Property rights and the Property rights and the allocation of common pool allocation of common pool resources: resources:
NonNon--timber forest timber forest products on public products on public land in BCland in BC
Sinclair TedderWestern Forest Economists Conference, May 1-3, 2006
WFE Conference May 1-3, 2006
Acknowledgements
Sustainable Forest Management Network
Royal Roads University, Centre for Non-Timber Resources
BC Ministry of Forests
WFE Conference May 1-3, 2006
Outline of presentation
Purpose of researchBC NTFP characteristicsThe problem?BC case studyCase study subjectsPreliminary results
WFE Conference May 1-3, 2006
Purpose of study
Part of a larger research project looking into the role of tenure in sustainable forest managementResearch question: what role does tenure, or more broadly property rights play in the sustainable management of NTFPs?Alternatively, are conditions in B.C. conducive to creating appropriate incentives through property rights?Results will help to clarify the need for and design of institutions to manage NTFPs on Crown or public landAre current approaches to providing NTFPs the most appropriate?
WFE Conference May 1-3, 2006
Characteristics of NTFPs in BCHeterogeneous sectorOver 200 species identifiedCommercial and non-commercial usersPredominantly open access – no permits/tenureDomestic and export marketsBC sales revenue: CDN$ 280 million (?)Employs some 30,000 F-T & P-T (?)Volumes harvested:
EWM 400 – 1,000+ tonnes?Salal ? Boughs ?
Harvest location and impact of harvest (?)Uncertainty?
WFE Conference May 1-3, 2006
Is there a problem in BC?What do we know?
63 million hectares of forested landMyriad of timber, trapping, recreation tenuresNTFPs are under open access in most areas
No permits, no rules or responsibilitiesNo specific NTFP tenures
NTFPs are common pool resourcesExclusion costlyRivalrousDifficult to divide
Rents existOver-exploitation of resource?
WFE Conference May 1-3, 2006
Theory suggests…Market failure
Poorly defined property rights – open access: over-exploitation, rent dissipation, resource ruinPublic goods nature of common pool resources Transaction costs: Information, Cooperation,
EnforcementAssigning rights assumes the ability to exclude and the existence of scarcity, congestion, and resource rents
Institutional failureRole of the stateEstablishing rights, rules and responsibilitiesBreak in constitutional-collective-operational choice rulesCommercial versus non-commercial
WFE Conference May 1-3, 2006
Methodological approachDeductive perspective
Provision of and investment in NTFPsDefinition of property right elementsInformation availability and costEstablished rights, rules and responsibilitiesIndicators of over-harvesting/dissipation of rentMinimization of trespass or free riders
Inductive perspectiveLocational characteristics and variancesPrescriptive versus entrepreneurialHomogeneity of user rightsLand adjacency influencesPublic access ethicInvestment funding sourcesValue (market or non-market) of NTFPs
WFE Conference May 1-3, 2006
BC as a case study of NTFPs and property rights regimes
Wide range of property rights to investigateOpen accessTenured rightsPrivate landFirst Nations Treaty LandCommon property (?)
WFE Conference May 1-3, 2006
Case studies
Community Forest Agreement Tenures11 CFAs, 264,000 ha in total, ranging from 400 ha to 60,000 ha. Only Crown tenure to include NTFPs.
Open access Crown/public land≈ 30 million ha within timber harvesting landbase
North Cowichan Forest ReserveMarket logger with 5,344 ha.
TimberWestIndustrial timber producer with 335,000 ha on Vancouver Island
WFE Conference May 1-3, 2006
Community Forest Agreements
Speak to multiple values but tenure still timber focusedNTFPs included in tenure if desiredMany CFAs interested in NTFPS, but
Timber planning requirementsNo NTFP inventory – costly to undertakeLow value NTFP areaLack of market informationAdjacent land open accessCost of development given market uncertainty
Permit others to access CFAHarrop-Procter is an exceptionOther values, archaeological for e.g., included in development planning – NTFPs usually omitted
WFE Conference May 1-3, 2006
Open access public land
No de jure rights, rules or responsibilities for the use of NTFPsSome government research investment into pine mushroom habitat, berry, market and institutional aspectsNo access restrictions other than parksSignificant $ valueNo permitting or collection of fees or rentsNo information collectedOver-harvesting: uncertain to government. To users?Are there de facto common propertysystems of rights and rules?Wide range of user knowledge
WFE Conference May 1-3, 2006
North Cowichan Forest ReserveTimber focused market loggerProvides unlimited NTFP access to permit holders other than in watershedsPermit fees: $60/month/person = total value about $1500.Collects no information on volumes and valuesLacks resources to investigate or further develop potential Interest and value in NCFR lands gauged by number of permit requests, not by value of productSkeptical of value to community shareholdersEnforcement issue precludes exclusive contractLiability issues associated with exclusive contract
WFE Conference May 1-3, 2006
TimberWestUntil recently provided access to land via permitOver-harvesting led to exclusive contract for one companyTW does not collect volume and value informationDealt with liability issues – passed on to contractor who must ensure appropriate WCB, taxes etc. paidNot interested in pursuing for own business, difficult for NTFPs to compete with $80million/yr in shareholder disbursements Low NTFP marginsCurrent method may be most efficient method for land owner to provide resourceLessons for the public land owner?
WFE Conference May 1-3, 2006
Private – public open access continuumPrivate
Provides access via permitsNot interested in developing NTFP businessNo investment in NTFP resourceNot lucrative enough for timber oriented companyOver-harvesting? In some areas yes
PublicCrown provides free access – limited tenured accessPublic expectation of free accessUnsure how to tenure or permit NTFP useMarginal investment in NTFP resourceThe more valued are NTFPs, the more they are incorporated within timber managementOver-harvesting? In some areas yes
WFE Conference May 1-3, 2006
Summary of NTFP tenure characteristics
Tenure structureTimber focus overwhelms NTFPsDegree of focus relative to the available rents Privateness does not lead to private maximization of rentsOptimal use ≠ single use … society seeks other usesNested levels of use
Resource and institutional conducivenessTenure cannot evolve and maintain itselfInstitutional elements
Homogeneity across landscape as necessaryNTFP focusedIn some areas, multiple NTFP species, not single species/productState support – information, enforcement Protection of non-commercial values
WFE Conference May 1-3, 2006
NTFP tenure design
Appropriate allocationCan timber companies be expected to incorporate NTFPs into timber management?Those who will invest in the resource are those who will reap the greatest benefits, i.e., the usersNot all NTFPs are conducive to tenure, e.g., edible wild mushroomsCommon pool non-exclusivity may limit effectiveness of tenure optionsLocal versus non-local participants
WFE Conference May 1-3, 2006
NTFP tenure design
Nested tenuresAllocating resources to those who derive the greatest benefit from themNTFPs have both competing and complementary relationship to timber – may be amenable to nestingNesting can occur within NTFP sub-sectors and across sectorsGovernment, NTFP industry, timber industry must collaborate with First Nations
But, does anyone want this or any other model?
WFE Conference May 1-3, 2006
Questions?
Suggestions?