Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
91417 | Forest Policy and Economics | 2012 | 6 Pages |
Forests provide a variety of ecosystem goods and services to society, which often have the typical characteristics of a public good: non-excludability and non-rivalry. One of these services is avalanche protection of forests. A monetary valuation of this service would be helpful to provide efficient and effective protection to the local population. We present the results of a case study from the Swiss Alps, where we determined the willingness to pay for avalanche protection based on a choice experiment combined with virtual reality visualizations. Furthermore, we compare these results with the costs of alternative technical measures for natural hazard mitigation as well as with the results of a risk-based evaluation. We conclude that the willingness to pay for avalanche protection of forests is about the same range as the collective risk related to a 300-years avalanche event and within a range similar to the per-household costs of alternative measures. However, willingness to pay is substantially higher than the costs of silvicultural measures to maintain protection forest.
► CE is combined with risk-based evaluation and virtual reality visualization. ► Interdisciplinary collaboration as adequate approach for valuing protection services. ► Guidance for efficient solutions in avalanche protection and forest management.