Abstract of: The Joint Production of Timber and Environmental Values:
Demonstration for the Westside of Washington State

By Bruce R. Lippke, B. Bruce Bare, Weihuan Xu, Jeffrey Moffett and Bill Turner

Regulatory requirements to protect habitat have increased, requiring forest managers to include measures of biodiversity, habitat, and streamside protection in their plans. A demonstration of environmental and economic impacts for a range of timber management alternatives was developed for Western Washington. Economic and environmental impacts were characterized for current and prospective regulations as well as for several management alternatives designed to achieve environmental objectives similar to those produced by the regulations. Tradeoffs between environmental and economic impacts were developed for the landowners decision process. As a basis for policy analysis, tradeoffs between the benefits and costs to rural and urban communities were identified, demonstrating who gains and who loses under various management alternatives.

Integration of timber growth and yield models with habitat models in a mathematical programming framework was used to produce the biological and economic measures associated with different management strategies. Experimental choice analysis among management alternatives was then used to develop public preference values for measures of forest biodiversity, aesthetics, rural job losses, and costs as surrogates for the economic/environmental tradeoffs. Results showed that regulations and proposals that focus on preservation without considering long-term motivation to produce non-market forest amenities result in significantly less value to the public and less equitable treatment across urban and timber rural communities than do alternatives that seek to jointly produce timber and non-market amenities. (Proceedings of the International Symposium on Global Concerns for Forest Resource Utilization - Sustainable Use and Management. Dept. of Agricultural & Forest Economics. Miyazaki University. SEAGAIA, Miyazaki, Japan. October 5-8. Volume II, p. 521-532.)


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