TY - JOUR
T1 - Farmers' willingness to accept compensation to maintain the benefits of urban forests
AU - Wang, Xueyan
AU - Adamowski, Jan F.
AU - Wang, Guangda
AU - Cao, Jianjun
AU - Zhu, Guofeng
AU - Zhou, Junju
AU - Liu, Chunfang
AU - Dong, Xiaogang
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding: This research was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (41461109), the Major Program of the Natural Science Foundation of Gansu province, China (18JR4RA002), and the Key Laboratory of Ecohydrology of Inland River Basin, Chinese Academy of Science (KLERB-ZS-16-01) and the Open Fund for Key Laboratory of Land Surface Process and Climate Change in the Cold and Arid Region of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (LPCC2018008).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 by the authors.
PY - 2019/8/1
Y1 - 2019/8/1
N2 - The Returning Farmland to Forest Program (RFFP) was implemented in China in 1999 with the goal of supporting environmental restoration by returning significant areas of cultivated land to forest. While afforestation supports long-term ecosystem services like carbon sequestration and the reduction of soil and water loss, it also reduces the amount of available arable land, putting financial pressure on those who depend on it for their livelihoods. In an effort to balance both ecological and economic benefits, regional governments offer financial compensation to farmers to offset these pressures in the form of a dollar amount per hectare of reforested land. The current study explores participants' willingness to accept pay (WTA), along with the difference between the offered per hectare compensation and the amount deemed acceptable by RFFP participants in the region. To this end, 92 households from the representative afforestation area were surveyed in Huining County, Gansu Province, China - an area of strategic ecological importance in the Loess Plateau. The results showed 12.0% of the surveyed respondents to be satisfied with the current compensation policy, while 88.0% of respondents were not. The respondents' lower and upper WTA limits were $221/ha/year and $1331/ha/year, respectively, with an averageWTAof $777/ha/year. The compensation that respondents would be most willing to accept was distributed in the $444-888/ha/year and the $889-1331/ha/year ranges, accounting for 37.0% and 31.5% of the total responses, respectively. Gender, age, and education were found to be the main factors influencing a respondents' WTA. Results of the survey suggest that the actual compensation amount ($355/ha/year) is much lower than respondents' WTA, and that compensation measures and policies should be improved to guarantee a basic income.
AB - The Returning Farmland to Forest Program (RFFP) was implemented in China in 1999 with the goal of supporting environmental restoration by returning significant areas of cultivated land to forest. While afforestation supports long-term ecosystem services like carbon sequestration and the reduction of soil and water loss, it also reduces the amount of available arable land, putting financial pressure on those who depend on it for their livelihoods. In an effort to balance both ecological and economic benefits, regional governments offer financial compensation to farmers to offset these pressures in the form of a dollar amount per hectare of reforested land. The current study explores participants' willingness to accept pay (WTA), along with the difference between the offered per hectare compensation and the amount deemed acceptable by RFFP participants in the region. To this end, 92 households from the representative afforestation area were surveyed in Huining County, Gansu Province, China - an area of strategic ecological importance in the Loess Plateau. The results showed 12.0% of the surveyed respondents to be satisfied with the current compensation policy, while 88.0% of respondents were not. The respondents' lower and upper WTA limits were $221/ha/year and $1331/ha/year, respectively, with an averageWTAof $777/ha/year. The compensation that respondents would be most willing to accept was distributed in the $444-888/ha/year and the $889-1331/ha/year ranges, accounting for 37.0% and 31.5% of the total responses, respectively. Gender, age, and education were found to be the main factors influencing a respondents' WTA. Results of the survey suggest that the actual compensation amount ($355/ha/year) is much lower than respondents' WTA, and that compensation measures and policies should be improved to guarantee a basic income.
KW - Afforestation
KW - Ecological benefits
KW - Economic benefits
KW - Rural development
KW - Willingness to accept pay
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85071129366&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/f10080691
DO - 10.3390/f10080691
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85071129366
SN - 1999-4907
VL - 10
JO - Forests
JF - Forests
IS - 8
M1 - 691
ER -