Streams of Revenue

Streams of Revenue The Restoration Economy and the Ecosystems It Creates

Paperback (13 Jan 2021)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Market-based approaches to environmental conservation have been increasingly prevalent since the early 1990s. The goal of these markets is to reduce environmental harm not by preventing it, but by pricing it. A housing development on land threaded with streams, for example, can divert them into underground pipes if the developer pays to restore streams elsewhere. But does this increasingly common approach actually improve environmental well-being? In Streams of Revenue, Rebecca Lave and Martin Doyle answer this question by analyzing the history, implementation, and environmental outcomes of one of these markets: stream mitigation banking. In stream mitigation banking, an entrepreneur speculatively restores a stream, generating "stream credits" that can be purchased by a developer to fulfil regulatory requirements of the Clean Water Act. Tracing mitigation banking from conceptual beginnings to implementation, the authors find that in practice it is very difficult to establish equivalence between the ecosystems harmed and those that are restored, and to cope with the many sources of uncertainty that make positive restoration outcomes unlikely. Lave and Doyle argue that market-based approaches have failed to deliver on conservation goals and call for a radical reconfiguration of the process.

Book information

ISBN: 9780262539197
Publisher: The MIT Press
Imprint: The MIT Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 363.73947
DEWEY edition: 23
Number of pages: xiii, 192
Weight: 288g
Height: 152mm
Width: 227mm
Spine width: 16mm