The Benefits of Green Infrastructure for Affordable Housing

The Benefits of Green Infrastructure for Affordable Housing

Earth Economics, Groundwork USA, and Groundwork Hudson Valley have published “Green Stormwater Infrastructure for Affordable Housing in Yonkers, NY” based on the results of an ecosystem services valuation of Groundwork Hudson Valley’s Climate Safe Neighborhoods program.

The Benefits of Schoolyard Greening

The Benefits of Schoolyard Greening

The mission of Amigos de los Rios is to create the “Emerald Necklace,” a network of green spaces, green schools, parks, and trails throughout under-served communities in the Los Angeles Basin. Focusing on equitable access to nature, Amigos de los Rios uses a whole-systems approach to watershed and social restoration. Earth Economics partnered with Amigos de los Rios to assess the social, environmental, and economic benefits of the Watershed Discovery Campus of Mary W. Jackson Elementary (Jackson Elementary) with generous support from the Ingrid Rasch Legacy Fund.

Accounting for Nature in FEMA’s Hazard Mitigation Program

Accounting for Nature in FEMA’s Hazard Mitigation Program

Since 2013, we have supported FEMA as it has incorporated ecosystem service benefits of nature-based solutions into its Benefit-Cost Analysis Toolkit for hazard mitigation assistance applicants. This includes updates to FEMA’s baseline ecosystem service valuation estimates in 2016, 2020, and 2022, which expanded the variety of eligible landcover and green infrastructure project elements.

Resilience Hubs for Participatory Disaster Preparedness

Resilience Hubs for Participatory Disaster Preparedness

WE STAY/ Nos Quedamos is a South Bronx-based Community Development Corporation founded in 1992 within the Melrose Commons Urban Renewal Area. Its mission is to engage, empower, and transform the marginalized communities of the South Bronx to help them remain and thrive. Nos Quedamos has brought over $500 million in investment to the area, including affordable housing for more than 4,000 families, infrastructure and broadband access, open space and parks, education and trade programs, environmental health, and social justice advocacy. Earth Economics partnered with Nos Quedamos to conducting an analysis of the benefits of three Resilience Hubs to help them as they further develop these social- and built-infrastructure hybrid solutions.

The Economic Impacts of Climate Change in Florida's Rural Areas

The Economic Impacts of Climate Change in Florida's Rural Areas

Following Hurricane Ian (September, 2022), the Environmental Defense Fund of Florida hired Earth Economics to identify the complex impacts of hurricanes on tourism and agricultural sectors of the state’s rural economies. Hurricanes can make tourism destinations less desirable by damaging the amenities and infrastructure services. They also often have broad impacts on agriculture, flooding fields, damaging crops, harming livestock, and also impacting critical infrastructure. Rural economies are disproportionately impacted, with negative effects persisting for several months after landfall.

Natural Capital of the Elephant Hill Wildfire Area

Natural Capital of the Elephant Hill Wildfire Area

The Natural Capital of the Elephant Hill Wildfire Area: Valuation of the ecosystem services affected by the 2017 Elephant Hill fire highlights pre-fire ecosystem services for Secwepemcúl'ecw Restoration and Stewardship Society communities. The 2017 fire resulted in losses of $500 million to nearly $1 billion annually in ecosystem services benefits.

The Value of Protecting and Restoring the Duckabush Estuary

The Value of Protecting and Restoring the Duckabush Estuary

In early 2023, Earth Economics conducted an ecosystem service valuation and jobs analysis of the Duckabush Estuary Restoration Project, a $120m infrastructure project, which will raise a causeway into a 1,600 foot full spanning bridge, reestablishing the estuary’s connection to neighboring floodplains and creating a corridor for marine and terrestrial wildlife. Earth Economics calculated the total value of the wetlands at $249.6 million ($75.4 million at a 3 percent discount rate) over the 100-year lifespan of the bridge. The valuation includes the additional 400,000 chum salmon population due to the improved nursery function of the estuary, valued at $30 million to $109 million to Puget Sound residents.

The Value of Natural Climate Solutions in Minnesota

The Value of Natural Climate Solutions in Minnesota

Earth Economics partnered with The Nature Conservancy to quantify and value the co-benefits generated and protected by implementing Natural Climate Solutions in Minnesota—up to $37 billion per year. The study also demonstrates that Natural Climate Solutions are a sound investment for Minnesota’s economy, with every dollar invested supporting over $8 in economic activity. That ripple effect would support over 5,000 jobs with up to $148 million in wages going into workers’ pockets every year through 2050.

Principles for the Next Generation of Multi-Benefit Projects

Principles for the Next Generation of Multi-Benefit Projects

This empirical research report explores collaborative approaches to developing multi-benefit infrastructure projects. Using evidence from Los Angeles County, this study identifies factors that contribute to project success, uncovers barriers to achieving project goals, and provides actionable next steps that government agencies can take to create the institutional conditions necessary for multi-benefit projects to be successful. 

Best Management Practices for Oklahoma’s Blue River Watershed

Best Management Practices for Oklahoma’s Blue River Watershed

At the end of 2022, Earth Economics completed a report for The Nature Conservancy in Oklahoma,  Benefit-Cost Analysis of Best Management Practices in the Blue River Watershed of Oklahoma. This report is an extension of an earlier analysis conducted by Earth Economics, Ecosystem Services in the Blue River Watershed, which estimated $927 million to $1.7 billion per year in nonmarket ecosystem services provided within the basin.