A Spatial Valuation of the Natural and Semi-Natural Open Space Areas in eThekwini Municipality

Durban is located within a global biodiversity hotspot, and still contains a wealth of biodiversity. Some of this is protected in nature reserves, but much of it is in private hands or in communal lands on the city’s periphery. City managers are di...

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Main Authors: Turpie, Jane, Letley, Gwyneth, Chyrstal, Robynne, Corbella, Stefan, Stretch, Derek
Format: Report
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/339351496060660305/Promoting-green-urban-development-in-Africa-enhancing-the-relationship-between-urbanization-environmental-assets-and-ecosystem-services
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26765
id okr-10986-26765
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-267652021-05-25T09:00:28Z A Spatial Valuation of the Natural and Semi-Natural Open Space Areas in eThekwini Municipality Turpie, Jane Letley, Gwyneth Chyrstal, Robynne Corbella, Stefan Stretch, Derek URBAN DEVELOPMENT CITY URBANIZATION GREEN GROWTH ECOSYSTEM ENVIRONMENT Durban is located within a global biodiversity hotspot, and still contains a wealth of biodiversity. Some of this is protected in nature reserves, but much of it is in private hands or in communal lands on the city’s periphery. City managers are divided over the level of attention that should be given to preserving these remaining natural areas. While it is argued that they make a significant contribution to biodiversity conservation in the province, provide valuable ecosystem services and will contribute to the city’s resilience in the face of climate change, the counter argument is that much of this area should make way for development to alleviate the escalating problem of unemployment. The study of ecosystem services and their value to society has made significant advances since an estimate was made of Durban’s ecosystem services in the 1990s using early values from the international literature. The aim of this study was to provide estimates of the value of ecosystem services provided by natural open space areas within the eThekwini Municipal Area (EMA), and to map the geographic variation in these values as far as possible so as to be able to compare both areas and types of value, using available and locally-relevant data. This study was carried out as a desktop study based on available data. Modelling assumptions were based on data from within the study area, drawing on the regional, national or international literature only where necessary. The study focused on the direct values associated with the provision of natural resources, indirect use values associated with regulating services generated by ecosystem functioning, and the amenity values generated by ecosystem attributes. 2017-05-30T16:25:32Z 2017-05-30T16:25:32Z 2017 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/339351496060660305/Promoting-green-urban-development-in-Africa-enhancing-the-relationship-between-urbanization-environmental-assets-and-ecosystem-services P148662 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26765 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: City Development Strategy Economic & Sector Work Africa
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic URBAN
DEVELOPMENT
CITY
URBANIZATION
GREEN GROWTH
ECOSYSTEM
ENVIRONMENT
spellingShingle URBAN
DEVELOPMENT
CITY
URBANIZATION
GREEN GROWTH
ECOSYSTEM
ENVIRONMENT
Turpie, Jane
Letley, Gwyneth
Chyrstal, Robynne
Corbella, Stefan
Stretch, Derek
A Spatial Valuation of the Natural and Semi-Natural Open Space Areas in eThekwini Municipality
geographic_facet Africa
description Durban is located within a global biodiversity hotspot, and still contains a wealth of biodiversity. Some of this is protected in nature reserves, but much of it is in private hands or in communal lands on the city’s periphery. City managers are divided over the level of attention that should be given to preserving these remaining natural areas. While it is argued that they make a significant contribution to biodiversity conservation in the province, provide valuable ecosystem services and will contribute to the city’s resilience in the face of climate change, the counter argument is that much of this area should make way for development to alleviate the escalating problem of unemployment. The study of ecosystem services and their value to society has made significant advances since an estimate was made of Durban’s ecosystem services in the 1990s using early values from the international literature. The aim of this study was to provide estimates of the value of ecosystem services provided by natural open space areas within the eThekwini Municipal Area (EMA), and to map the geographic variation in these values as far as possible so as to be able to compare both areas and types of value, using available and locally-relevant data. This study was carried out as a desktop study based on available data. Modelling assumptions were based on data from within the study area, drawing on the regional, national or international literature only where necessary. The study focused on the direct values associated with the provision of natural resources, indirect use values associated with regulating services generated by ecosystem functioning, and the amenity values generated by ecosystem attributes.
format Report
author Turpie, Jane
Letley, Gwyneth
Chyrstal, Robynne
Corbella, Stefan
Stretch, Derek
author_facet Turpie, Jane
Letley, Gwyneth
Chyrstal, Robynne
Corbella, Stefan
Stretch, Derek
author_sort Turpie, Jane
title A Spatial Valuation of the Natural and Semi-Natural Open Space Areas in eThekwini Municipality
title_short A Spatial Valuation of the Natural and Semi-Natural Open Space Areas in eThekwini Municipality
title_full A Spatial Valuation of the Natural and Semi-Natural Open Space Areas in eThekwini Municipality
title_fullStr A Spatial Valuation of the Natural and Semi-Natural Open Space Areas in eThekwini Municipality
title_full_unstemmed A Spatial Valuation of the Natural and Semi-Natural Open Space Areas in eThekwini Municipality
title_sort spatial valuation of the natural and semi-natural open space areas in ethekwini municipality
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/339351496060660305/Promoting-green-urban-development-in-Africa-enhancing-the-relationship-between-urbanization-environmental-assets-and-ecosystem-services
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26765
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