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Large-scale River Restoration Pays Off

A case study of ecosystem servicevaluation for the Emscher restoration generation project

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Citation

Gerner, Nadine V. et. al. 2018: Large-scale river restoration pays off: A case study of ecosystem servicevaluation for the Emscher restoration generation project. In: Ecosystem Services, 30 (2018), 327–338.

Though the Ecosystem Service (ESS) approach is considered promising for integrated ecosystem management, its operationalisation is hampered by the lack of agreed evaluation instruments. To demonstratethe suitability of a structured ESS evaluation, the authors, among them Ecologic Institute's Dr. Manuel Lago and Gerardo Anzaldúa, conducted a case study estimating the impact of therestoration of the Emscher River and its tributaries on the provision, use and benefit of ESS.

The Emscher restoration is a large-scale project with immense temporal and financial efforts. To assess the values generated by this restoration, we applied an ESS evaluation framework and quantified the regulation and maintenance ESS 'self-purification capacity', 'maintaining nursery populations and habitats' and 'flood protection' as well as cultural ESS such as aesthetic, recreational, educational and existence values. Final ESS were monetized using economic methods, e.g. 'damage costs avoided', 'contingent valuation' and 'benefit transfer'. The authors estimated amarket value/direct economic impact of 21,441,572€ per year as aresult of the restoration. Furthermore, anon-market value for people who care about the local environment of 109,121,217€ per year was determined, representing the benefit with 'non-use value' from the Emscher restoration. The case study demonstrated the successful application of the structured evaluation framework in practice. Its implications and limitations are discussed.

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Language
English
Authorship
Nadine V. Gerner
Issa Nafoa
Caroline Winking
Kristina Wencki
Clemens Strehl
Timo Wortberg
André Niemann
Sebastian Birk
Funding
Published in
Ecosystem Services
Published by
Year
Dimension
12 pp.
ISSN
2212-0416
DOI
Project
Project ID
Keywords
DPSIR, ecosystem service, restoration, benefit, ecosystem service, monetization
Emscher, Germany, North Rhine-Westphalia
evaluation

Source URL: https://www.ecologic.eu/16626