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来源类型 | Project |
规范类型 | 研究项目 |
项目编号 | 1750-11 |
The Use of Market Incentives to Preserve Biodiversity | |
Dr. Rainer Müssner; Dr. Ingo Bräuer; Katrina Marsden; Benjamin Görlach | |
开始日期 | 2005-12 |
结束日期 | 2006-04 |
资助机构 | European Commission, Directorate-General Environment (DG Environment) |
概述 | EU Member States are increasingly using market-based instruments such as taxes, subsidies or tradable permits to conserve Biodiversity. Ecologic has been commissioned by DG Environment to analyse the current use of Market Based Instruments (MBIs) like taxes, fees and charges to protect biodiversity. Based on this, Ecologic collaborated with its project partners in preparing a report that evaluates the success and failure of these instruments and assesses their potential for wider use in different contexts in the future. The report is available for download.Read more |
摘要 | EU Member States are increasingly using market-based instruments such as taxes, subsidies or tradable permits to conserve Biodiversity. Ecologic has been commissioned by DG Environment to analyse the current use of Market Based Instruments (MBIs) like taxes, fees and charges to protect biodiversity. Based on this, Ecologic collaborated with its project partners in preparing a report that evaluates the success and failure of these instruments and assesses their potential for wider use in different contexts in the future. The report is available for download. Market Based Incentives (MBIs) are becoming increasingly popular in the political debate on future strategies for biodiversity conservation. The reasons are twofold: (1) MBIs offer policy-makers new cost-efficient ways to reach conservation objectives using less financial resources, since MBIs use market forces to achieve their objectives. (2) actual procedures to protect biodiversity, many of them command and control approaches (CAC), suffer an increasing lack of acceptance. Hence MBI can achieve results beyond these traditional approaches. Examples of market-based instruments already in place include trading schemes for fishing quotas, agri-environmental schemes, eco-labelling and taxes. The objective of this report has been to investigate:
It does this by reviewing the current literature and databases, as well as consulting expert judgements about MBIs in use in the Member States of the EU and other countries, with particular emphasis on successful and promising examples. MBI in useWithin this study ca. 200 examples of applied market based incentives were analysed. The analysis shows that price-based instruments are more common than quantity based ones. The most frequently applied instruments belong to the group taxes, fees and charges, followed by subsidies and tradable permits. In the majority of cases, MBIs are applied in the field of habitat and ecosystem conservation, and to lesser extent in species conservation. Nevertheless, the implementation of MBIs and the creation of a working market remains a challenge. In general, taxes, fees and charges may be viewed as regulatory approaches to limit external damage to biodiversity, while subsidies and eco-labelling are useful market based instruments to foster the provision of biodiversity assets. The final report The Use of Market Incentives to Preserve Biodiversity [pdf, 520 KB, English] for this project by Ingo Bräuer, Rainer Müssner et al. is now available for download. |
标签 | Biodiversity ; Nature Conservation ; Policy Assessment |
关键词 | Markt Based Incentives economic evaluation biodiversity conservation Europe |
URL | https://www.ecologic.eu/1725 |
来源智库 | Ecologic Institute (Germany) |
资源类型 | 智库项目 |
条目标识符 | http://119.78.100.153/handle/2XGU8XDN/38842 |
推荐引用方式 GB/T 7714 | Dr. Rainer Müssner,Dr. Ingo Bräuer,Katrina Marsden,et al. The Use of Market Incentives to Preserve Biodiversity. 2005. |
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