Financial Costs of Meeting Global Biodiversity Conservation Targets: Current Spending and Unmet Needs
Royal Society for the Protection of Birds · BirdLife international · +13 more institutions
Abstract
World governments have committed to halting human-induced extinctions and safeguarding important sites for biodiversity by 2020, but the financial costs of meeting these targets are largely unknown. We estimate the cost of reducing the extinction risk of all globally threatened bird species (by ≥1 International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List category) to be U.S. $0.875 to $1.23 billion annually over the next decade, of which 12% is currently funded. Incorporating threatened nonavian species increases this total to U.S. $3.41 to $4.76 billion annually. We estimate that protecting and effectively managing all terrestrial sites of global avian conservation significance (11,731 Important Bird Areas)…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 132.34
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 74
Authors
17- DMDonal McCarthyCorresponding
Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, BirdLife international
- PFPaul F. Donald
Royal Society for the Protection of Birds
- JPJörn P. W. Scharlemann
University of Sussex, UN Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre
- GMGraeme M. Buchanan
Royal Society for the Protection of Birds
- ABAndrew Balmford
University of Cambridge
Topics & keywords
- Threatened species
- Biodiversity
- Natural resource economics
- Business
- Safeguarding
- IUCN Red List
- Conservation-dependent species
- Geography
- Life in Land