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We think beyond the Pigouvian policy approach for correcting forest ecosystem externalities. Not all ecosystem services in forestry are public goods and deserving of government intervention. Interaction in the market by sellers and buyers concerning payments for ecosystem services is possible....
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We study a rent-based land use problem where a landowner is uncertain about the timing and extent of an emerging biomass market. Unlike other work, ecosystem service flows, in the form of amenities, and transaction costs impact conversion from agriculture or conventional forest to bioenergy, but...
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Individual landowners may capture non-timber benefits from both their own forested parcels and adjacent parcels owned by different landowners. These benefits may affect incentives for landowners to cooperate in their forest management decisions. Landowner survey data is used to examine...
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Forest management that reduces southern pine beetle (SPB) risk benefits not only the landowners, but all who draw benefits from southern pine forests, including other owners whose risk is reduced by landscape-wide efforts. One such practice is pre-commercial thinning (PCT) of pine stands, which...
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This article examines alternative forest harvesting regimes when ecosystem services in terms of water quality, biodiversity conservation and climate change mitigation are included in the analysis. The harvesting regimes are whole-tree harvesting with stump removal and conventional stem-only...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010939643