Humanity has never had a greater impact on the world’s land use than we do at the present. As a result, some natural scientists predict that a third or more of the species on earth could become extinct in this century. Such losses are encountered in the geological record only at times of astronomical cataclysm. Half of all terrestrial species can be found in the 6% of the world’s land area covered by tropical forests, and these species face the gravest risk. In developing tropical countries, the social agenda is dominated by the pressing needs of poor and growing populations.
Despite the difficulties inherent in influencing behavior in other countries, international efforts to preserve biodiversity have been under way for many years. Aggregate statistics are difficult to come by, but some numbers are indicative of the commitment. The World Bank has dedicated well over a billion dollars toward biodiversity conservation. A number of donors have allocated the same amount toward retiring developing country debt under debt-for-nature swaps. A recent study of conservation spending in Latin America reported approximately $3.3 billion in expenditures. Private foundations have contributed more than $10 million per year to conservation in developing countries.
Over the past two decades, conservation funding has shifted away from the “parks and fences” approach toward one attempting to integrate conservation and development projects. This new approach has been harshly criticized. “Integrated conservation and development projects,” as they are called, have been labeled as little more than wishful, and generally ineffectual, thinking in works such as John Terborgh’s Requiem for Nature (Island Press, 1999). Calls to return to a parks and fences approach have sparked another backlash from critics who regard it as little better than stealing indigenous peoples’ land at gunpoint. While these debates are raging, other groups are cataloguing, extolling, or sometimes lambasting a variety of innovative approaches to conservation finance.
The conservation need is urgent, the stakes are high, and the debate is heated. There has never been a greater need for both a clear understanding of the principles involved and a careful investigation of the facts.
Box 1. A Taxonomy of Habitat Conservation Policy Options
Direct approaches pay for land to be protected. Examples include:
- Purchase or lease—Land is acquired for parks or reserves.
- Easement—Owners agree to restrict land use in exchange for a payment.
- Concessions—Conservation organizations bid against timber companies or developers for the right to use government-owned land
Indirect approaches support economic activities that yield habitat protection as a by-product. Examples include:
- Payments to encourage land use activities that protect habitat and supply biodiversity as joint products.
- These payments can take several forms:
- Subsidies to ecofriendly commercial ventures:
- Subsidies assist ecotourism, bioprospecting, and nontimber forest product entrepreneurs with facility construction, staff training, or marketing and distribution.
- Payments for other ecosystem services: Payments for carbon sequestration, flood and erosion protection, or water purification provide incentives to maintain the habitats that both provide these services and shelter biodiversity.
- Subsidies to ecofriendly commercial ventures:
- Payments to encourage economic activities that direct human resources away from activities that degrade habitats. This "conservation by distraction" approach provides assistance for activities such as intensive agriculture or offfarm employment. These activities may not be eco-friendly, but their expansion can reduce local incentives to exploit native ecosystems.
Direct vs. Indirect Approaches
Biodiversity conservation is largely a matter of preserving the habitats sheltering imperiled species. Effective conservation requires that people who would destroy such habitats be provided with incentives to preserve them. Equitable conservation requires that we identify the people who have a rightful claim to such habitats and compensate them. People who do not have rightful claims must be prevented from destroying imperiled habitats.
People will generally do what is in their own interest. If they can receive more benefits from protecting an area of habitat than they could from clearing it for other uses, they will preserve it.