cover image: Estimating the cost of environmental degradation : a training manual in English, French and Arabic

20.500.12592/nd1r7t

Estimating the cost of environmental degradation : a training manual in English, French and Arabic

1 Sep 2005

Everyday decisions require information. For example, entrepreneurs decide whether to invest in new machinery; workers decide whether to accept a job; and families decide where to go on vacation. In the same way, governments have to decide whether to spend more money on defense, hospitals, or protecting the environment. Ideally, implementing such decisions should mean trading off the net benefit of the action with the net benefits of alternative actions. Environmental management does not escape this simple rule. Pollution control and regulation are not cost-free activities; they use financial resources that could be spent elsewhere. In order to make an informed decision about whether to undertake the activity, it must be known if the benefits of doing so exceed the costs. Information is crucial to making good decisions. The first step is to analyze what the elements of a good decision making process are. In this manual the authors do so from an economic point of view: it requires understanding the principles of benefit cost analysis (BCA) and its advantages and limitations. The second step is to identify the costs and benefits of controlling environmental degradation. The third step is to explore the range of techniques that are available to calculate the monetary value of benefits. This manual is intended to be a guide through the mechanics and practicalities of 'environmental valuation'. What is being evaluated is the willingness of individuals to spend scarce resources on the environment that could very well be used for alternative purposes. The following chapters describe a wide range of economic valuation techniques used to estimate the benefits of policies or projects yielding environmental improvements. While keeping technical jargon to a minimum, the guide addresses the following questions: 1) When is a valuation technique a useful tool for decision-making? 2) What is the theoretical basis of economic valuation? 3) What are the technical and human resources needed to engage in a valuation process? 4) How is valuation used in practice?
soil erosion environmental degradation environmental economics public goods crop yield cost of illness public good economic valuation discount rate demand curve net present value soil loss cost of production ozone layer depletion option value existence value pollution impact environmental benefit market price environment and natural resources risk of death good environmental management change in behavior benefit cost analysis total economic value damage cost annual soil loss damage to property marginal abatement cost curve reduction in production relative value loss of ecosystems damage to buildings sedimentation of reservoirs valuation technique marginal benefit contingent valuation method public policy agenda coastal water quality contingent valuation study hedonic price function indirect use value bequest value level of abatement availability of firewood economic valuation techniques productivity approach emission from gasoline vehicle production function shifts passive use value

Authors

Bolt, Katherine, Ruta, Giovanni, Sarraf, Maria

Disclosure Date
2006-04-06
Disclosure Status
Disclosed
Doc Name
Estimating the cost of environmental degradation : a training manual in English, French and Arabic
Published in
United States of America
Series Name
Environment working paper series ; no. 106
Total Volume(s)
1
Unit Owning
Office of the Vice President (ESDVP)
Version Type
Final
Volume No
1

Files

Related Topics

All