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Preferences for proactive and reactive climate-adaptive forest management and the role of public financial support

Dominik Braunschweiger, Tamaki Ohmura, Janine Schweier, Roland Olschewski and Tobias Schulz

Forest Policy and Economics, 2024, vol. 169, issue C

Abstract: The impacts of climate change threaten forest ecosystems and the services they provide. Policies and measures to make forests more resilient to climate-change-induced disturbances are needed, but the success of such efforts depends on their acceptance among forest owners and managers. Based on a discrete choice experiment survey among Swiss forest owners and managers in the canton of Bern, we analysed whether respondents prefer (i) proactive over reactive interventions, (ii) advanced/natural regeneration over plantings, (iii) native over non-native tree species, and (iv) the role governmental payment schemes play in these decisions. About one-third of the respondents belong to the class of forest managers and owners that are open to a transition strategy including proactive interventions and non-native tree species. Two-thirds of the forest owners and managers prefer a reactive restoration approach after disturbances and management that relies on native tree species. The amount of financial support plays a decisive role in the willingness of most respondents to accept adaptation measures. These results confirm the feasibility of diversifying the policy support toolbox to enable more proactive climate-adaptive forest management.

Keywords: Choice experiment; Latent class analysis; Proactive interventions; Reactive interventions; Restoration; Transition (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eee:forpol:v:169:y:2024:i:c:s1389934124002028

DOI: 10.1016/j.forpol.2024.103348

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