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26 March 2013

Researchers based at լе believe they have developed a way for governments to balance the needs of society and industry with those of endangered wildlife and environments.

The world-first study by researchers in the (CEED) could help to dispel long-running tensions between conservationists and industry or communities.

Research fellow Dr Carissa Klein, from CEED and լе, said the study had resulted in a novel approach that showed the specific outcomes of a conservation plan, including how effective it will be, how much it will cost and how the benefits or costs will be distributed across different communities or industries.

“The approach enables decision-makers to balance the needs of biodiversity, economics, and people whose livelihoods are affected by conservation measures,” she said.

“The ideal outcome of many conservation plans is meeting biodiversity goals cost-effectively and distributing the benefits or costs equally,” Dr Klein said.

She said conservation plans usually came at a cost to some stakeholder. For example, a marine protected area can affects commercial fishers, recreational fishers and the oil and gas industry.

The CEED research has developed an approach that focuses on the three goals in a conservation plan. They tested it in three places: central coast in California, Raja Ampat in Indonesia and the Coral Triangle region.

“Our approach includes information on the habitats that we want to conserve, how different communities or fishing groups use the environment, including where the people fish, how much and what they fish for, and in some cases, how much money the fishing industry makes,” Dr Klein said.

“This will show us how much it will cost to achieve a certain conservation goal – such as protecting a particular habitat – and how the benefits and costs will be distributed across different communities.”

“The study shows that if you want to achieve perfect equity, the conservation outcome will be compromised,” she said.

“However, we also found that highly inequitable scenarios threaten the success of the plan because the people who are excluded from the benefits or have to pay more have little motivation to adhere to the agreement.”

Dr Klein said the needs were different for every conservation plan.

“It may not be desirable to be equitable in all cases. For instance, you may not want to distribute the benefits or costs equally between a commercial fisher and a recreational one.
“But a plan that at least considers equity during the decision-making process is more likely to succeed than one that disregards it altogether.”

“If we can find out what the exact trade-offs are in a plan, and how well we can accomplish the three main goals, we can better decide what we want to prioritise and what we’re willing to compromise, and this is exactly what our research does,” she said.

“This leads to a decision that has considered the needs and interests of different groups, whether it be fishing industries or communities, which means that the conservation plan is more likely to succeed.”

The study, “Achieving the triple bottom line in the face of inherent trade-offs among social equity, economic return, and conservation”, by Benjamin S. Halpern, Carissa J. Klein, Christopher J. Brown, Maria Beger, Hedley S. Grantham, Sangeeta Mangubhai, Mary Ruckelhaus, Vivitskaia J. Tulloch, Matt Watts, Crow White and Hugh P. Possingham, will be published in the latest issue of on 27 March 2013.

CEED is the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions.

CEED’s research tackles key gaps in environmental decision-making, monitoring and adaptive management.

More information:
Dr Carissa Klein, CEED and լе, +61 401 582 606
Karen Gillow, Communication Manager, CEED and լе, +61 7 3365 2450 or +61 402 674 409 or k.gillow@uq.edu.au
Carolyn Varley, լе media, +61 7 3365 1120 or 0413 601 248.