Sign up & Download
Sign in

The value of the world's ecosystem services and natural capital

by Robert Costanza, Ralph d'Arge, Rudolf De Groot, Stephen Farber, Monica Grasso, Bruce Hannon, Karin Limburg, Shahid Naeem, Robert V O'Neill, Jose Paruelo, Robert G Raskin, Paul Sutton, Marjan Van Den Belt show all authors
Nature (1997)

Abstract

The services of ecological systems and the natural capital stocks that produce them are critical to the functioning of the Earth's life-support system. They contribute to human welfare, both directly and indirectly, and therefore represent part of the total economic value of the planet. We have estimated the current economic value of 17 ecosystem services for 16 biomes, based on published studies and a few original calculations. For the entire biosphere, the value (most of which is outside the market) is estimated to be in the range of US$16-54 trillion (10(12)) per year, with an average of US$33 trillion per year. Because of the nature of the uncertainties, this must be considered a minimum estimate. Global gross national product total is around US$18 trillion per year.

Cite this document (BETA)

Sign up today - FREE

Mendeley saves you time finding and organizing research. Learn more

  • All your research in one place
  • Add and import papers easily
  • Access it anywhere, anytime

Start using Mendeley in seconds!

Already have an account? Sign in

Readership Statistics

302 Readers on Mendeley
by Discipline
 
 
 
by Academic Status
 
28% Ph.D. Student
 
14% Student (Master)
 
11% Researcher (at an Academic Institution)
by Country
 
26% United States
 
11% United Kingdom
 
9% Germany

Tags