The role of enabling actors in ecosystem service accounting

When accounting for ecosystem services, it is important to distinguish between the flow of services and the flow of benefits (which can be part of economic accounts or not) generated by those services. To disentangle services and benefits, particular attention has to be paid in allocating each ca...

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Main Authors: Alessandra La Notte, Alexandra Marques
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pensoft Publishers 2017-12-01
Series:One Ecosystem
Online Access:https://oneecosystem.pensoft.net/article/20834/
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spelling doaj-e15a4d365a8c440b8befac1e0f4d51122020-11-24T21:26:24ZengPensoft PublishersOne Ecosystem2367-81942017-12-01211410.3897/oneeco.2.e2083420834The role of enabling actors in ecosystem service accountingAlessandra La Notte0Alexandra Marques1European Commission- Joint Research Centre, Directorate for Sustainable Resources, Land Resources UnitEuropean Commission- Joint Research Centre, Directorate for Competences, Modelling, Indicators and Impact Evaluation Unit When accounting for ecosystem services, it is important to distinguish between the flow of services and the flow of benefits (which can be part of economic accounts or not) generated by those services. To disentangle services and benefits, particular attention has to be paid in allocating each category of flows in the use table to those institutional sectors that generate the need for the services and have the power to modify them - the enabling actors - and to final beneficiaries. The general concept of use, without specifying whether services or benefits are referred to, could in fact lead to misinterpretations. This paper discusses the issue of the allocation of ecosystem services and the role of enabling actors through a practical example of water purification accounts in the Netherlands. In particular, the role of the agricultural sector as an enabling actor is disentangled from the cleaned water as benefit and from water supply companies as beneficiaries. The proper allocation of the flow of the service can in fact facilitate the establishment of a causal relationship between the actions of economic actors and ecological consequences and vice versa. https://oneecosystem.pensoft.net/article/20834/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alessandra La Notte
Alexandra Marques
spellingShingle Alessandra La Notte
Alexandra Marques
The role of enabling actors in ecosystem service accounting
One Ecosystem
author_facet Alessandra La Notte
Alexandra Marques
author_sort Alessandra La Notte
title The role of enabling actors in ecosystem service accounting
title_short The role of enabling actors in ecosystem service accounting
title_full The role of enabling actors in ecosystem service accounting
title_fullStr The role of enabling actors in ecosystem service accounting
title_full_unstemmed The role of enabling actors in ecosystem service accounting
title_sort role of enabling actors in ecosystem service accounting
publisher Pensoft Publishers
series One Ecosystem
issn 2367-8194
publishDate 2017-12-01
description When accounting for ecosystem services, it is important to distinguish between the flow of services and the flow of benefits (which can be part of economic accounts or not) generated by those services. To disentangle services and benefits, particular attention has to be paid in allocating each category of flows in the use table to those institutional sectors that generate the need for the services and have the power to modify them - the enabling actors - and to final beneficiaries. The general concept of use, without specifying whether services or benefits are referred to, could in fact lead to misinterpretations. This paper discusses the issue of the allocation of ecosystem services and the role of enabling actors through a practical example of water purification accounts in the Netherlands. In particular, the role of the agricultural sector as an enabling actor is disentangled from the cleaned water as benefit and from water supply companies as beneficiaries. The proper allocation of the flow of the service can in fact facilitate the establishment of a causal relationship between the actions of economic actors and ecological consequences and vice versa.
url https://oneecosystem.pensoft.net/article/20834/
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