The increased understanding of ecosystem services has resulted in a growing recognition that the actions of landholders can either contribute to broader environmental and social benefits or degrade them.
Individual landholders may be managing their land in ways that not only provides them with benefits, but may also contribute to the broader public good through the provision of ecosystem services. For example, some farmers who fence off remnant vegetation in a water catchment area may be contributing to improved water filtration (public good) while improving stock control (private good).
Defining stewardship responsibilities is a useful way to clarify the roles and responsibilities of landholders. Clearly, land managers should all meet some basic level of environmental responsibility and be compliant with laws and regulations (i.e. they should adhere to a basic duty-of-care).
Equally, where society obtains environmental benefits from the actions of individual land managers some form of reward could be provided to those land managers (such as a rate rebate or tax incentive).
Stewardship payments provide a targeted way of rewarding land managers when they undertake agreed actions (in excess of their basic responsibilities) that provide longer-term environmental benefits to society. Put simply, stewardship payments are a voluntary mechanism for securing public benefits from private land managers, whereby a land manager receives payments in response to agreeing to manage land in a particular way. There are, however, risks associated with stewardship payments.
Without careful design, there is a risk that stewardship payments could result in significant misallocation of resources. In particular, it is possible for payment mechanisms:
- to pay people to undertake things that they were already intending to do
- to erode common notions of environmental responsibility and create situations where landholders have an implicit right to hold the environment and other land managers to ransom
- to build bureaucracies and administrative processes that have very high transaction costs, especially if the payment schemes have to be run in perpetuity
- to discourage private investment in the environment
- to discourage innovation, change and structural adjustment.
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