The idea of being able to put a price on nature is dividing opinion, but the financial value of ‘ecosystem services’ is increasingly guiding policy

In 1996, Prof Shahid Naeem was part of a team of researchers who set out to value the Earth. Specifically, they were trying to establish the dollar value of all of the “ecosystem services” the planet provides to humans every year. Around $33tn, they concluded, nearly double global GDP at the time.

“The team was half ecologists and half economists. The ecologists found the exercise really scary but understood the utility of it. The economists felt nature could be valued but they disagreed about how it could be done,” Naeem says.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Cyril Ramaphosa ‘farmgate’ inquiry clears South African president – watchdog

Police still investigating after ANC leader was accused of failing to report…

Revealed: ships may dump oil up to 3,000 times a year in Europe’s waters

Collaborative investigation shows ships regularly discharge ‘bilge’ water illegally instead of treating…

‘A different level’: York beat Leeds on record day for women’s rugby league

A crowd of 5,308 arrived at Headingley to hail the first two…

Let’s go wild: 10 nature-based festivals in the UK

From a rewilding gathering in Devon to eagle conservation in Scotland, these…