Abstract

‘Building with Nature’ solutions seem like a logical alternative to technical solutions. Working with nature instead of against it might save civil engineering costs. But will it also generate additional civil engineering benefits? Typical engineering benefits are related to flood prevention, transportation and sand mining. Both technical and natural solutions can produce these benefits. Natural solutions, however, may produce additional ecosystem benefits. These are rarely accounted for in investment decisions about engineering projects. This is not surprising as there are no rules stating that and how these benefits should be calculated. The Netherlands is the first country in Europe to install a national guideline for monetising ecosystem benefits within cost-benefit analyses in the public sector. This article shows how this guideline provides a systematic approach to prevent both over- and under-estimations of ecosystem benefits. The key to this approach is to make a distinction between goods and services that directly generate welfare while linking those to conditional functions that indirectly generate welfare. This approach is applied to flood defence in the Scheldt estuary in Belgium. It resulted in benefit estimates that were large enough to compensate for the extra cost of natural solutions. Taking ecosystem benefits into account influenced the flood protection decision of the national government: the natural ‘inundation areas’-solution was preferred to the technical solution of ‘dyke heightening’.

Highlights

  • IntroductionNatural solutions are gaining popularity as an alternative to technical solutions

  • In civil engineering, natural solutions are gaining popularity as an alternative to technical solutions

  • When a natural solution turns out to be more costly than its NATURAL SOLUTIONS VERSUS TECHNICAL SOLUTIONS: HOW ECOSYS-TEM BENEFITS CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN PUBLIC DECISIONS

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Natural solutions are gaining popularity as an alternative to technical solutions. When natural solutions save costs, they are -- welcomed. Creating natural inundation areas is more expensive than dyke heightening, because the creation of inundation areas requires giving up valuable agricultural land. Is it fair to compare two types of solutions merely on the basis of cost, when they might differ in terms of benefits? If designed for a specific purpose (e.g. flood protection) both natural and technical solutions have similar key benefits (e.g. prevented flood damage) for society. The natural solution may, have ecosystem benefits, that the technical solution does not, such as recreational or carbon fixation benefits

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call