Impact of Ecosystem Services Loss to Macroeconomic Productivity
Abstract
Ecosystem service losses pose an enormous threat not only to the environment, but
also to businesses and society. The Duke student team helped its client, Ortec Finance,
assess frameworks around ecosystem service losses and risks to different business
sectors by conducting a literature review, describing analysis methodologies, and
providing recommendations. The literature review showed that quantifying the economic
impacts of ecosystem services is effectively done through either partial-equilibrium
or computable general-equilibrium models (CGE’s). The foremost publication regarding
CGE models was found to be a report by the World Bank, which provides insights into
how countries and economic sectors will differ between 2021 and 2030 due to BES losses.
Additional literature showed consensus on three sectors: agriculture, raw material
mining, and manufacturing are at the highest risk from ecosystem service losses. A
flowchart was created to easily summarize how different ecosystem services link to
various economic sectors. Geopolitically, developed countries in North America and
Europe have low direct GDP dependency on BES. Other developing countries like China,
India, and Brazil all have moderate to high GDP dependency. In comparing quantification
methodologies used to analyze the economic impacts of ecosystem services, we recommended
that Ortec Finance focuses on the Swiss Re BES Index as well as the ENCORE tool. The
results from these two main approaches conducted by this report should feed into the
expansion of Ortec Finance’s proprietary tool, Climate Maps, on ecosystem services.
Type
Master's projectDepartment
Nicholas School of the EnvironmentPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24882Citation
Hermanson, Max; Chen, Mingyi; Vanasse, Sam; & Wang, Yifan (2022). Impact of Ecosystem Services Loss to Macroeconomic Productivity. Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24882.Collections
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