TY - JOUR
T1 - Legitimacy and limitations of valuing the oxygen production of ecosystems
AU - Chen, Haojie
AU - Costanza, Robert
AU - Kubiszewski, Ida
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2022/12
Y1 - 2022/12
N2 - Oxygen production is an ecosystem service essential to life on Earth. However how it should be valued is controversial and depends on several factors. Here, we commented on how valuation might be applicable to the stock or flow of oxygen, whether additional oxygen produced at the micro or macro scale provides additional human wellbeing, and whether double counting may occur if oxygen production and carbon sequestration are both valued independently and added. We concluded that the flow of oxygen produced by ecosystems should be valued when: (1) high levels of atmospheric oxygen at specific micro-scale areas (e.g., a park) provides additional benefits to local human health and additional attraction to tourists; (2) micro-scale aquatic oxygen production (e.g., in a pond or aquafarm) avoids potential loss of aquatic products; and (3) macro-scale aquatic oxygen production (e.g., in global oceans) maintains marine contributions to humans (e.g., fishery resources). However, whether macro-scale atmospheric oxygen production should be valued is uncertian, because the effects of declining global atmospheric oxygen, especially in the short term, remain unclear. This needs further research. We also concluded that the values of oxygen production and carbon sequestration can be aggregated without double counting, given that the values are not duplicated in multiple ecosystem service categories. For example, oxygen production is best considered as contributing to gas regulation while carbon sequestration contributes to climate regulation. But one should not count and add both carbon sequestration and oxygen production as contributing to both gas and climate regulation. Techniques for valuing oxygen production may include the willingness to pay for additional health benefits of breathing extra high levels of atmospheric oxygen, the market price of industrial oxygen, the travel cost to natural ‘oxygen bars’, the avoided cost of losing aquatic resources, and the replacement cost of using artificial techniques to produce oxygen.
AB - Oxygen production is an ecosystem service essential to life on Earth. However how it should be valued is controversial and depends on several factors. Here, we commented on how valuation might be applicable to the stock or flow of oxygen, whether additional oxygen produced at the micro or macro scale provides additional human wellbeing, and whether double counting may occur if oxygen production and carbon sequestration are both valued independently and added. We concluded that the flow of oxygen produced by ecosystems should be valued when: (1) high levels of atmospheric oxygen at specific micro-scale areas (e.g., a park) provides additional benefits to local human health and additional attraction to tourists; (2) micro-scale aquatic oxygen production (e.g., in a pond or aquafarm) avoids potential loss of aquatic products; and (3) macro-scale aquatic oxygen production (e.g., in global oceans) maintains marine contributions to humans (e.g., fishery resources). However, whether macro-scale atmospheric oxygen production should be valued is uncertian, because the effects of declining global atmospheric oxygen, especially in the short term, remain unclear. This needs further research. We also concluded that the values of oxygen production and carbon sequestration can be aggregated without double counting, given that the values are not duplicated in multiple ecosystem service categories. For example, oxygen production is best considered as contributing to gas regulation while carbon sequestration contributes to climate regulation. But one should not count and add both carbon sequestration and oxygen production as contributing to both gas and climate regulation. Techniques for valuing oxygen production may include the willingness to pay for additional health benefits of breathing extra high levels of atmospheric oxygen, the market price of industrial oxygen, the travel cost to natural ‘oxygen bars’, the avoided cost of losing aquatic resources, and the replacement cost of using artificial techniques to produce oxygen.
KW - Double counting
KW - Ecosystem service valuation
KW - Human wellbeing
KW - Oxygen
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85139359824&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ecoser.2022.101485
DO - 10.1016/j.ecoser.2022.101485
M3 - Article
SN - 2212-0416
VL - 58
JO - Ecosystem Services
JF - Ecosystem Services
M1 - 101485
ER -