INR’s long-term goal with this and other projects is to help revitalize rural economies and contribute to rural sustainability, while increasing ecosystem restoration and thoughtfully developing ecosystem services markets. To assist in meeting these goals, this project aims to understand and overcome a significant hurdle on the supply side of these emerging markets: the financing burden and risk shouldered by rural landowners who wish to invest in restoration activities. In order to accomplish these objectives, the project seeks to identify and apply financial mechanisms and institutional arrangements that enable landowners to access ecosystem services markets, a new and potentially long-term source of land and water stewardship income.\ud ...
The burgeoning development of the market-based institutions of wetland mitigation, carbon trading, a...
Quantifying the demand for multiple ecosystem services is difficult because it is subjective and het...
A political and social recognition of ecosystem services is increasingly complementing that of servi...
Ecosystem services markets represent potential revenue streams for small- and medium-scale rural agr...
Many of the world’s ecosystems are not managed sustainably. Payment for ecosystem services schemes i...
This report is laid out as a progressive exploration of how the economics of ES production interacts...
Payments for ecosystem services (PES) provide a market-based instrument to motivate changes in land ...
The popular view of the decline of farming as a consumption shift in the rural economies of develope...
The report is part of a series of case studies that provide insights into various mechanisms used to...
Natural resources provided by the environment through ecosystem services (ES) are vital in humanity’...
Environmental restoration and conservation challenges go beyond what can be financed publicly. There...
Farmers and other actors in agricultural value chains find it difficult to access or provide the fin...
Created by the interactions of living organisms with their environment, ecosystem services support o...
This dissertation aims to identify and propose a few valuation strategies to provide insights to con...
Payment for ecosystem services (PES) is a market-based approach to environmental management that com...
The burgeoning development of the market-based institutions of wetland mitigation, carbon trading, a...
Quantifying the demand for multiple ecosystem services is difficult because it is subjective and het...
A political and social recognition of ecosystem services is increasingly complementing that of servi...
Ecosystem services markets represent potential revenue streams for small- and medium-scale rural agr...
Many of the world’s ecosystems are not managed sustainably. Payment for ecosystem services schemes i...
This report is laid out as a progressive exploration of how the economics of ES production interacts...
Payments for ecosystem services (PES) provide a market-based instrument to motivate changes in land ...
The popular view of the decline of farming as a consumption shift in the rural economies of develope...
The report is part of a series of case studies that provide insights into various mechanisms used to...
Natural resources provided by the environment through ecosystem services (ES) are vital in humanity’...
Environmental restoration and conservation challenges go beyond what can be financed publicly. There...
Farmers and other actors in agricultural value chains find it difficult to access or provide the fin...
Created by the interactions of living organisms with their environment, ecosystem services support o...
This dissertation aims to identify and propose a few valuation strategies to provide insights to con...
Payment for ecosystem services (PES) is a market-based approach to environmental management that com...
The burgeoning development of the market-based institutions of wetland mitigation, carbon trading, a...
Quantifying the demand for multiple ecosystem services is difficult because it is subjective and het...
A political and social recognition of ecosystem services is increasingly complementing that of servi...