The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Putting dollar value on nature will help protect it

- Linda J. Bilmes The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

President Joe Biden calls climate change “the existentia­l crisis of our time” and has taken steps to curb it that match those words. They include returning the U.S. to the Paris Agreement; creating a new climate Cabinet position; introducin­g a plan to slash fossil fuel subsidies; and announcing ambitious goals to cut U.S. greenhouse gas emissions.

But climate change is not the only global environmen­tal threat that demands attention. Scientists widely agree that loss of wildlife and the natural environmen­t is an equally urgent crisis. Some argue that biodiversi­ty loss threatens to become Earth’s sixth mass extinction. But unlike efforts to fight climate change – which center on clear, measurable goals to reduce greenhouse gas emissions – there is no globally accepted metric for saving biodiversi­ty.

As an expert on budgeting and public finance, I know that government­s and private businesses alike pay much more attention to resources when they have a well-defined price tag. I believe that overhaulin­g society’s concept of wealth to include “natural capital” – the value nature provides to humans – is a critical step for slowing and reversing the loss of precious ecosytems.

Natural capital can be defined as the world’s stocks of natural assets – soil, air, water, grasslands, forests, wetlands, rocks and minerals – and all of its living things, from mammals and fish to plants and microbes. Conservati­on experts estimate that these resources contribute more than $125 trillion to the global economy every year.

Humans depend on nature’s contributi­ons for survival. For example, forests absorb carbon and filter the water we drink. Wetlands and coral reefs mitigate flooding. Bees and other insects pollinate crops, enabling us to grow food.

But human societies don’t formally recognize the economic value of these services. This oversight encourages people to recklessly deplete the natural environmen­t.

A recent review of the economics of biodiversi­ty, commission­ed by the U.K. government and led by Cambridge University economist Sir Parth Dasgupta, warns that human prosperity is growing at a “devastatin­g cost to nature” and estimates that it would take 1.6 Earths to maintain the world’s current living standards. The report calls for the world to treat nature like an asset to be reported in financial statements and national accounts.

The Capitals Coalition, a global consortium of 380 initiative­s and businesses, is trying to “change the math.” The organizati­on seeks to persuade at least half of the world’s businesses, financial institutio­ns and government­s to incorporat­e natural capital into their decision-making by 2030.

Current accounting methods used by corporatio­ns and government­s largely ignore what ecosystems and their services contribute to the economy and to human social well-being, jobs and livelihood­s. As a consequenc­e, modern societies spend far more on investment­s that deplete or exploit natural assets than they do to preserve them.

A recent study by the Paulson Institute, a research institute founded by former U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, estimated global investment­s that degrade nature exceed conservati­on efforts by $600 billion to $824 billion per year.

Natural capital accounting would require businesses and government­s to calculate how human activity affects nature, much as they assess depreciati­on of buildings or machinery. Analyzed in this way, nature is a financial asset, and damage to it becomes a liability. This approach creates incentives to conserve natural resources and restore others that have been degraded or depleted.

Global recognitio­n of this issue is growing. In March 2021 the United Nations updated a statistica­l framework for standardiz­ing ecosystem accounting, which was first published in 2012. These guidelines help countries track changes in ecosystems and their services and provide leaders with a baseline with which to compare their stocks and flows when making policy decisions.

Some 90 countries have adopted this System of Environmen­tal Economic Accounting and produced baseline “national capital accounts.” They include European Union members, Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom and more than 40 developing countries.

The U.S has lost decades of potential progress since Congress suspended fledgling efforts by the Bureau of Economic Analysis to develop environmen­tal accounting methods in 1995. In contrast, the U.K. created public environmen­tal accounts and set up a Natural Capital Committee in 2012, led by its finance ministry, to help corporatio­ns develop natural capital accounts. Today, the U.K. maintains these accounts, which capture data on the size, condition, quantity and value of habitats and ecosystem services. President Biden could empower the U.S. Treasury Department to spearhead a similar initiative.

Adopting metrics to measure and track the benefits people receive from wildlife and ecosystems would clarify how human activities affect nature and show how much investment is needed to reverse humanity’s current destructiv­e trajectory. Conservati­on advocates will be much better positioned to protect our planet’s resources with a strong balance sheet to back it up.

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