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Assessing community values for reducing agricultural emissions to improve water quality and protect coral health in the Great Barrier Reef

report
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by Jill Windle, John RolfeJohn Rolfe
Key policy issues relating to protection of the Great Barrier Reef from pollutants generated by agriculture are to identify when measures to improve water quality generate benefits to society that outweigh the costs of reducing pollutants. The research reported in this paper makes a key contribution in several key ways. First, it uses the improved science understanding about the links between management changes and reef health to bring together the analysis of costs and benefits of marginal changes, helping to demonstrate the appropriate way of addressing policy questions relating to reef protection. Second, it uses the scientific relationships to frame a choice experiment to value the benefits of improved reef health, andlinks improvements explicitly to changes in ‘water quality units’. Third, the research demonstrates how protection values are consistent across a broader population, with some limited evidence of distance effects. Fourth, the information on marginal costs and benefitsthat are reported provide policy makers with key information to help improve management decisions. The results indicate that while there is potential for water quality improvements to generate net benefits, high cost water quality improvements are generally uneconomic. Oneimplication for policy makers is that cost thresholds for key pollutants should be set to avoid more expensive water quality proposals being selected.

Funding

Other

History

Parent Title

Environmental Economics Research Hub Research Reports

Start Page

1

End Page

22

Number of Pages

22

ISSN

1835-9728

Publisher

Crawford School of Economics and Government

Place of Publication

Canberra

Open Access

  • No

External Author Affiliations

Centre for Environmental Management;

Era Eligible

  • No