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Meeting Forest Futures with Payments for Ecosystem Services? Assessing Payment for Ecosystem Services’ potential for co-financing forest biodiversity preservation and climate change mitigation in Germany.

Loose, Milan LU (2021) In IIIEE Master Thesis IMEM01 20211
The International Institute for Industrial Environmental Economics
Abstract
German forests are in a deteriorating state. The effects of climate change are increasingly showing and presenting society, and also forest owners, with the challenge of restructuring forests to become more climate resilient. At the same time there is a need to halt forest biodiversity loss and to further provide renewable resources that can be used to decarbonise its economy. At present forests’ climate mitigation function and their importance as sources of biodiversity are undervalued and thus insufficiently translated into policy goals. This thesis explores how a novel economic policy instrument, Payments for Ecosystem Services, could be designed to restructure Forest Ecosystem Service governance in Germany and provide stimuli to... (More)
German forests are in a deteriorating state. The effects of climate change are increasingly showing and presenting society, and also forest owners, with the challenge of restructuring forests to become more climate resilient. At the same time there is a need to halt forest biodiversity loss and to further provide renewable resources that can be used to decarbonise its economy. At present forests’ climate mitigation function and their importance as sources of biodiversity are undervalued and thus insufficiently translated into policy goals. This thesis explores how a novel economic policy instrument, Payments for Ecosystem Services, could be designed to restructure Forest Ecosystem Service governance in Germany and provide stimuli to transform forestry, forests and forest management practices to be better aligned with climate protection and biodiversity goals. With the help of an analytical framework a new policy proposal for the introduction of a Payments for Ecosystem Services scheme developed by the Thünen Institute (Elsasser et al. 2020a) is analysed and discussed. This framework builds on a recently emerged consensus of crucial design principles for PES and a Theory of Change (Wunder et al. 2020) perspective in an analytical framework to assess the policy proposal’s potential to incentivise a sustainable and balanced provision of three Forest Ecosystem Services: biodiversity preservation, carbon sequestration and raw timber provision. Moreover, it compares the proposal to a well-known Finnish PES scheme for forest biodiversity preservation (METSO). The thesis demonstrates why it is essential to combine remuneration for biodiversity preservation with financial rewards for carbon sequestration in privately-owned forests to achieve the potential of the PES scheme at hand, but also to stimulate a restructuring of current forestry governance for a highly needed improved provision of biodiversity preservation. It discusses these findings in the light of the public debate around the need for preserving high-value biodiversity forest areas. It also points to the limitations of PES programmes, highlights the necessity for developing the policy proposal further and to complement its implementation with an effective policy mix to achieve its goals. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Loose, Milan LU
supervisor
organization
course
IMEM01 20211
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
Forest Ecosystem Services, Payments for Ecosystem Services, policy innovation, ES governance, Germany
publication/series
IIIEE Master Thesis
report number
2021.14
ISSN
1401-9191
language
English
id
9063248
date added to LUP
2021-08-18 11:20:15
date last changed
2021-08-18 11:20:15
@misc{9063248,
  abstract     = {{German forests are in a deteriorating state. The effects of climate change are increasingly showing and presenting society, and also forest owners, with the challenge of restructuring forests to become more climate resilient. At the same time there is a need to halt forest biodiversity loss and to further provide renewable resources that can be used to decarbonise its economy. At present forests’ climate mitigation function and their importance as sources of biodiversity are undervalued and thus insufficiently translated into policy goals. This thesis explores how a novel economic policy instrument, Payments for Ecosystem Services, could be designed to restructure Forest Ecosystem Service governance in Germany and provide stimuli to transform forestry, forests and forest management practices to be better aligned with climate protection and biodiversity goals. With the help of an analytical framework a new policy proposal for the introduction of a Payments for Ecosystem Services scheme developed by the Thünen Institute (Elsasser et al. 2020a) is analysed and discussed. This framework builds on a recently emerged consensus of crucial design principles for PES and a Theory of Change (Wunder et al. 2020) perspective in an analytical framework to assess the policy proposal’s potential to incentivise a sustainable and balanced provision of three Forest Ecosystem Services: biodiversity preservation, carbon sequestration and raw timber provision. Moreover, it compares the proposal to a well-known Finnish PES scheme for forest biodiversity preservation (METSO). The thesis demonstrates why it is essential to combine remuneration for biodiversity preservation with financial rewards for carbon sequestration in privately-owned forests to achieve the potential of the PES scheme at hand, but also to stimulate a restructuring of current forestry governance for a highly needed improved provision of biodiversity preservation. It discusses these findings in the light of the public debate around the need for preserving high-value biodiversity forest areas. It also points to the limitations of PES programmes, highlights the necessity for developing the policy proposal further and to complement its implementation with an effective policy mix to achieve its goals.}},
  author       = {{Loose, Milan}},
  issn         = {{1401-9191}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  series       = {{IIIEE Master Thesis}},
  title        = {{Meeting Forest Futures with Payments for Ecosystem Services? Assessing Payment for Ecosystem Services’ potential for co-financing forest biodiversity preservation and climate change mitigation in Germany.}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}