Managing a Sea: The Ecological Economics of the Baltic

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Routledge, Jul 28, 2017 - Law - 152 pages
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Marine resources and fish stocks are now high on the international and economic research agendas, and the management of highly complex marine ecosystems is increasingly important. The task is complicated by the number of interlinked factors to be taken into account, such as social impacts, drainage systems, marine currents and the ecosystems involved. This interdisciplinary volume presents a comprehensive blueprint for managing a sea. Focused on the Baltic Sea, it employs a range of methods and techniques, including nutrient budgets and simulation models, Geographical Information Systems (GIS), economic valuation and policy analysis, to arrive at an assessment of causes and consequences of pollution in the sea and the management of its resources. From the analysis of data on land use, population, costs of nutrient reductions and associated impacts, it presents significant and highly practical empirical and policy results. It diagnoses the causes of marine degradation, identifies through the use of simulation models cost-effective strategies for remediation and sets out the policies to be pursued collectively by the countries around the sea to restore and manage their common resource. This is an exemplary study in the application of ecological economics to complex natural resource systems. It will be of interest to students, researchers and professionals working on any aspect of marine ecosystem management.
 

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Contents

List of Figures and Tables
Causes of Baltic Sea ecological degradation
LAND USE AND NUTRIENT LOADS
Land Use Population and Nutrient Loads
Wetlands as Nutrient Sinks
The wetland footprint of Baltic cities
Costeffective Nutrient Reductions to the Baltic
Impacts of Changed Nutrient Loads on the Baltic
Policy instruments and Cost Sharing of Baltic Sea Cleaning
Baltic Sea nitrogen and phosphorus permit markets
Winners and Losers from Baltic Sea Nitrogen Reductions
Estimated net benefits under alternative bargaining solution
The Effects of Implementing Markets for Emission Permits
Simulation results
Conclusions
References

nitrogen
The Benefits of a Less Eutrophicated Baltic
Basinwide benefits

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About the author (2017)

Ing-Marie Gren is professor of environmental and resource economics at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, and research associate at the Beijer International Institute of Ecological Economics, Stockholm. Kerry Turner is professor of environmental sciences and Director of the Centre for Social and Economic Research on the Global Environmental (CSERGE) at the University of East Anglia, Norwich. Fredrik Wulff is professor of marine biology at the Department of Systems Ecology, University of Stockholm.

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