Too bad Charlestown was not included in this study
University of Cambridge
A
new study has found that costs of conservation projects are rarely reported,
making it difficult for others to make decisions on the most cost-effective
interventions at a time when funding for biodiversity conservation is severely
limited.This is Charlestown's version of transparency
A
review of 1,987 published reports of conservation interventions has found that
only 8.8% reported the total cost of the intervention, and many of these were
not detailed or standardised. The authors say this makes it very difficult to
determine the cost-effectiveness of different interventions, and to make
decisions on how to spend limited funding for biodiversity conservation.
The
review, by researchers in the University of Cambridge's Department of Zoology,
is published today in the journal BioScience. This is the
first time that cost reporting across a broad range of wildlife conservation
interventions has been reviewed.
"If we're serious about addressing biodiversity loss, knowing the financial costs of interventions is as important as knowing their effectiveness. But the cost of projects is rarely reported for others to benefit from," said Thomas White, a researcher in the University of Cambridge's Department of Zoology and first author of the paper.
Dr
Silviu Petrovan, in the University of Cambridge's Department of Zoology and a
co-author of the study, added: "Wildlife conservation across the world is
severely limited by funding, and the lack of information on the
cost-effectiveness of different interventions makes it very difficult to
prioritise where this money is spent."
The
work is part of the University of Cambridge's Conservation Evidence project,
led by Professor Bill Sutherland, which has compiled a huge resource of
scientific information on the effectiveness of different conservation
interventions. It is designed to support anyone making decisions about how to
maintain and restore biodiversity.
For
this new review, the team checked 1,987 studies in peer-reviewed journals and
other reports -- representing actions to conserve a range of different species
and habitats -- to see whether financial costs had been reported. Only 13.3% of
these reported any financial costs at all.
"Even
when costs are reported, the lack of consistency between reports makes it
difficult for others to work out whether a cost is relevant to their project or
not," said Professor Bill Sutherland in the University of Cambridge's
Department of Zoology, a co-author of the study.
He
added: "It's frustrating because the people who implemented conservation
projects probably do know how much they cost, it's just that the information
isn't making its way into the scientific literature so others can benefit from
it."
The
review found that costs were reported more often for some specific types of
intervention, such as those linked with agriculture -- which the authors
suggest could be due to the nature of farming as an income-driven activity.
Planting hedgerows or wildflower strips on farmland to encourage wildlife, or
applying herbicide to control invasive plants, for example, incur costs that
farmers must factor into their operations and are easily measurable.
In
addition, costs were reported more often for conservation projects in
Africathan in other parts of the world. The authors suggest this could be
because projects in African countries are more likely to be led by conservation
organisations that must prioritise cost-effectiveness.
The
authors recommend that researchers, publishers and practitioners report the
costs of conservation interventions in standardised formats, so that they can
be used to improve decision-making by everyone planning a conservation project.
They are now developing a framework to make it easier to report these costs.
"There
are some easy steps to be taken to fix this -- it's just about creating a
culture of reporting costs as part of reporting a conservation project, and
making sure those costs are in a format that allows others to understand how
much it would cost them to implement a similar action in a different
context," said White.
The
authors say that in healthcare settings there is also a need to efficiently
allocate resources -- but unlike in conservation, healthcare decision-makers
have access to a developed body of work that collates and analyses information
on effects and costs. The effectiveness of conservation interventions can be
more difficult to evaluate because many factors may be involved -- such as
acceptability to local communities, or feasibility with the skills and
equipment available -- as well as cost.
At
COP26 in Glasgow last year, world leaders recognised the connection between the
global biodiversity crisis and the climate crisis -- and the critical role that
nature plays in both adapting to and mitigating climate change.
"We're
losing global biodiversity at an alarming rate -- it's a real risk to society,
and we need to be serious about reversing that trend. To do it will require
unprecedented conservation action at a scale we aren't yet achieving and we
don't have the finances for. So we need to be really careful about selecting
the most cost-effective interventions with the money we've got," said
White.