Who should carry the cost of ecosystem service provision? A pan-European citizens’ view

Research output: Contribution to journalConference abstract in journalResearch

Standard

Who should carry the cost of ecosystem service provision? A pan-European citizens’ view. / Prokofieva, Irina; Mavsar, Robert; Bartczak, Anna; Boon, Tove Enggrob; Czajkowski, Mikolaj; Giergiczny, Marek; Jacobsen, Jette Bredahl; Mäntymaa, Erkki; Ovaskainen, Ville; Pettenella, Davide; Thorsen, Bo Jellesmark; Tyrväinen, Liisa; Vedel, Suzanne Elizabeth; Vidale, Enrico.

In: Scandinavian Forest Economics, Vol. 45, 2014, p. 179.

Research output: Contribution to journalConference abstract in journalResearch

Harvard

Prokofieva, I, Mavsar, R, Bartczak, A, Boon, TE, Czajkowski, M, Giergiczny, M, Jacobsen, JB, Mäntymaa, E, Ovaskainen, V, Pettenella, D, Thorsen, BJ, Tyrväinen, L, Vedel, SE & Vidale, E 2014, 'Who should carry the cost of ecosystem service provision? A pan-European citizens’ view', Scandinavian Forest Economics, vol. 45, pp. 179.

APA

Prokofieva, I., Mavsar, R., Bartczak, A., Boon, T. E., Czajkowski, M., Giergiczny, M., Jacobsen, J. B., Mäntymaa, E., Ovaskainen, V., Pettenella, D., Thorsen, B. J., Tyrväinen, L., Vedel, S. E., & Vidale, E. (2014). Who should carry the cost of ecosystem service provision? A pan-European citizens’ view. Scandinavian Forest Economics, 45, 179.

Vancouver

Prokofieva I, Mavsar R, Bartczak A, Boon TE, Czajkowski M, Giergiczny M et al. Who should carry the cost of ecosystem service provision? A pan-European citizens’ view. Scandinavian Forest Economics. 2014;45:179.

Author

Prokofieva, Irina ; Mavsar, Robert ; Bartczak, Anna ; Boon, Tove Enggrob ; Czajkowski, Mikolaj ; Giergiczny, Marek ; Jacobsen, Jette Bredahl ; Mäntymaa, Erkki ; Ovaskainen, Ville ; Pettenella, Davide ; Thorsen, Bo Jellesmark ; Tyrväinen, Liisa ; Vedel, Suzanne Elizabeth ; Vidale, Enrico. / Who should carry the cost of ecosystem service provision? A pan-European citizens’ view. In: Scandinavian Forest Economics. 2014 ; Vol. 45. pp. 179.

Bibtex

@article{54f1d3abbaf2468d985aeab7c0fb9c82,
title = "Who should carry the cost of ecosystem service provision? A pan-European citizens{\textquoteright} view",
abstract = "The underlying notion of payments for environmental services is that beneficiaries of environmental services (directly or indirectly) financially support their provision by covering at least part of the costs landowners incur to generate them. This so-called “beneficiary-pay principle” is a widely accepted concept in theory, the legitimacy of which nevertheless has not yet been challenged in practice. In ourstudy, we conducted an extensive survey in five European countries – Finland, Denmark, Poland, Italy and Spain – with the aim to explore citizens{\textquoteright} opinions of who should carry the costs of ecosystem services provision. The ecosystem services in question were biodiversity, recreation, carbon sequestration, water quality, and scenic beauty. Our results show that the majority of respondents in all studied countries generally think that the costs of enhanced provision of ecosystem services shall be borne by the public administration, rather than by the direct beneficiaries of these services or by the forest owners. However, there is a clear tendency to accept that users shall pay for improved ecosystem service provision in case of local ecosystem services (such as e.g. water quality) or those that have a strong direct use component (e.g. recreation). Moreover, the respondents in generally accept that forest owners shall be compensated for theenhanced provision of ecosystem services, and only a small percentage of them thinks that forest owners should bear all the additional costs related to such provision.",
author = "Irina Prokofieva and Robert Mavsar and Anna Bartczak and Boon, {Tove Enggrob} and Mikolaj Czajkowski and Marek Giergiczny and Jacobsen, {Jette Bredahl} and Erkki M{\"a}ntymaa and Ville Ovaskainen and Davide Pettenella and Thorsen, {Bo Jellesmark} and Liisa Tyrv{\"a}inen and Vedel, {Suzanne Elizabeth} and Enrico Vidale",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
volume = "45",
pages = "179",
journal = "Scandinavian Forest Economics",
issn = "0355-032X",
note = "null ; Conference date: 21-05-2014 Through 24-05-2014",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Who should carry the cost of ecosystem service provision? A pan-European citizens’ view

AU - Prokofieva, Irina

AU - Mavsar, Robert

AU - Bartczak, Anna

AU - Boon, Tove Enggrob

AU - Czajkowski, Mikolaj

AU - Giergiczny, Marek

AU - Jacobsen, Jette Bredahl

AU - Mäntymaa, Erkki

AU - Ovaskainen, Ville

AU - Pettenella, Davide

AU - Thorsen, Bo Jellesmark

AU - Tyrväinen, Liisa

AU - Vedel, Suzanne Elizabeth

AU - Vidale, Enrico

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - The underlying notion of payments for environmental services is that beneficiaries of environmental services (directly or indirectly) financially support their provision by covering at least part of the costs landowners incur to generate them. This so-called “beneficiary-pay principle” is a widely accepted concept in theory, the legitimacy of which nevertheless has not yet been challenged in practice. In ourstudy, we conducted an extensive survey in five European countries – Finland, Denmark, Poland, Italy and Spain – with the aim to explore citizens’ opinions of who should carry the costs of ecosystem services provision. The ecosystem services in question were biodiversity, recreation, carbon sequestration, water quality, and scenic beauty. Our results show that the majority of respondents in all studied countries generally think that the costs of enhanced provision of ecosystem services shall be borne by the public administration, rather than by the direct beneficiaries of these services or by the forest owners. However, there is a clear tendency to accept that users shall pay for improved ecosystem service provision in case of local ecosystem services (such as e.g. water quality) or those that have a strong direct use component (e.g. recreation). Moreover, the respondents in generally accept that forest owners shall be compensated for theenhanced provision of ecosystem services, and only a small percentage of them thinks that forest owners should bear all the additional costs related to such provision.

AB - The underlying notion of payments for environmental services is that beneficiaries of environmental services (directly or indirectly) financially support their provision by covering at least part of the costs landowners incur to generate them. This so-called “beneficiary-pay principle” is a widely accepted concept in theory, the legitimacy of which nevertheless has not yet been challenged in practice. In ourstudy, we conducted an extensive survey in five European countries – Finland, Denmark, Poland, Italy and Spain – with the aim to explore citizens’ opinions of who should carry the costs of ecosystem services provision. The ecosystem services in question were biodiversity, recreation, carbon sequestration, water quality, and scenic beauty. Our results show that the majority of respondents in all studied countries generally think that the costs of enhanced provision of ecosystem services shall be borne by the public administration, rather than by the direct beneficiaries of these services or by the forest owners. However, there is a clear tendency to accept that users shall pay for improved ecosystem service provision in case of local ecosystem services (such as e.g. water quality) or those that have a strong direct use component (e.g. recreation). Moreover, the respondents in generally accept that forest owners shall be compensated for theenhanced provision of ecosystem services, and only a small percentage of them thinks that forest owners should bear all the additional costs related to such provision.

M3 - Conference abstract in journal

VL - 45

SP - 179

JO - Scandinavian Forest Economics

JF - Scandinavian Forest Economics

SN - 0355-032X

Y2 - 21 May 2014 through 24 May 2014

ER -

ID: 132144032