Institute for Environmental Studies, VU University, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Sci Total Environ. 2011 Oct 1;409(21):4497-503. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2011.07.023. Epub 2011 Aug 21.
The Integrated Global Observing Strategy (IGOS, 2003) argues that further investments in Earth Observation information are required to improve coral reef protection worldwide. The IGOS Strategy does not specify what levels of investments are needed nor does it quantify the benefits associated with better-protected reefs. Evaluating costs and benefits is important for determining optimal investment levels and for convincing policy-makers that investments are required indeed. Few studies have quantitatively assessed the economic benefits of Earth Observation information or evaluated the economic value of information for environmental management. This paper uses an expert elicitation approach based on Bayesian Decision Theory to estimate the possible contribution of global Earth Observation to the management of the Great Barrier Reef. The Great Barrier Reef including its lagoon is a World Heritage Area affected by anthropogenic changes in land-use as well as climate change resulting in increased flows of sediments, nutrients and carbon to the GBR lagoon. Since European settlement, nutrient and sediment loads having increased 5-10 times and the change in water quality is causing damages to the reef. Earth Observation information from ocean and coastal color satellite sensors can provide spatially and temporally dense information on sediment flows. We hypothesize that Earth Observation improves decision-making by enabling better-targeted run-off reduction measures and we assess the benefits (cost savings) of this improved targeting by optimizing run-off reductions under different states of the world. The analysis suggests that the benefits of Earth Observation can indeed be substantial, depending on the perceived accuracy of the information and on the prior beliefs of decision-makers. The results indicate that increasing informational accuracy is the most effective way for developers of Earth Observation information to increase the added value of Earth Observation for managing coral reefs.
综合全球观测策略(IGOS,2003 年)认为,需要进一步投资地球观测信息,以改善全球范围内的珊瑚礁保护。IGOS 战略没有具体说明需要多少投资水平,也没有量化与更好保护的珊瑚礁相关的效益。评估成本和效益对于确定最佳投资水平以及说服决策者确实需要投资非常重要。很少有研究定量评估地球观测信息的经济效益,也很少有研究评估信息在环境管理方面的经济价值。本文使用基于贝叶斯决策理论的专家评估方法来估计全球地球观测对大堡礁管理的可能贡献。大堡礁及其泻湖是一个受人类土地利用变化和气候变化影响的世界遗产区,导致沉积物、营养物和碳向大堡礁泻湖的流量增加。自欧洲殖民以来,营养物和沉积物负荷增加了 5-10 倍,水质变化导致珊瑚礁受损。来自海洋和沿海颜色卫星传感器的地球观测信息可以提供关于沉积物流动的时空密集信息。我们假设,地球观测通过实现更有针对性的径流减少措施来改善决策,并通过在不同的世界状态下优化径流减少来评估这种改进的针对性的效益(成本节约)。分析表明,地球观测的效益确实可以很大,这取决于信息的感知准确性和决策者的先验信念。结果表明,提高信息的准确性是地球观测信息开发者提高地球观测对管理珊瑚礁的附加值的最有效途径。