Wetland Mitigation Banking in the United States
Abstract
In this thesis, I study market-based biodiversity conservation policies in the context of the
wetland compensatory mitigation program under the US Clean Water Act. The program
requires developers to compensate for adverse impacts on wetlands by purchasing credits that
specialized firms have generated in advance from wetland conservation activities. In this
work, I study aspects related to the environmental and economic performance of the program.
In the first chapter (with Jessica Coria, João Vaz, and Yann Clough), we evaluate
environmental outcomes in the compensatory credit markets. We measure wetland area gains
at 400 compensation sites over 1995–2020 using a combination of high-resolution satellite
imagery and land cover change data. Comparing realized compensation projects to planned
but withdrawn projects in a difference-in-differences framework, we find that the majority of
the gains would not have occurred without dedicated conservation activities. Nonetheless, the
wetland area gains appear insufficient to compensate for the wetland area losses regulated
within the program.
In the second chapter (with João Vaz and Jessica Coria), we provide a theoretical
examination of the costs and benefits of the two approaches to compensate for impacts:
market-based banking mechanisms that entail third-party offsets and the conventional
command-and-control approach of developer-led offsets. We find that (1) if offsets by banks
are of insufficient quality relative to developer-led offsets, a large enough market could
compensate for the lack of equivalency due to cost-savings from market expansion, and (2) if
entry costs are positively correlated with restoration quality, the market could hold banks of
low quality, which is an outcome that favors the relative performance of developer-led
offsets. We illustrate our results empirically in the case of the US wetland mitigation
program.
In the third chapter, I examine the labor market effects of federal regulations that protect
water resources in the United States. The Clean Water Rule, an executive order enacted in
2015, expanded the scope of waters that are federally protected under the Clean Water Act. I
use a difference-in-differences framework to compare construction employment between the
22 states where the Rule was implemented and the 28 states where it was never implemented
due to litigation in regional courts. I find that the overall effect of the Rule on construction
employment was negligible. However, a negative effect appears in the four states that had
unsuccessfully litigated against the Rule. Furthermore, the decrease in construction activity
was most prominent in counties where low-cost compliance options through environmental
offset markets were limited.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
University of Gothenburg. School of Business, Economics and Law
Institution
Department of Economics ; Institutionen för nationalekonomi med statistik
Disputation
Fredagen den 15 september, kl 10.15, Hörsal E44, Handelshögskolan, Vasagatan 1, Göteborg
Date of defence
2023-09-15
v.p.inkinen@exeter.ac.uk
Date
2023-08-24Author
Inkinen, Ville Pekka Tapani
Keywords
biodiversity
land use
offsetting
mitigation banking
wetlands
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-88199-74-4
978-91-88199-73-7
ISSN
1651-4297 (online)
1651-4289 (PDF)
Series/Report no.
Economic Studies 257
Language
eng