5 décembre 2022, 11h00–12h15
Toulouse
Salle Auditorium 4
Environmental Economics Seminar
Résumé
Agricultural land uses and semi-natural habitats are at the core of the conflicts between production and conservation objectives. In Europe, biodiversity losses keep going, questionning environmental and cost-effectivenesses of agricultural policies. Ecological network appears as a promising tool regarding its environmental effectiveness and its diffusion into current public policy. However their joined ecological-economic impacts and bioeconomic effectiveness are poorly known. We develop a bioeconomic modeling framework underlying by spatiotemporal processes applied to the french case study, then the simulate public policy scenarios with different spatial targets and compare their bioeconomic performances and effectivenesses. We show that ecological network targeting improves the cost-effectiveness of the conservation policy even if its relative performance depends on the time horizon. This comes from high ecological states in the targeted ecological reservoirs but also from ecological spillovers from the taregeted regions on their neighourhood. Eventually, we exhibit no win-it-all conclusion if considering a multicriteria ecological perspectives.