Authors
Josh Farley, André Aquino, Amy Daniels, Azur Moulaert, Dan Lee, Abby Krause
Publication date
2010/9/15
Journal
Ecological economics
Volume
69
Issue
11
Pages
2075-2084
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
An international payment for ecosystem service (IPES) schemes may be one of the only mechanisms available to stimulate the provision of vital non-marketed ecosystem services at the global level, as those nations that benefit from global ecosystem services (GES) cannot readily force other sovereign nations to provide them. Currently, international trade offers trillions of dollars in incentives for countries to convert natural capital into marketable goods and services, and few payments to entice countries to conserve natural capital in order to sustain critical non-marketed ecosystem services. We examine the biophysical characteristics of climate change and biodiversity to understand the obstacles to developing effective IPES schemes. We find that none of the existing schemes for providing GES are adequate, given the scale of the problem. A cap and auction scheme for CO2 emissions among wealthy nations could …
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Scholar articles
J Farley, A Aquino, A Daniels, A Moulaert, D Lee… - Ecological economics, 2010