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Ecotourism, Pygmy Elephant Reserves and Oil Palm Plantations in Borneo. Joint Paper with Lisa Marie King and Kenneth R. Szulczyk. Contents. Introduction Use values Non-use Value Borneo Pygmy Elephant Travel Cost Method Contingent Valuation Value of Oil Palm Plantations Conclusion.
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Ecotourism, Pygmy Elephant Reserves and Oil Palm Plantations in Borneo Joint Paper with Lisa Marie King and Kenneth R. Szulczyk
Contents • Introduction • Use values • Non-use Value • Borneo Pygmy Elephant • Travel Cost Method • Contingent Valuation • Value of Oil Palm Plantations • Conclusion
Introduction • Elephants are in decline around the world • Many countries are converting forests and prairies into agricultural land and community development • Elephants are losing their habitat • Herds become fragmented • Elephants’ birth rate declines • Many elephants are becoming endangered
Introduction • Researchers use many methods to estimate an elephant’s value. • Methods are not mutually exclusive • Each method involves a different use or function of elephants • Thus, the economic value of the elephants cannot be compared.
Introduction • Two broad classes to estimate value • Use values – humans directly gain a net benefit from the elephants • Researchers gather information about revenues and costs, and calculate the net benefits of the elephants • Non-use values – humans gain a net benefit knowing the elephants exist • People pay and donate to conservation societies that protect the elephants
Use Values • Trophy hunting, elephant culling, and poaching • Attains the highest economic values of African elephants • Value comes directly from consuming the elephants • Types • Hunters pay fees to hunt the elephants • Government or communities use elephant culling to control the growing elephant herds in national parks • Sell ivory, salted hides, and dried meat to the communities
Use Values • Botswana, Namibia, and Zimbabwe use community-based natural resource management (CBNRM) • Communities assume the property rights over communal land that includes the wildlife • 80% of incomes come from trophy hunting • 34% of households were willing to pay” a median $5.45 to preserve the elephants • 2% were willing to pay $1.78 to remove the elephants from the land • Some households do not benefit from the elephants • Illegal poaching – many elephant species are located in poor countries • Poachers may hunt elephants and sell the ivory on the black markets • Buyers of ivory are from affluent countries • Governments must use resources to monitor and track the elephants and identify and arrest the poachers
Use Values 2. Ecotourism – travelers and tourists are attracted to the elephants • Value of elephant comes from the tourists spending money to see them • Airline tickets • Hotels • Pay travel guides • Opportunity cost – if tourist stayed home and worked, they could earn wages
Use Values 3. Crop damage – elephants can damage crops and property • Farmer’s earn lower profits as elephants reduce crop yields • Value of the elephant • Compensate the farmers for the elephant’s damage • Pay to relocate the elephants to a natural reserve or sanctuary • Then the organization pays to monitor and manage the elephants
Use Values 4. Labor value – the elephants’ economic value relates to the elephants contributing to production. • Government and companies in Myanmar around up troublesome elephants that raid farmers’ fields and crops • Government and industry uses elephants for logging while other elephants are detained in eco-tourism camps
Non-use values 1. Existence value- the economic value of elephants is existing and interacting in their environments. • Elephants are key players in the environment • Other species may depend on the elephant’s survival • Existence value does not depend on humans being around • Economic value comes from the humans • The Precautionary Principal applies to the Borneo pygmy elephants • Since humans do not know the future consequences of the pygmy elephants going extinct, we should intervene to ensure their continued survival.
Non-use values 2. Bequest value – people are willing to pay non-use values to protect and preserve the elephants for the current and future generations • People are willing to pay an organization or government entity to manage and protect the elephants
Borneo Pygmy Elephant • Pygmy elephants are localized to one spot – the Kinabatangan Wildlife Sanctuary • Sanctuary comprises about 26,103 hectares, or 261 sq. km. • Researchers estimated about 2,040 Pygmy elephants live in Borneo • Around the sanctuary, producers are converting forests and undeveloped land into palm oil plantations • Plantations restrict the elephants to the sanctuary and along the banks of the Kinabatangan River • Full-grown elephants eat about 150 kg of foliage per day • They love durian – rolling it in mud and swallowing it whole
Borneo Pygmy Elephant • Travel Cost • Eco-tourists visit the parks to see the proboscis monkeys, Sumatran rhinoceros, 600 species of birds, and the flora, such as the world’s largest flower – rafflesia • Orangutans and elephants are at the top of the list • The pygmy elephant have a use cost because tourist gain utility or pleasure by visiting the animals in its wild habitat. • We estimate the value of elephant by analyzing the tourists’ cost to visit the site
Borneo Pygmy Elephant • We estimate a demand function to visit the site • Dependent variable is the number of visits to the site per unit of time • Visits is a discrete variable, where y = 0, 1, 2, 3, … • The probability of visiting the park gets smaller with more visits • Y would be a Poisson distribution
Borneo Pygmy Elephant • Poisson Distribution • Lambda, li, is the number of expected trips to the park • Natural log (ln) makes the lambda positive • Betas, b, are the parameter estimates • Tourist i pays travel costs (TCi) to visit elephants
Borneo Pygmy Elephant • Tourist i would pay travel costs (TCs) to a substitute site • Tourist earns income (Ii) and has obtained an education level of Ei • Tourists with greater incomes and higher education are more likely to visit the park • We have a problem • This measures a tourist’s demand to visit the site and not the elephants • Perhaps we can use dummy variables
Borneo Pygmy Elephant • Dummy variables • D1 = 1, if tourist primarily visits the park for the elephants • D2 = 1, if the tourist primarily visits the park to see the orangutans. • D1 = D2= 0 represents the base to visit the park for the fauna and flora
Borneo Pygmy Elephant • After we estimate the demand function • We estimate each tourist’s consumer surplus to visit the elephants • Then we sum the total surplus over all tourists • I am not clear on all the steps • This method may have serious statistical problems • Truncation Bias • Not a Random Sample • Endogenous stratification
Borneo Pygmy Elephant • Contingent Valuation • We design a survey to ask Malaysians the non-use value they would place on the elephants • People do not view the elephants directly but gain utility that the elephants exist and roam freely. • Malaysians place a value on the elephant’s existence but they never plan to visit the elephants in their natural habitat
Borneo Pygmy Elephant • We can ask Malaysians whether they would support the following: • Contribute to a wildlife fund • Pay fees to expand the national parks and protected areas • Promote eco-tourism by establish animal orphanages and recreation centers
Borneo Pygmy Elephant • Advantages of Contingent valuation • Gain information for a natural resource when it has no market values or market prices • Survey may boost public awareness of the animals • Disadvantages of contingent valuation (CV) • People report their preferences • Economists do not collect data from observing people • People say one thing and do another • They are not reaching into their pockets to pay a contribution • CV studies are sensitive to outliers
Borneo Pygmy Elephant • Disadvantages of contingent valuation • People taking the survey may have a warm glow by answering to help the pygmy elephants • Contingent Valuation study may overstate people’s true willingness-to-pay (WTP) • People are sensitive to how the resource is paid for • Taxes, fees, or contributions to a wildlife fund • Sensitive to the information level the surveys provided
Borneo Pygmy Elephant • Production Value Method • We can measure the economic value of pigmy elephant by comparing the cost of developing palm oil plantations • Plantation owners convert pristine rainforests into palm oil plantations. • The pygmy elephants, orangutans, and exotic birds lose their natural habitat.
Borneo Pygmy Elephant • Value of the palm oil plantations • Palm oil plantations create four primary products • Palm oil – extraction mill removes the oil from the pulp that surrounds the palm kernel • Palm kernel oil – extraction mill crushes and extract the palm kernel oil from the kernel • Palm kernel cake – left over residues from the palm kernel • Contains high levels of protein • Extraction mills compress the cake into expeller pellets • Feed producers mix the pellets into cattle, swine, and fish feeds • Palm Fatty Acid Distillate – leftover oils and chemicals from processing the palm oil • Extraction mills can sell this to chemical industries
Borneo Pygmy Elephant • Food and chemical industries use the primary products to manufacturing many secondary and consumer products • Cooking oil, soaps, margarines, non-dairy creamers for coffee, tea, hot chocolate. • Palm kernel oil is more valuable than palm oil • Substitute palm kernel oil for cocoa butter in chocolates • Create trans-fat free margarines.
Borneo Pygmy Elephant • Land creates a financial return • Researchers use four steps to estimate the land’s productive value • 1. Estimate gross income using long-term average yields and the long-term market prices of the palm oil products. • Primary palm oil products are priced in U.S. dollars • Assume the palm oil plantations export all primary products • 2. Estimate production costs for cultivating the palm oil plantation • Costs data from Sime-Darby
Borneo Pygmy Elephant • 3. Return to land is the income minus the production costs • Similar to producers’ surplus in economics • Producers’ surplus comprises of economic profit plus total fixed costs • 4. Capitalization • Calculate the present value of future profits using a discount rate • Economic life of a plantation ranges between 20 and 25 years • Land has salvage value • For land near the cities, companies can develop the land into urban blight
Borneo Pygmy Elephant • Below are monthly export prices for primary palm oil products
Borneo Pygmy Elephant • I calculated a rough value of the land • Excludes land salvage value • Excludes immature plantations • Oil palms need about 3.5years to grow before producing fruit • Value of land ranges between $2,438 and $2,665 per hectare per year • Hectare is 10,000 square meters • We have the same problem • We have the value of land with the elephants, orangutans, and fauna living on it. • Cannot isolate the value of the elephants
Conclusion • Recurring problem – orangutans and elephants are confounded • Difficult to separate the elephant’s and orangutan's economic value from each other • Tourists are aware of the orangutans but not the pygmy elephants • Presents another problem for estimating the pygmy elephants