Tradable rights in conservation: useful policy tool or industry in themselves?
Resource information
Date of publication
Diciembre 2015
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201600185286
Pages
289-290
In recent decades, markets have become widely used for environmental resources. Prime examples include water rights where trade enables water to be allocated to the most profitable crops, and allows farmers more flexibility to cope with climatic variability (Bjornlund 2003). Similarly, tradable rights for air pollution minimize the cost of meeting air quality targets (Stavins 1998). The same principles can potentially be widely applied to biodiversity conservation. In this issue, we are fortunate to have a short but diverse series of papers on tradable rights in conservation.