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Measuring rural homeowners’ willingness to pay for land conservation easements

Reference Type
Journal, Research (Article)

"Rapid growth of rural communities in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Macon County, North Carolina has been giving rise to concerns over declining environmental quality and increasing need for land-use policy. This paper examines willingness to pay (WTP) for hypothetical conservation easements as an alternative land-use policy for the county. Despite the fact that Macon County has struggled to adopt any land-use policy, the stated WTP for conservation easements of our study shows that homeowners potentially value the use of conservation easements. Estimated household’s WTP to participate in an easement program ranges from $10.97 to $21.79 per year per household depending on modeling assumptions. Aggregate county WTP ranges from $360,772 to $109,825 depending on aggregation stance. This suggests a range of 53–175 acres entering the program per year, and a consequent decline in the rate of land conversion, compared to the 1987–1997 period, of 14–46%." [Abstract]

Authors
S. Cho, D.H. Newman, J.M. Bowker
Date Published
2005
Journal/Conference
Forest Policy and Economics
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher Location
Oxford (UK)
ISBN/ISSN
1389-9341
Volume/Issue/Number
7/august 2005/5
Start Page
757
End Page
770
Sub-Topics
Conservation Easements, Economics/Cost-Benefit Analysis
State(s)/Region(s)
North Carolina
Keywords
Easements, WTP
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