2021
DOI: 10.1007/s10640-021-00613-6
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Distributional Issues in Natural Capital Accounting: An Application to Land Ownership and Ecosystem Services in Scotland

Abstract: Accounting for ecosystems is increasingly central to natural capital accounting. What is missing from this, however, is an answer to questions about how natural capital is distributed. That is, who consumes ecosystem services and who owns or manages the underlying asset(s) that give rise to ecosystem services. In this paper, we examine the significance of the ownership of land on which ecosystem assets (or ecosystem types) is located in the context of natural capital accounting. We illustrate this in an empiri… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…The law requires that revenue from these NRs be transferred to a sovereign fund managed by the Bank of Norway, according to the investment strategy provided by the Ministry of Finance, following the authorization of Parliament. The focus is not on the balance sheet but on operational flows (the so-called ecosystems; Atkinson and Ovando, 2022; Biondi and Oulasvirta, 2023).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The law requires that revenue from these NRs be transferred to a sovereign fund managed by the Bank of Norway, according to the investment strategy provided by the Ministry of Finance, following the authorization of Parliament. The focus is not on the balance sheet but on operational flows (the so-called ecosystems; Atkinson and Ovando, 2022; Biondi and Oulasvirta, 2023).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to Biondi and Oulasvirta (2023), recognizing NRs as assets and representing them on a balance sheet in a supposedly reliable monetary amount is not a necessary condition for preserving NRs for future generations. This perspective suggests that the issue is not (only) assessing the monetary value of NRs as assets but also measuring flows (Atkinson and Ovando, 2022; Hartel, 2003) derived from this stock or resource, as the Norwegian case suggests.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To a minor extent, work on ES and justice has broadened to include work scrutinizing the formal or informal institutions (e.g., rules, norms, laws) that structure interactions between societal and political actors, guide resource-use decisions that influence ES production and access (Kooiman, 2003 ). We also observe a trend toward shedding light on the interface between environmental justice and the supply side of ES (Benra and Nahuelhual, 2019 ; Ramirez-Gomez et al 2020 ; Atkinson and Ovando 2021 ), as well as on equity in programs and policies, e.g., for planning green infrastructure in cities (Hoover et al 2021 ). To date, ES assessments only marginally touch on the disaggregation of beneficial and detrimental ES by different groups of people and their cultural worldviews (Brück et al 2022 ).…”
Section: Shedding Light On Justice In Ecosystem Services Researchmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…Other studies have focused on the inequitable distribution of the potential supply of ES (Mandle et al 2016 ; Felipe-Lucia et al 2022 ), or have characterized barriers in access to ES for different members of society, including vulnerable and marginalized populations (e.g., Wieland et al 2016 ) or specific demographic groups (Cortinovis and Geneletti, 2018 ). Examples include the distribution of access to urban green spaces (Nyelele and Kroll 2020 ), the distribution of the potential supply of ES in rural social-ecological systems and rural properties (Benra and Nahuelhual, 2019 ; Atkinson and Ovando, 2021 ), and the (unequal) use of protected areas by different groups (Booth et al 2010 ).…”
Section: Shedding Light On Justice In Ecosystem Services Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Equity in access to land and other resources is also relevant when designing an ambitious woodland expansion programme through carbon finance, in particular when disadvantaged low income communities are involved. High rural land ownership concentration in Scotland, along with insights that a significant part of carbon sequestration (though mostly not additional) is already occurring in large private properties (Atkinson and Ovando, 2022) calls for caution in the design of policy or market-based interventions using forest-based carbon offsets. Large-scale habitat restoration and woodland expansion occurring in Scotland as part of new natural capital markets, carbon in particular, may also result in social and cultural impacts at local levels.…”
Section: Carbon Offsetting Beyond Carbonmentioning
confidence: 99%