber
    harvesting where disturbances caused by
    harvesting are similar to natural disturbances.
  • There are two basic methods to accomplish this
    goal
  • strip harvesting
  • selective harvesting.

14
1. Strip method
  • The strip method identifies small finger-like
    areas and cuts all the trees within this area.
  • The total quantity cut represents 6 to 10 of
    the volume of wood in the general area where the
    harvesting activity takes place.
  • After harvesting, the entire area is left
    unharvested and undisturbed for a minimum of 30
    years.

15
2. Selective harvesting
  • Harvest of individual trees, not a small
    clearing.
  • These individual trees would be scattered across
    the entire acreage and would comprise less than
    6 to 10 of volume of wood in entire acreage.
  • Again, once harvest was complete, the entire
    acreage would be left undisturbed for a minimum
    period of 30 years.

16
Why is most timbering activity destructive to the
rain forest?
  • Even though it is technically possible to harvest
    wood in a rainforest in a manner that keeps the
    rainforest intact, virtually all commercial
    harvesting of rainforests results in destruction
    to the rainforest.
  • Due to a series of market failures, poorly
    designed government policies and a divergence
    between private and public benefits associated
    with changing harvesting methods.
  • Figure 13.4 illustrates the difference between
    the income paths of a sustainable and
    non-sustainable forestry.

17
  • Non-sustainable gives an initial high level of
    income, but low levels of income into the future.
  • Sustainable forestry management provides lower
    levels of income for greater periods of time.
  • Unfortunately, firms may focus on the short term
    income rather than the long term sustainability.

18
Concessionaire agreements
  • Even where the tropical forest is publicly owned,
    the forest might be harvested in a destructive
    fashion.
  • One of the major reasons is the way that
    countries issue leases (concessionaire
    agreements).
  • The length of the leases is too short a time
    period and as a result companies harvest at a
    faster rate than optimal and have no incentive to
    reduce the environmental damage associated with
    the harvest activity.

19
Concessionaire agreements
  • Granting the firms long term harvesting rights,
    which they can either exercise or sell, creates
    an incentive to maintain the productivity of the
    forest.
  • If the actions of the firm result in a reduction
    of the productivity of the forest, then the firm
    bears the cost.
  • However, long term leases do not give the firms
    an incentive to protect the flow of ecological
    services into the future.
  • Economists have suggested that better management
    of the forest resource could be accomplished by
    changing the fee structure of the lease for
    harvesting.

20
Area-based fee
  • Fee structures can be based on area, revenue
    earned, undifferentiated volume, or
    differentiated volume.
  • Fee based on the number of hectares in which it
    operates. This type of fee would give the firm an
    incentive to clear cut that area.
  • In addition, this fee structure also provides an
    incentive for the firm to harvest species of
    trees with the highest profit (high grading)
    and fundamentally change the stability of the
    ecosystem.

21
Revenue-based fee
  • Charges the firm a fee based on a fixed
    percentage of total revenue.
  • This type of fee reduces the incentive to clear
    cut but still retains an incentive for the firms
    to high-grade harvest because the fee is based on
    revenue and not profits.
  • It also gives the firm an incentive to harvest in
    lower-cost areas such as in the proximity of
    roads and rivers.

22
Volume-based
  • An undifferentiated volume-based fee charges the
    firm per cubic meter of wood harvested.
  • The fee is constant across all types of wood
    harvested and will lead to problems of
    high-grading
  • A differentiated volume-based fee charges a
    different fee for each type of tree species.
  • If the fees are set properly this type of fee
    will remove the incentive to high grade.
  • However high administrative costs

23
Other policies how to harvest
  • While a fee system can influence how many trees
    are harvested, and what type of trees are
    harvested, it can not influence how the
    harvesting activity is conducted.
  • As such, fee systems do not provide incentives to
    ensure that the rain forests are not destroyed by
    the process of harvesting.
  • To ensure that harvesting methods are consistent
    with the recoverability of the forest, the
    government has choices between 2 broad categories
    of environmental policy
  • direct controls
  • economic incentives.

24
Direct controls
  • Specify the techniques that harvesters would be
    required to use and place restraints on their
    activities to protect the rainforest.
  • For most economic problems direct controls are
    associated with lower monitoring and enforcement
    costs as compared to economic incentives, this is
    not true for forestry.
  • It is possible for firms to engage in hit and
    run harvesting where the firm goes out into the
    forest, harvests intensively and destructively
    and then disappears before penalties can be
    enforced.
  • Since the assets of the firm are highly mobile,
    it is difficult to locate and seize these assets.

25
Economic incentives
  • Economic incentives work better because they can
    be configured to provide an incentive that exists
    even before the cutting begins.
  • The most useful incentive for environmental
    management of forests is a performance bond,
    where money is collected from the firm before it
    begins its activities.
  • The money is placed in an escrow account, if the
    firm complies with the environmental regulations
    during harvesting, the money is returned.
  • If not, the performance bond monies are
    forfeited.
  • The focus of performance bonds in this context is
    not to remediate damage (as in strip mining) but
    to prevent large scale disturbances.

26
Alternative patterns of harvest
  • Forest has better chance of regenerating if
    following conditions are met
  • Large ratio of undisturbed cleared area
  • Cleared area has high ratio of the edge of
    cleared surface area cleared
  • Goal is to design economic incentives to ensure
    timbering activities conform to these requirements

27
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28
Summary
  • Tropical forests are diverse ecosystems that
    provide many benefits, including consumable and
    nonconsumable benefits.
  • Microeconomic conditions, such as poorly defined
    property rights, and macroeconomic conditions,
    such as high foreign debt, have contributed to a
    high rate of deforestation of tropical forests.
  • Improved economic conditions can reduce
    deforestation.
  • Of particular importance are policies which
    provide an incentive for sustainable alternatives
    to current activities.
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