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The Economic Benefits of GI GI Workshop 31 Oct 07 The Two Parts to my Presentation: # Brief explanation of what the Natural Economy NW Programme is and our progress to date, # Summary of the findings emerging from the draft Ecotec report on the Economic Benefits of Investing in GI, commissioned by NENW. What is Natural Economy Northwest? • A three-year partnership programme that maximises the benefit from existing and new investment in the region’s natural environment delivering RES Action 113. • A multi-agency/cross-sectoral partnership resourced by Natural England, the Northwest Regional Development Agency and the SITA Trust. • The Shared Vision – “A prosperous economic future with a thriving natural environment”. RES Action 113 Develop the economic benefits of the region’s natural economy through better alignment of environmental activities and economic gain ……. and develop a strategy for Green Infrastructure and Transport Corridors NENW Programme • Business Plan sets out several programmes of activity ranging from promotional and influencing activity, training work, engaging with selected demonstration projects to commissioning reports and providing technical support. • Two key strands of activity are the Natural Tourism Programme and the GI Programme-my focus from here on in. NENW ORGANISATIONAL STUFF! • Programme managed by Natural England using funds comprising the clever matching of a SITA Landfill programme with primarily NWDA funding ( with some from NE), which pays for the small staff team, on costs, plus limited budget for pump priming, technical support, monitoring and communications. • Formal governance is via a small Board representing the key partners. • Wider NENW Steering Group includes the key stakeholdersNWDA, NWRA, GONW, EnvAg, Forestry Comm., Community Forests and other NGOs, UU, Tourist Boards, Natural England……. • NENW GI Steering Group includes the above, and has two key roles a) to direct the GI Strand of the NENW prog and b) to enable increasing coordination between the agencies on GI in the Region. • The NENW Natural Tourism Steering Group provides a similar function for the NENW Natural Tourism Strand. • The NENW Staff are all seconded to the Programme. What is Green Infrastructure? The region’s life support system; a network of natural environment components and green & blue spaces that lies within and between the Northwest’s cities, towns and villages, and which provides multiple social, economic and environmental benefits. NENW GI Programme NB - NENW Formal start 15 Jan 2007 • Ecotec Policy and Economic Benefits Reviews, & City Greens study, • Grey Infrastructure & Transport Corridors Review • Lancs GI Strategy • Work with the other 4 SRPs on Strategic Approach to GI (+ support via Reg GIU) • Strategic Funding Review • Advice for Natural Economy Projects re maximising econ benefits • Regional GI Synergy/Inter–agency Coordination • Selection of 6+ demonstration projects Parallel activity on Natural Tourism The Ecotec Report – The Economic Benefits of GI • Currently being finalised • Been through many iterations, including extenal review by reps of the NWDA,NWRA, GONW & NENW steering Group • Based on a thorough literature review • Identifies 9 categories of economic benefit • Seeks to make the link to the NWDA’s Tasking Framework & the 2 types of SAV –ie what they have to deliver. • For each category, encapsulates the benefits, sets out a model or diagram, and then summarises the evidence in a table, citing the references • Also summarises the context + links to key policies: eg RES, RSS, Sub-regional Econ Strategies, Sustainable Communities (DCLG), Ecosystem Services (DEFRA), Climate Change and the SubNational Review NB Economic development budgets tend to be bigger than environmental ones!! The Economic Benefits of GI • • • • • • • • • Flood alleviation and water management Enhancing quality of place Improved health and well being Increased land and property prices Creating a setting for inward investment New opportunities for renewable energy production Improving the tourism, recreation and leisure offer New employment in land management and biodiversity. Climate change alleviation Ecosystem services and economic benefits Flood alleviation & water management Improved Quality of place health & well being Supporting services Climate change alleviation Land management The services that are necessary for the production of all other ecosystem services including soil formation, photosynthesis, primary production, nutrient cycling and water cycling. Land & property prices & biodiversity Creating & Tourism recreation & leisure Renewable energy production setting for inward investment Ecosystem services and economic benefits Flood alleviation & water management Improved Quality of place health & well being Provisioning services Climate change alleviation Land management The products obtained from ecosystems, including food, fibre, fuel, genetic resources, biochemicals, natural medicines, pharmaceuticals, ornamental resources and fresh water; Land & property prices & biodiversity Creating & Tourism recreation & leisure Renewable energy production setting for inward investment Ecosystem services and economic benefits Flood alleviation & water management Climate change alleviation Land management & biodiversity Improved Quality of place health & well being Regulating services The benefits obtained from the regulation of ecosystem processes, including air quality regulation, climate regulation, water regulation, erosion regulation, water purification, disease regulation, pest regulation, pollination, natural hazard regulation; Land & property prices Creating & Tourism recreation & leisure Renewable energy production setting for inward investment Ecosystem services and economic benefits Flood alleviation & water management Improved Quality of place health & well being Cultural services Climate change alleviation Land management & biodiversity The non-material benefits people obtain from ecosystems through spiritual enrichment, cognitive development, reflection, recreation and aesthetic experiences – thereby taking account of landscape values; Land & property prices Creating & Tourism recreation & leisure Renewable energy production setting for inward investment Flood alleviation and water management BENEFIT Improvement in the quality of environment within urban and semi-urban locations VALUE Increase in Land and House Prices Reduction in Insurance Premiums Investment in Green Infrastructure Reduction in flood risk for highly populated areas Encouragement of inward investment Lower clean up costs for local and central government Increase in economic activity, jobs and growth Lower costs to Environment Agency of SUDS vs. Hard engineering solutions Increased canopy cover, increased greenspace and 'soft surfacing' and sustainable urban drainage schemes (SUDS) reduce and control run off, improve absorption rates & provide storage capacity, resulting in less dramatic flood events for urban areas, thereby reducing the costs resulting from increasingly regular 'catastrophic' events. Quality of Place BENEFIT Improved quality of life for residents Investment in Green Infrastructure Increased involvement of local communities in ownership and management Improved attractiveness of place for investment VALUE Reduction in poor health Reduced maintenance costs through community ownership and management of green space Increased house and land prices New employment opportunities from Inward Investment Enhanced GI provides for an improved sense of quality of place, providing opportunities for recreation,empowerment through community ownership, and visual amenity, improving the attractiveness of a neighbourhood with effects upon property prices, investment, employment opportunities, and social capital. Improved Health and Well Being BENEFIT VALUE Reduction in obesity levels New opportunities for formal and informal recreation Investment in Green Infrastructure Increase in local air quality - reduced ozone, CO2 Reduction in costs to the NHS and waiting lists Reduction in stress related illness Reduction in Coronary Heart Disease and related illnesses Increase in economic activity and job productivity Reduction of illness associated with poor air quality e.g. Asthma Increased Green Infrastructure provides multiple health & consequent economic benefits, through improved air quality, reduced stress levels, increased opportunities for informal & normal physical activity and recreation, all contributing to the reduction of limiting long term illness, and cost to the health services, reducing days lost to industry through illness & improving productivity. Land and property prices Investment in Green Infrastructure BENEFIT VALUE Higher demand for neighbourhoods with good access to green space Increase in House Prices Improved natural environments within urban and urban fringe locations Improvement to the public realm and urban design Uplift in land values New employment opportunities Developing green space and undertaking env. improvements in key locations has significant benefits for housing and land prices. Proximity to high quality & accessible GI directly impacts positively upon house prices. Greener cities increase visitors and spend on city centre retail and leisure, improving rental values & increasing employment opportunities. Creating a setting for inward investment BENEFIT Improved quality of life and environment, encouraging property developers and investors. Investment in Green Infrastructure Revitalisation of DUN land on permanent and temporary basis Green Business Parks attracting knowledge economy businesses VALUE Increased Land/ Property Prices Growth in the occupancy of vacant units within Market Towns/Key Service Centres Increase in economic activity The creation and development of green space and landscaping can encourage and attract high value industry and workers. This can provide many benefits to urban areas in terms of improvements in quality of life and an improved green environment can increase opportunities for adding GVA to local economies. Renewable energy production BENEFIT VALUE New use for DUN land for sustainable woodlands Investment in Green Infrastructure Increase in the number of people accessing green space and recreation opportunities in woodlands Opportunities for agricultural sector diversification Reduction in CO2 Levels Growth in local access to wood, biofuel, charcoal markets Increase in production of biofuels and biomass New employment opportunities in renewable energy sector Increased GI provides substantial opportunities to generate and encourage the development of renewable sources of energy. Rural areas and the agricultural industry undergoing structural change are provided with diversification opportunities to supply local markets for biofuels and biomass, which in turn has mitigation effects for climate change through cleaner energy generation and reduced fossil fuel use. Tourism, recreation and leisure BENEFIT Increased numbers of people accessing new woodlands and greenspace for new recreation opportunities Investment in Green Infrastructure Growth in Natural Tourism “Green Cities” - more attractive to investors and visitors VALUE Safeguarding and creating jobs for those employed in Tourism sector New urban employment from new visitor economy Increased economic output through Natural Tourism GI plays a strong role in the generation of new recreation & leisure opportunities and also stimulates economic activity within agriculture, forestry, and public services. The potential to create green spaces within built up areas reconnects urban communities with the land. Greening city centres attracts new visitors, in turn supporting urban retail and tourism sectors. Land management and biodiversity BENEFIT Growth in rural diversification opportunities for the Land Based Sector Investment in Green Infrastructure Improved management of the countryside through Stewardship Schemes VALUE Safeguarding and creating jobs for those employed in the Landbased sector Increased economic growth through local procurement for agricultural sector Increased economic output through Natural Tourism and Niche Markets GI plays a strong role in supporting direct and indirect employment in agriculture, forestry, land management and conservation industries. The potential to create green spaces within built up areas reconnects urban communities with the land and improves opportunities for local food marketing. Climate change alleviation BENEFIT Providing Adaption - microclimate control - water management Investment in Green Infrastructure Enabling Mitigation - carbon sink - carbon sequestration - O2 production Improved Local Air Quality Reduced Carbon Emissions Local Energy Solutions VALUE Reduced costs to industry and households Delivering Climate Change Levy Targets GI provides natural air conditioning for urban areas (adaptation), reducing the need for power consumption for heating and cooling, alongside its contribution towards greenhouse gas absorption (mitigation) and longer term benefits in terms of managing the impacts of climate change. Woodland provides setting for tourism, biofuels and education GI in flood plain helps to manage risk of downstream urban flooding Upland grazing and moorland drainage scheme slows and reduces run-off Riverside walk Riding for the Disabled centre on reclaimed brownfield land Allotments City Farm run by community Trees and green spaces in town ameliorate effects of climate change Sports pitches Woodland improves air quality and reduces particulates from motorway GI adds value to adjacent properties Country park on reclaimed industrial site provides: • Healthy leisure and exercise • Urban wildlife • Employment Cycle route on disused railway line Pond balances storm flow Biomass operation run by social enterprise supplies fuel to power station Commercial development set within GI Sustainable drainage system Whole landscape scale benefits of GI Outstanding Issues • Quantification and the contribution GI makes to GVA - how to compare the contribution investing in differing “bundles” of GI will make to closing the N/S GVA Gap as against other demands on economic development budgets? • Free riding - how to get all the benefiting agencies, & other beneficiaries (eg the private sector), to invest to secure “their” benefits? • Who pays to ensure the ongoing underlying ecosystem services - without which…………?? The Economic Benefits of Investing in GI ECOTEC (2007) [email protected] www.naturaleconomynorthwest.co.uk