US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
Opinion / OP Rana

Trying to measure Earth's value with money is weird

By Op Rana (China Daily) Updated: 2015-05-23 07:35

Trying to measure Earth's value with money is weird

Despite a high urbanization rate, Foshan city conserves a friendly ecosystem in Guangdong province.

Money has become omnipotent. It is used to measure the value of life and increasingly so to determine the cost of death. Economists have been trying to assign monetary value to every living and non-living objects. Just the other day an American paid $350,000 Namibian authorities to hunt an endangered black rhino saying the amount was enough to compensate for the loss and would help raise awareness about wildlife and boost efforts to save the species from extinction.

Of course, the American national has received scathing criticism and death threats as conservationists and wildlife lovers have reacted to the hunt of one of the most endangered species. But then the power of money has not been lost on anyone.

Before this news saddened and angered people across the world, some researchers assigned monetary values to some of Mother Earth's most important ecosystems. Their contention is that the exercise will help prioritize conservation efforts and funding. They have described the research into the services rendered by our ecosystems as "the benefits people derive from ecosystems - the support of sustainable human well-being that ecosystems provide". Placing financial values on environmental resources, they say, will help raise awareness about the importance of ecosystems and biodiversity.

If their view sounds similar to with that of the American hunter, it is more than coincidental. But more shocking are the absurdly small financial values they have assigned to the nine ecosystems. For instance, the worth of tropical forests is only $2,335 per hectare, prompting the questions: How can the ecosystem that is home to half of the plant and animal species despite covering only 6 percent of the Earth's land surface be worth just more than a couple of thousand dollars. Are the food and pharmaceuticals the tropical forests provide worth only a pittance? How can one place a value on such forests' biodiversity and climate stabilization properties?

Incidentally, open oceans are worth only $135, temperate forests $1,127 and grasslands $2,698 per hectare. All the open oceans, Atlantic, Pacific, Indian and Arctic, and the millions of life forms they are home to are under threat. So are grasslands that give us food, water and other natural resources and help keep climate change in check. Yet they are worth almost nothing.

The monetary value of coastal ecosystems, according to the study, is a pitiable $26,760 per hectare. Coastal and inland wetlands are worth only $12,163 and $16,534 a hectare, and lakes a shocking $3,938 a hectare. According to the UN Environmental Programme, about 40 percent of the people live within 100 kilometers of coastlines, which means they get sustenance from coastal ecosystems and wetlands. Yet the combined worth of the two coastal systems is worth a mere $38,933 a hectare.

Perhaps something went wrong with the study. Else, how could the researchers assign a monetary value of 197,900 per hectare to coral reefs? Still, it does not do any justice to the true worth of coral reefs, which apart from their wide range of biodiversity also provide food for an estimated 1 billion people.

We need money to survive, but money is not the be all and end all of life. Assigning monetary value to every natural resource and system may be a good idea for the market, but it is certainly not conducive to protecting the planet. The nine ecosystems the researchers have studied have sustained life for millions of years. And their worth is beyond the value of all human possessions.

Yet the study has tried to weigh the ecosystems with a few a pieces of paper, which incidentally we get by exploiting the same ecosystems.

Is this a ploy to let market forces run amok with even the most sacrosanct benefits that nature has to offer? The answer is obvious.

The author is a senior editor with China Daily. oprana@hotmail.com

(China Daily 05/23/2015 page5)

Most Viewed Today's Top News
...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 久久er99热精品一区二区| 免费无码看av的网站| 1000部禁片黄的免费看| 女人被男人桶爽| 中文字幕在线第二页| 日韩不卡在线播放| 亚洲国产婷婷综合在线精品| 特级毛片a级毛片在线播放www| 国产免费女女脚奴视频网| 四虎在线视频免费观看视频| 国产精品福利一区二区| 99精品视频99| 好吊妞视频免费视频| 中文字幕韩国电影| 日韩免费视频一区二区| 亚洲天堂一区在线| 波多野结衣同性系列698| 免费很黄很色裸乳在线观看| 综合亚洲欧美日韩一区二区| 国产不卡视频在线观看| 香蕉视频在线观看www| 国产成人精品免高潮在线观看| 思99热精品久久只有精品| 国产视频你懂的| 99国产精品久久| 天天影视色香欲综合免费| 一本一本久久aa综合精品| 成人凹凸短视频在线观看| 中文字幕热久久久久久久| 日本a∨在线观看| 久久男人av资源网站| 日韩精品中文字幕无码一区| 五月婷中文字幕| 欧美午夜在线视频| 亚洲日韩精品无码一区二区三区 | 国产手机在线视频放线视频| 2020狠狠操| 国产精品第7页| 久久人搡人人玩人妻精品首页 | 久久伊人成人网| 日韩在线视频不卡|