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Journal article

Valuing the commons: An international study on the recreational benefits of the Baltic Sea

Pollution has reduced important recreation benefits provided by the Baltic Sea. This paper describes a regional study of the economic value of current recreational benefits and of the potential benefits of water quality improvements.

Tea Nõmmann, Heidi Tuhkanen / Published on 10 April 2015

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Citation

Czajkowski, M., H. Ahtiainen, J. Artell, W. Budziński, B. Hasler, L. Hasselström, J. Meyerhoff, T. Nõmmann, D. Semeniene, T. Söderqvist, H. Tuhkanen, T. Lankia, A. Vanags, M. Zandersen, T. Żylicz, N. Hanley (2015). Valuing the commons: An international study on the recreational benefits of the Baltic Sea. Journal of Environmental Management, 156, 209–217.

The Baltic Sea provides benefits to all of the nine nations along its coastline, with some 85 million people living within the catchment area. Achieving improvements in water quality requires international cooperation. The likelihood of effective cooperation is known to depend on the distribution across countries of the benefits and costs of actions needed to improve water quality.

This paper estimates the benefits associated with recreational use of the Baltic Sea in current environmental conditions using a travel cost approach, based on data from a large, standardized survey of households in each of the nine Baltic Sea states. Both the probability of engaging in recreation (participation) and the number of visits people make are modeled.

The authors find a large variation in the number of trips and the extent of participation, along with large differences in current annual economic benefits from Baltic Sea recreation. The total annual recreation benefits are close to 15 billion EUR. Under a water quality improvement scenario, the proportional increases in benefits range from 7 to 18% of the current annual benefits across countries. Depending on how the costs of actions are distributed, this could imply difficulties in achieving more international cooperation to achieve such improvements.

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SEI authors

Heidi Tuhkanen
Heidi Tuhkanen

Senior Expert (Green and Circular Economic Transformations Unit)

SEI Tallinn

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10.1016/j.jenvman.2015.03.038 Closed access
Topics and subtopics
Water : Water resources / Health : Pollution
Related centres
SEI Tallinn
Regions
Baltic

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