VALUASI EKONOMI SUMBERDAYA LAHAN
description
Transcript of VALUASI EKONOMI SUMBERDAYA LAHAN
VALUASI EKONOMI
SUMBERDAYA LAHAN
Diabstraksikan : SoemarnoPSL-PPSUB NOPEMBER 2012
LAHAN KUBIS
TIDAK SEMUA LAHAN DAPAT MENDUKUNG PRODUKSI KUBIS
LAHAN = SUMBERDAYA EKONOMI
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://smallbusiness.chron.com/economic-definition-four-factors-production-3941.html .................... 3/11/2012 .
Land is the economic resource encompassing natural resources found within a nation economy. This resource includes timber, land,
fisheries, farms and other similar natural resources. Land is usually a limited resource for many economies. Although some natural
resources, such as timber, food and animals, are renewable, the physical land is usually a fixed resource. Nations must carefully use their land resource by creating a mix of natural and industrial uses.
Using land for industrial purposes allows nations to improve the production processes for turning natural resources into consumer
goods.
Gross Margin: The simplest economic measure is the gross margin, which is the cash flow out less the cash flow in, on a per unit area (normalized or standardized) or aggregate (per-field or per-farm)
basis, in one accounting period (usually a year).
The gross margin can be expressed in terms of the return to labor or the return to land.
Return to labor: the farm family’s labor is not included as an expense, and the gross margin must be sufficient to allow the farm
family an adequate income. This makes most sense if the gross margin is non-normalized, i.e., the actual amount received for the
whole farm.Return to land: the farm family’s labor is included in the expenses, as if the labor had been contracted. If the ‘wage’ is at a reasonable level, the gross margin only has to be positive for the land use to
be feasible. This makes most sense if the gross margin is normalized, i.e., the amount received per unit land area.
LAHAN …..
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/329078/land ...................
. 3/11/2012 .
Land, In economics, the resource that encompasses the natural resources used in production. In classical economics, the three factors
of production are land, labour, and capital. Land was considered to be the “original and inexhaustible gift of
nature.” In modern economics, it is broadly defined to include all that nature provides, including minerals, forest products, and water and
land resources. While many of these are renewable resources, no one considers them “inexhaustible.”
The payment to land is called rent. Like land, its definition has been broadened over time to include
payment to any productive resource with a relatively fixed supply.
Automated Land Evaluation System ‘ALES’.
How ALES links land characteristics with economic values
Starting from the physical inventory of the characteristics of a land area, how do we arrive at an economic value of a land use if
implemented on that land area?
By means of severity levels of Land Qualities, which can either limit yield (and thus reduce income) or increase costs.
Land Qualities, and their diagnostic Land Characteristics, can be divided into two type for this analysis:
1. Location-independent (in-situ) and 2. Location dependent.
E.g. (1) soil and climate qualities and characteristics, (2) distance,Adjacency.
LAND QUALITY INDICATOR (LQI)
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.mpl.ird.fr/crea/taller-colombia/FAO/AGLL/pdfdocs/landqual
.pdf .................... 3/11/2012 .
Some generic indicators of land units that must be monitored, especially for:
1. Condition of land resources, both positive and negative;2. Areas arising from different land uses;3. Rates of adaptation and adoption of recommended/suggested practices;4. Farm management practices;5. Yields and other outputs resulting from project interventions or other
development;6. Rural development issues such as land tenure, population density;7. Water resources;8. Fisheries and aquaculture;9. Forest management;10. Land-soil nutrients.
Lahan pertanian produktif –mixed cropping
The holistic concept of Land (FAO ,1976; FAO, 1995) :
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.mpl.ird.fr/crea/taller-colombia/FAO/AGLL/pdfdocs/landqual
.pdf .................... 3/11/2012 .
"Land is a delineable area of the earth's terrestrial surface, encompassing all attributes of the biosphere
immediately above or below this surface, including those of the near-surface climate, the soil and terrain forms, the
surface hydrology (including shallow lakes, rivers, marshes and swamps), the near-surface sedimentary
layers and associated groundwater reserve, the plant and animal populations, the human settlement pattern and
physical results of past and present human activity (terracing, water storage or drainage structures, roads,
buildings, etc.).“
The functions of Land:
1. Production function2. Biotic environmental function3. Climate-regulative function4. Hydrologic function5. Storage function6. Waste and pollution control function7. Living space function8. Archive or heritage function9. Connective space function.
Land attributes, characteristics, properties and
qualities (or limitations/ conditions):
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.mpl.ird.fr/crea/taller-colombia/FAO/AGLL/pdfdocs/landqual
.pdf .................... 3/11/2012 .
1. ATTRIBUTE, or variable, is a neutral, over-arching term for a single or compound aspect of the land;
2. CHARACTERISTIC is an attribute which is easily noticed and which serves as a distinguishing element for different types of land; it may or may not have a practical meaning (e.g., soil colour or texture, or height of forest cover are characteristics without giving direct information on land quality);
3. PROPERTY is an attribute that already gives a degree of information on the value of the land type;
4. LAND QUALITY (or limitation) is a complex attribute of land which acts in a manner distinct from the actions of other land qualities in its influence on the suitability of land for a specified kind of use.
KERANGKA-KERJA EVALUASI LAHAN DARI FAO 1976
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.mpl.ird.fr/crea/taller-colombia/FAO/AGLL/pdfdocs/landqual
.pdf .................... 3/11/2012 .
LAND QUALITIES RELATED TO PRODUCTIVITY FROM CROPS OR OTHER PLANT GROWTH
1. Crop yields (a resultant of many qualities listed below).
2. Moisture availability.3. Nutrient availability.4. Oxygen availability in the root zone.5. Adequacy of foothold for roots.6. Conditions for germination.7. Workability of the land (ease of cultivation).8. Salinity or sodicity.9. Soil toxicity.10. Resistance to soil erosion.11. Pests and diseases related to the land.12. Flooding hazard (including frequency, periods of
inundation).13. Temperature regime.14. Radiation energy and photoperiod.15. Climatic hazards affecting plant growth (including
wind, hail, frost).16. Air humidity as affecting plant growth.17. Drying periods for ripening of crops.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.mpl.ird.fr/crea/taller-colombia/FAO/AGLL/pdfdocs/landqual
.pdf .................... 3/11/2012 .
LAND QUALITIES RELATED TO DOMESTIC ANIMAL PRODUCTIVITY
1. Productivity of grazing land.2. Climatic hardships affecting animals.3. Endemic pests and diseases.4. Nutritive value of grazing land.5. Toxicity of grazing land.6. Resistance to degradation of vegetation.7. Resistance to soil erosion under grazing conditions.8. Availability of drinking water.
FRAMEWORK FOR LAND EVALUATION OF 1976
Lahan pertanian pada saat “bera” mernjadi sumber rumput pakan ternak
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.mpl.ird.fr/crea/taller-colombia/FAO/AGLL/pdfdocs/landqual
.pdf .................... 3/11/2012 .
LAND QUALITIES RELATED TO FOREST PRODUCTIVITY
1. The qualities listed may refer to natural forests, forestry plantations, or both.
2. Mean annual increments of timber species3. Types and quantities of indigenous timber species.4. Site factors affecting establishment of young trees.5. Pests and diseases.6. Fire hazard.
FRAMEWORK FOR LAND EVALUATION OF 1976
Kawasan hutan tanaman jati
LAND QUALITIES RELATED TO MANAGEMENT AND INPUTS
1. The qualities listed may refer to arable use, animal production or forestry.
2. Terrain factors affecting mechanization (trafficability).
3. Terrain factors affecting construction and maintenance of access-roads (accessibility).
4. Size of potential management units (e.g. forest blocks, farms, fields).
5. Location in relation to markets and to supplies of inputs.
FRAMEWORK FOR LAND EVALUATION OF 1976
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.mpl.ird.fr/crea/taller-colombia/FAO/AGLL/pdfdocs/landqual
.pdf .................... 3/11/2012 .
1. FAO. 1976. A framework for land evaluation. Soils Bulletin 32, FAO, Rome. 72 p. Also, Publication 22, (R. Brinkman and A. Young (eds.), ILRI, Wageningen, The Netherlands.
2. FAO. 1995. Planning for sustainable use of land resources: towards a new approach, W.G. Sombroek and D. Sims. Land and Water Bulletin 2, FAO, Rome.
ATMOSPHERIC QUALITIES1. Atmospheric moisture supply: rainfall, length of growing
season, evaporation, dew formation.2. Atmospheric energy for photosynthesis: temperature,
daylength, sunshine conditions.3. Atmospheric conditions for crop ripening, harvesting and land
preparation: occurrence of dry spells.
Land qualities related to vertical components of a
natural land unit
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.mpl.ird.fr/crea/taller-colombia/FAO/AGLL/pdfdocs/landqual
.pdf .................... 3/11/2012 .
LAND COVER QUALITIES1. Value of the standing vegetation as "crop", such as timber.2. Value of the standing vegetation as germ plasm:
biodiversity value.3. Value of the standing vegetation as protection against
degradation of soils and catchment.4. Value of the standing vegetation as regulator of local and
regional climatic conditions.5. Regeneration capacity of the vegetation after complete
removal.6. Value of the standing vegetation as shelter for crops and
cattle against adverse atmospheric influences.7. Hindrance of vegetation at introduction of crops and
pastures: the land "development" costs.8. Incidence of above-ground pests and vectors of diseases:
health risks of humans and animals.
Land qualities related to vertical components of a
natural land unit
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.mpl.ird.fr/crea/taller-colombia/FAO/AGLL/pdfdocs/landqual
.pdf .................... 3/11/2012 .
LAND SURFACE AND TERRAIN QUALITIES1. Surface receptivity as seedbed: the tilth condition.2. Surface treatability: the bearing capacity for cattle,
machinery, etc.3. Surface limitations for the use of implements
(stoniness, stickiness, etc.): the arability.4. Spatial regularity of soil and terrain pattern,
determining size and shape of fields with a capacity for uniform management.
5. Surface liability to deformation: the occurrence or hazard of wind and water erosion.
6. Accessibility of the land: the degree of remoteness from means of transport.
7. The presence of open freshwater bodies for use by humans, animals or fisheries.
8. Surface water storage capacity of the terrain: the presence or potential of ponds, on-farm reservoirs, bunds, etc.
9. Surface propensity to yield run-off water, for local water harvesting or downstream water supply.
10. Accumulation position of the land: degree of fertility renewal or crop damaging by overflow or overblow.
Land qualities related to vertical components of a
natural land unit
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.mpl.ird.fr/crea/taller-colombia/FAO/AGLL/pdfdocs/landqual
.pdf .................... 3/11/2012 .
SOIL QUALITIES
1. Physical soil fertility: the net moisture storage capacity in the rootable zone.
2. Physical soil toxicity: the presence or hazard of waterlogging in the rootable zone (i.e. the absence of oxygen).
3. Chemical soil fertility: the availability of plant nutrients.
4. Chemical soil toxicity: salinity or salinization hazard; excess of exchangeable sodium.
5. Biological soil fertility: the N-fixation capacity of the soil biomass; and its capacity for soil organic matter turnover.
6. Biological soil toxicity: the presence or hazard of soil-borne pests and diseases.
7. Substratum (and soil profile) as source of construction materials.
8. Substratum (and soil profile) as source of minerals.9. Biological soil toxicity: the presence or hazard of soil-
borne pests and diseases.
SUBSTRATUM OR UNDERGROUND QUALITIES
1. Groundwater level and quality in relation to (irrigated) land use.2. Substratum potential for water storage (local use) and conductance
(downstream use).3. Presence of unconfined freshwater aquifers.4. Substratum (and soil profile) suitability for foundation works
(buildings, roads, canals, etc.)
Land qualities related to vertical components of a
natural land unit
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.mpl.ird.fr/crea/taller-colombia/FAO/AGLL/pdfdocs/landqual
.pdf .................... 3/11/2012 .
Deskripsi profil tanah
EVALUASI LAHAN
Land evaluation is the process of assessment of
land performance when used for specific purposes,
involving the execution and interpretation of surveys and studies of land forms, soils,
vegetation, climate and other aspects of land in order to
identify and make a comparison of promising kinds of land use in terms
applicable to the objectives of the evaluation.
LAND EVALUATION….
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.mpl.ird.fr/crea/taller-colombia/FAO/AGLL/pdfdocs/landqual
.pdf .................... 3/11/2012 .
LUT
A land utilization type (FAO, 1976) is a kind of land use described or
defined in a higher degree of detail than that of a major kind of land use
(such as rainfed agriculture or forestry), as
an abstraction of actual land-use systems (which
may be single, compound or multiple).
Ketahanan suatu Lahan :
The capacity of the land to recover quickly to former levels of productivity - or to resume the trend to increased productivity - after
an adverse influence such as drought, floods, or human abandonment or mismanagement.
KETAHANAN LAHAN
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.mpl.ird.fr/crea/taller-colombia/FAO/AGLL/pdfdocs/landqual
.pdf .................... 3/11/2012 .
Some concepts of resilience of land and its productivity, comparing the situation in someindustrialized countries (A) with that of most
developing countries (B). (Sombroek, 1993)
1. Decline in quality of soils as rooting environments;2. Erosion and loss of topsoil by wind and water;3. Loss of vegetation cover, including woody perennials;4. Acidification, soil fertility decline and plant nutrient
depletion;5. Salinity and salinization, particularly in irrigated
systems.
MAJOR ISSUES OF LAND MANAGEMENT….
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.mpl.ird.fr/crea/taller-colombia/FAO/AGLL/pdfdocs/landqual
.pdf .................... 3/11/2012 .
Pengelolaan lahan sawah : Palawija musim kemarau
The type OF INDICATORS:1. Physical soil condition;2. Diversity or density of vegetation cover;3. Thickness of topsoil (by erosion or, conversely, by good
management);4. Salinity or sodicity (alkaline conditions);5. Terracing;6. Establishment of contour vegetation strips.
Unit in which the indicator is measured: areal extent and magnitude of change of the indicator types , with improvement and deterioration
reported separately.
INDICATOR : Land condition change (Change in land qualities).
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.mpl.ird.fr/crea/taller-colombia/FAO/AGLL/pdfdocs/landqual
.pdf .................... 3/11/2012 .
Mulsa sisa-panen tanaman sebelumnya untuk mengendalikan evaporasi
I. Above the soil surface, as related with yields:1. Cover close to the ground: its density, distribution,
duration, timing.2. Stress in plants: growth rates; timing and frequency of
wilting; visible nutrient deficiencies or imbalances.
II. On the soil surface, as affecting particularly soil moisture and runoff+erosion:
Porosity of at least topsoil layers, in millimetric bands: proportions of incidentrainfall becoming infiltrated;
III. Below the soil surface:Organic matter content and biological activity, as affecting multiple features:Soil architecture:. structural stability;. gas exchange. water movement and retention/release;Cation exchange capacity:. nutrient capture and retention;. pH buffering;. nutrient availability;. source of small amounts of recycled nutrients.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.mpl.ird.fr/crea/taller-colombia/FAO/AGLL/pdfdocs/landqual
.pdf .................... 3/11/2012 .
LAND QUALITY INDICATOR (LQI)
1. NUTRIENT BALANCE: describes nutrient stocks and flows as related to different land management systems used by farmers in specific AEZs and specific countries.
2. YIELD TRENDS AND YIELD GAPS: describes current yields, yield trends and actual:potential farm-level yields for the major food crops in different countries.
3. LAND USE INTENSITY: describes the impacts of agricultural intensification on land quality. Intensification may involve increased cropping, more value-added production, and increased amounts and frequency of inputs; emphasis is on the management practices adopted by farmers in the transition to intensification.
4. LAND USE DIVERSITY (agrodiversity): describes the degree of diversification of production systems over the landscape, including livestock and agroforestry systems; it reflects the degree of flexibility (and resilience) of regional farming systems, and their capacity to absorb shocks and respond to opportunities.
5. LAND COVER: describes the extent, duration and timing of vegetative cover on the land during major erosive periods of the year. It is a surrogate for erosion and, along with land use intensity and diversity, it will increase understanding on the issues of desertification.
LIMA MACAM LQI UNTUK PERTANIAN DAN KEHUTANAN
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://wgbis.ces.iisc.ernet.in/energy/HC270799/LM/SUSLUP/KeySpeak
ers/ADumanski.pdf .................... 3/11/2012 .
SOIL Fertility is the inherent capacity of a soil to supply nutrients in adequate amounts and suitable proportions, whereas soil productivity is a wider term
referring to the ability of a soil to yield crops (Brady, 1974). The chief factors in soil productivity are soil organic matter (including microbial
biomass), soil texture, structure, depth, nutrient content, water-storage capacity, reaction and absence of toxic elements.
The soil productivity depends on physical, hydric, chemical and biologic characteristics and their interaction.
Brady, N.C. 1974. The Nature and properties of soils. 8th Edition. Macmillan, New York.
PRODUKTIVITAS TANAH
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.fao.org/docrep/006/y4690e/y4690e08.htm....................
3/11/2012 .
SAWAH IRIGASI TEKNIS
Land productivity measures the wealth generated on a piece of land.
High land productivity translates into :1. Lower resource wastage, 2. Improved production processes, 3. Shorter turn-around time and, 4. Greater cost-savings.
PRODUKTIVITAS LAHAN
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.mpl.ird.fr/crea/taller-colombia/FAO/AGLL/pdfdocs/landqual
.pdf .................... 3/11/2012 .
Mulsa plastik – ciri usahatani intensif
Soil quality is generally defined in terms of the capacity of a soil to perform specific functions in relation to human needs or purposes, including maintaining environmental quality and sustaining plant
and animal production (Lal, 1998a). Soil quality, in turn, derives from a variety of particular physical, chemical, and biological properties that support these functions, including topsoil depth, texture, bulk density, and water-holding
capacity; organic matter, pH level, and extractable nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium; and microbial biomass (Mausbach and
Seybold, 1998). Some of these properties (e.g., pH, N, P, and K) are characterized by optimum levels; departures from these optima (in either direction)
are associated with reduced soil quality. Other properties (e.g., topsoil depth and microbial biomass) contribute positively to soil quality at all levels, while some (e.g., bulk density) are inversely
related to soil quality. In addition to soil properties, other characteristics also play a critical role in determining land quality, including aspects of terrain (such as slope) and climate (such as temperature and precipitation, and thus
the length of growing period).
1. Lal, R. 1998a. “Soil Erosion Impact on Agronomic Productivity and Environment Quality.” Critical Reviews in Plant Sciences 17(4): 319-464.
2. Mausbach, M. J., and C. A. Seybold . 1998. “Assessment of Soil Quality.” In Soil Quality and Agricultural Sustainability, edited by Rattan Lal. Chelsea, MI: Ann Arbor Press.
KUALITAS & SIFAT-CIRI, KARAKTERISTIK TANAH
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.ers.usda.gov/media/521837/aer823c_1_.pdf....................
3/11/2012 .
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storie_index.................... 3/11/2012 .
The Storie index is a method of soil rating based on soil characteristics that govern the land's potential utilization and
productivity capacity. It is independent of other physical or economic factors that might determine the desirability of growing
certain plants in a given location.The evaluation is easy to be realized, being this an advantage of
this method.A variety of categories are comprised in few categories.
Four or five parameters are evaluated:1. A: Soil depth and texture;2. B: Soil permeability;3. C: Soil chemical characteristics;4. D: Drainage, Surface runoff;5. E: Climate (only if it is not homogeneous, if so than it should
not be included in the formula);
The index is calculated from the multiplication of these parameters, that is:
Sindex = A x B x C x D x E
The disadvantage of this method is that if we have a value of zero in any category, than the result will be zero and won't be suitable
for using.
STORIE INDEX
STORIE INDEX RATING SYSTEM
The Storie Index Rating system ranks soil characteristics according to their suitability for agriculture from Grade 1 soils (80 to 100 rating), which have few
or no limitations for agricultural production to Grade 6 soils (less than 10), which are not suitable for agriculture.
Under this system, soils deemed less than prime can function as prime soils when limitations such as poor drainage, slopes, or soil nutrient deficiencies are
partially or entirely removed. The six grades, ranges in index rating, and definition of the grades, as defined by
the NRCS, are provided below in Table Storie Index Rating System.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.ci.oakley.ca.us/UserFiles/File/planning/RiverOaksCrossing
%20Revised/3.9_Agricultural%20Resources_final.pdf.................... 5/11/2012 .
Tanah yang mempunyai rating tinggi cocok untuk multiple cropping
Storie Index Rating System …
Diunduh dari Sumber: .................... 5/11/2012 .
Rating soils for agricultural, forest and grazing use.
STORIE, R. E. Journal Transactions 4th Int. Cong. Soil Sci. 1950 Vol. 1
pp. 336-339 …. The Storie Index, a general soil-rating system of particular use in
evaluating soils from an agricultural standpoint for tax assessment, land appraisal and general land-use planning
purposes, is obtained by the multiplication of the per cent ratings given to FACTORS:
1. A, the soil-profile depth and permeability; 2. B, texture; 3. C, slope and 4. X, factors modifiable by management, namely drainage,
salinity or alkalinity, nutrient level, acidity, erosion and micro-relief.
The crop-productivity rating of a soil type is based on its yield as compared with that of the soil types giving the highest yield
under stated management practices and climatic conditions, and is expressed in ratios from 10 to 1 (that is 100% to 10% of highest
yields).
A given soil type may have one rating when undrained, another when drained and a third when d "a ned and fertilized and so on.
Timber soil ratings are similarly handled but where production is unknown, they are worked out by multiplying the ratings for
factors A, depth and texture; B, permeability; C, chemical properties such as salinity; D, drainage and runoff and E, climate,
including rainfall, temperature, aspect.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.cabdirect.org/abstracts/19511900206.html;jsessionid=C0E
71A3FA5EEDD62EF48270B1D7C59AA .................... 5/11/2012 .
STORIE INDEX RATING SYSTEM…
Gradre Index Rating
Definition
1 – Excellent
80 through 100
Soils are well suited to intensive use for growing irrigated crops that are climatically suited to the region.
2 – Good 60 through 79
Soils are good agricultural soils, although they may not be so desirable as Grade 1 because of moderately coarse, coarse, or gravelly surface soil texture; somewhat less permeable subsoil; lower plant available water holding capacity, fair fertility; less well drained conditions, or slight to moderate flood hazards, all acting separately or in combination.
3 – Fair 40 through 59
Soils are only fairly well suited to general agricultural use and are limited in their use because of moderate slopes; moderate soil depths; less permeable subsoil; fine, moderately fine, or gravelly surface soil textures; poor drainage; moderate flood hazards; or fair to poor fertility levels, all acting alone or in combination.
4 - Poor 20 - 39 Soils are poorly suited. They are severely limited in their agricultural potential because of shallow soil depths; less permeable subsoil; steeper slope; or more clayey or gravelly surface soil textures than Grade 3 soils, as well as poor drainage; greater flood hazards; hummocky micro-relief; salinity; or fair to poor fertility levels, all acting alone or in combination.
5- Very Poor
10 - 19 Soils are very poorly suited for agriculture, are seldom cultivated and aremore commonly used for range, pasture, or woodland.
6 – Non-agricultural
less than 10
Soils are not suited for agriculture at all due to very severe to extreme physicallimitations, or because of urbanization.
Source: USDA-NRCS 2010
SOIL RATING CHART.Storie soil index rating = Faktor A x Faktor B x Faktor C x Faktor X
Faktor A : Rating karakter fisik profil tanah
I Tanah-tanah aluvial muda yang profilnya belum berkembang
100 %
x Fase dangkal (pada material bahan induk yang konsolidated) --- kedalaman 2 feet
50-60
x Fase dangkal (pada material bahan induk yang konsolidated) --- kedalaman 3 feet
70
g Subsoil sangat berkerikil 80-95s Subsoil liat terstrata 80-95
II Tanah-tanah aluvial muda yang profilnya baru-sedikit berkembang
95-100 %
x Fase dangkal (pada material bahan induk yang konsolidated) --- kedalaman 2 feet
50-60
x Fase dangkal (pada material bahan induk yang konsolidated) --- kedalaman 3 feet
70
g Subsoil sangat berkerikil 80-95s Subsoil liat terstrata 80-95Sumber: Storie Index Soil Rating. R.E. Storie. Experiment Station Berkeley, Univ oc
California. 1978
SOIL RATING CHART.Storie soil index rating = Faktor A x Faktor B x Faktor C x
Faktor X
Faktor A : Rating karakter fisik profil tanah
III Tanah-tanah aluvial yang PERKEMBANGAN profilnya moderat (subsoilnya agak padat)
80-95 %
x Fase dangkal (pada material bahan induk yang konsolidated) --- kedalaman 2 feet
40-60
x Fase dangkal (pada material bahan induk yang konsolidated) --- kedalaman 3 feet
60-70
g Subsoil sangat berkerikil 60-90
IV
Tanah-tanah yang profilnya sudah berkembang (Subsoiolnya liat rapat /padat)
40-80 %
V Tanah-tanah yang profilnya mempunyai subsoil cadas (hardpan) pd kedalaman kurang dari 1 foot
5-20 %
Pada kedalaman 1-2 feet 20-30Pada kedalaman 2-3 feet 30-40Pada kedalaman 3-4 feet 40-50Pada kedalaman 4-6 feet 50-80
Sumber: Storie Index Soil Rating. R.E. Storie. Experiment Station Berkeley, Univ oc California. 1978
SOIL RATING CHART.Storie soil index rating = Faktor A x Faktor B x Faktor C x
Faktor XFaktor A : Rating karakter fisik profil tanah
VI
Tanah-tanah yang subsoilhya liat rapat terletak pada bahan induk yang konsolidated (moderat konsolidated)
40-80 %
VII
Tanah-tanah pada dataran upland yang batuan induknya berupa batuan beku yang keras pada kedalaman kurang dari 1 foot
10-30 %
Pada kedalaman 1-2 feet 30-50
Pada kedalaman 2-3 feet 50-70
Pada kedalaman 3-4 feet 70-80
Pada kedalaman 4-6 feet
Pada kedalaman lebih dari 6 feet
80-100
100
Sumber: Storie Index Soil Rating. R.E. Storie. Experiment Station Berkeley, Univ oc California. 1978
SOIL RATING CHART.Storie soil index rating = Faktor A x Faktor B x Faktor C x
Faktor X
VIII Tanah-tanah pada dataran upland yang bahan induknya berupa batuan sedimen yang konsolidated pada kedalaman kurang dari 1 foot
10-30 %
Pada kedalaman 1-2 feet 30-50Pada kedalaman 2-3 feet 50-70
Pada kedalaman 3-4 feet 70-80
Pada kedalaman 4-6 feet
Pada kedalaman lebih dari 6 feet
80-100
100
IX Tanah-tanah pada dataran upland yang bahan induknya berupa material lunak yang konsolidated pada kedalaman kurang dari 1 foot
20-40 %
Pada kedalaman 1-2 feet 40-60Pada kedalaman 2-3 feet 60-80
Pada kedalaman 3-4 feet 80-90Pada kedalaman 4-6 feet
Pada kedalaman lebih dari 6 feet
90-100
100
Sumber: Storie Index Soil Rating. R.E. Storie. Experiment Station Berkeley, Univ oc California. 1978
SOIL RATING CHART.Storie soil index rating = Faktor A x Faktor B x Faktor C x Faktor X
FAKTOR B. RATING BERDASARKAN TEKSTUR TANAH LAPISAN ATAS
Tekstur Medium: Lempung berpasir halus
100%
Lempung 100Lempung debu 100Lempung berpasir 95
Lempung liat berdebu, berkapur
95
Lemp. Liat berdebu, non kapur
90
Lemp. Liat berkapur
95
Lemp. Liat tidak berkapur
85-90
Tekstur halus atau berat
Liat berdebu, sangat berkapur
70-90
Liat berdebu, tidak berkapur
60-70
Liat, sangat berkapur 70-80
Liat tidak berkapur 50-70
Tekstur Kasar atau ringan: Lempung berpasir kasar
90
Pasir berlempung 80
Pasir snagat halus 80
Pasir halus 65Pasir 60Pasir kasar 30-60
Sumber: Storie Index Soil Rating. R.E. Storie. Experiment Station Berkeley, Univ oc California. 1978
SOIL RATING CHART.Storie soil index rating = Faktor A x Faktor B x Faktor C x Faktor X
FAKTOR B. RATING BERDASARKAN TEKSTUR TANAH LAPISAN ATAS
Berkerikil
Lempung berpasir halus berkerikil
70-80
Lempung berkerikil 60-80
Lempung debu berkerikil
60-80
Lempung perbasir berkerikil
50-70
Lemp. Liat berkerikil
60-80
Liat berkerikil 40-70
Pasir berkerikil 20-30
BerbatuLempung berpasir halus berbatu
70-80
Lempung berbatu 60-80
Lempung debu berbatu
60-80
Lempung perbasir berbatu
50-70
Lemp. Liat berbatu 50-80
Liat berbatu 40-70
Pasir berbatu 10-40
Sumber: Storie Index Soil Rating. R.E. Storie. Experiment Station Berkeley, Univ oc California. 1978
SOIL RATING CHART.Storie soil index rating = Faktor A x Faktor B x Faktor C x
Faktor XFAKTOR C. RATING BERDASARKAN KEMIRINGAN
A Hampir datar (kemiringan 0-2%) 100%
AA Agak berombak (kemiringan 0-2%) 95-100
B Agak miring (kemiringan 3-8%) 95-100
BB Berombak (kemiringan 3-8%) 85-100
C Miring (kemiringan 9-15%) 80-95
CC Bergelombang (kemiringan 9-15%) 80-95
D Sangat miring (kemiringan 16-30%) 70-80
DD Berbukit (kemiringan 16-30%) 70-80
E Curam (kemiringan 30-45%) 30-50
F Sangat curam (kemiringan lebih dari 45%)
5-80
Sumber: Storie Index Soil Rating. R.E. Storie. Experiment Station Berkeley, Univ oc California. 1978
SOIL RATING CHART.Storie soil index rating = Faktor A x Faktor B x Faktor C x
Faktor XFAKTOR X. RATING BERDASARKAN FAKTOR LAINNYA, SELAIN FAKTOR A, B, DAN C.
DrainageBaik 100%
Cukup baik 80-90
Tergenang moderat
40-80
Tergenang parah 10-40
Subyek banjir variabel
AlkaliBebas alkali 100%
Sedikit terpengaruh alkali
60-95
Pengaruh moderat 30-60
Pengaruh agak parah
15-30
Pengaruh parah 5-15
Unsur Hara (kesuburan)Tinggi (subur) 100%
Cukup 95-100
Miskin 80-95
Sangat miskin 60-80
Kemasaman
Sesuai dnegan pH 80-95%
Sumber: Storie Index Soil Rating. R.E. Storie. Experiment Station Berkeley, Univ oc California. 1978
SOIL RATING CHART.Storie soil index rating = Faktor A x Faktor B x Faktor C x
Faktor XFAKTOR X. RATING BERDASARKAN FAKTOR LAINNYA, SELAIN FAKTOR A, B, DAN C.
Erosi tanah: Tidak ada – Ringan
100%
Deposisi berbahaya 75-95
Erosi permukaan moderat 80-95
Alur dangkal jarang 70-90
Erosi permukaan moderat dg alur dangkal
60-80
Alur dalam 10-70
Erosi permukana moderat dg alur dalam
10-60
Erosi permukaan parah 50-80
Erosi permukaan parah dg alur dangkal
40-50
Erosi permukaan parah dg alur dalam
10-40
Erosi sangat parah 10-40
Erosi angin moderat 80-95
Erosi angin parah 30-80
Relief mikro:Smooth
100%
Channel 60-95
Hogwallow 60-95
Low hummock 80-95
High hummock 20-60
Dunes 10-40
Sumber: Storie Index Soil Rating. R.E. Storie. Experiment Station Berkeley, Univ oc California. 1978
SOIL RATING CHART.Storie soil index rating = Faktor A x Faktor B x Faktor C x
Faktor X
SOIL GRADING
GRADE 1 (Excelent)
Tanah-tanah yang mempunyai rate 80-100% dan cocok untuk berbagai jenis tanaman, tanaman pangan, perkebunan dan hutan
GRADE 2 (Good)
Tanah-tanah yang mempunyai rate 60-79% dan cocok untuk banyak jenis tanaman. Hasil tanaman umumnya baik hingga sangat baik
GRADE 3 (Fair)
Tanah-tanah yang mempunyai rate 40-59% dan kualitasnya cukup baik, cocok bagi cukup banyak jenis tanaman, Hasil jenis tanaman tertentu cukup baik
GRADE 4 (Poor)
Tanah-tanah yang mempunyai rate 20-39% dan mempunyai peluang terbatas bagi pertanian, misalnya beberapa tanah cocok untuk sawah
GRADE 5 (Very Poor)
Tanah-tanah yang mempunyai rate 10-19% dan penggunaan pertanian snagat terbatas, kendala serius seperti solum dangkal, berbatu, atau alkalis
GRADE 6 (Non-agriculture)
Tanah-tanah yang mempunyai rate kurang dari 10% dan faktor pembatasnya snagat serius, seperti sangat curam, pasang-surut, lembah banjir.
Sumber: Storie Index Soil Rating. R.E. Storie. Experiment Station Berkeley, Univ oc California. 1978
KUALITAS & KARAKTERISTIK LAHAN
"Karakterisik lahan" merupakan atribut lahan yang dapat diukur atau diestimasi. Misalnya: kemiringan,
curah hujan, tekstur tanah, kapasitas air tersedia, biomasa vegetasi, dll.
"Kualitas lahan" adalah kompleks atribut lahan yang mempunyai peranan spesifik dalam menentukan tingkat
kesesuaian lahan untuk suatu penggunaan tertentu. Misalnya: ketersediaan air, resistensi erosi, bahaya
banjir, dan aksesibilitas.
"Kriteria diagnostik" adalah suatu peubah yang mempunyai pengaruh tertentu terhadap hasil (atau
input yang diperlukan ) pada penggunaan tertentu, dan peubah ini juga berfungsi sebagai dasar untuk menilai
kesesuaian suatu bidang lahan bagi penggunaan tertentu.
“Kriteria diagnostik” ini dapat berupa kualitas lahan, karakteristik lahan, atau beberapa karakteristik lahan.
Diunduh dari sumber: http://pinterdw.blogspot.com/2012/01/kualiatas-dan-karakteristik-lahan.html…… 5/11/2012
KUALITAS LAHANHubungan antara kualitas dan karakteristik lahan yang dipakai pada metode evaluasi lahan (Djaenudin et al.
2003)..
Diunduh dari sumber: http://pinterdw.blogspot.com/2012/01/kualiatas-dan-karakteristik-lahan.html…… 5/11/2012
Kualitas Lahan Karakteristik Lahan
Temperatur (tc) Temperatur rata -rata (oC)
Ketersediaan air
(wa)
Curah hujan (mm), Kelembaban (%), Lamanya bulan
kering (bln)
Ketersediaan
oksigen (oa)
Drainase
Keadaan media
perakaran (rc)
Tekstur, Bahan kasar (%), Kedalaman tanah (cm)
Gambut Ketebalan (cm), Ketebalan (cm) jika ada sisipan
bahan mineral/pengkayaan, Kematangan
Retensi hara (nr) KTK liat (cmol/kg), Kejenuhan basa (%), pH , C-
organik (%)
Toksisitas (xc) Salinitas (dS/m)
Sodisitas (xn) Alkalinitas/ESP (%)
Bahaya sulfidik (xs) Bahaya sulfidik (xs) Kedalaman sulfidik (cm)
Bahaya erosi (eh) Lereng (%), Bahaya erosi
Bahaya banjir (fh) Genangan
Penyiapan lahan (lp) Batuan di permukaan (%), Singkapan batuan (%)
LAND USE
Land comprises the physical environment, including climate, relief, soils, hydrology and vegetation, to the extent that these influence potential for land use. It includes the results of past and present
human activity, e.g. reclamation from the sea, vegetation clearance, and also adverse results, e.g. soil salinization. Purely
economic and social characteristics, however, are not included in the concept of land; these form part of the economic and social
context.(sumber: http://www.fao.org/docrep/X5310E/x5310e03.htm)
Land use is the human use of land. Land use involves the management and modification of
natural environment or wilderness into built environment such as fields, pastures, and settlements.
“LAND USE” has also been defined as "the arrangements, activities and inputs people undertake in a certain land cover type to produce, change or maintain
it" (FAO, 1997; FAO/UNEP, 1999)..
Diunduh dari sumber: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_use …… 5/11/2012
LAND UTILIZATION
A land utilization type consists of a set of technical specifications in a given physical, economic and social setting. This may be the current environment or a future Betting modified by major land
improvement e, e.g. an irrigation and drainage scheme. Attributes of land utilization types include data or assumptions on:
1. Produce, including goods (e.g. crops, livestock timber), cervices (e.g. recreational facilities) or other benefits (e.g. wildlife conservation)
2. Market orientation, including whether towards subsistence or commercial production
3. Capital intensity4. Labour intensity5. Power sources (e.g. man's labour, draught animals machinery
using fuels)6. Technical knowledge and attitudes of land users7. Technology employed (e.g. implements and machinery,
fertilizers, livestock breeds, farm transport, methods of timber felling)
8. Infrastructure requirements (e.g. sawmills, tat factories, agricultural advisory services)
9. Size and configuration of land holdings, including whether consolidated or fragmented
10. Land tenure, the legal or customary manner in which rights to land are held, by individuals or groups
11. Income levels, expressed per capita, per unit of production (e.g. farm) or per unit area.
Diunduh dari sumber: http://www.fao.org/docrep/X5310E/x5310e03.htm …… 5/11/2012
Neoclassical Production Theory
The neoclassical production function for a single output and two variable inputs can be written:
y = f(x1,x2)
where y is the quantity of output and xi is the quantity of the ith variable input.
The properties of this production function are specified by assumptions:
1. Xi ≥ 0 and finite (non-negative, real inputs);2. f(X1,X2) is finite, nonnegative, real valued, and
single valued for all possible combinations of X1 and X2;
3. f(X1,X2) is everywhere continuous and everywhere twice continuously differentiable;
4. f(X1,X2) is subject to the "law" of diminishing returns.
Diunduh dari sumber: http://ageconsearch.umn.edu/bitstream/31977/1/rr980059.pdf …… 5/11/2012
INPUT / FAKTOR PRODUKSI
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.csa.com/discoveryguides/envecon/review.php#v2..............
...... 2/10/2012 .
Of the three factors of production in classical economics, land, labor, and capital, land may be the most difficult to define. Does it refer to
just the land itself? Or is land a generic term referring to all natural resources? Air,
sunshine, and water, necessary to make land productive, are all part of the surrounding ecosystems. While ownership of land itself can
easily be demarcated, ownership of mobile, associated resources is trickier.
PROSES PRODUKSI TANAMAN
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.ciesin.org/lw-kmn/yldgap/yldgap.html....................
5/11/2012 .
Many processes affect crop performance : the conservative efficiency of the use of radiation, water and nutrient on crop growth, those contributing to the
soil water balance and those affecting soil fertility. Crop growth has been modelled successfully as a function of environmental
factors using the concept of these conservative efficiencies.Crop production will be described for these levels in terms of potential and
water- or nutrient limited production . The most suitable cereal crop (depending on the agro-ecological conditions wheat, rice, maize, millet or sorghum) is taken as a proxy for a wide range of
crops that could be grown, with yields expressed in 'grain equivalents'. In practice actual production levels may differ from these calculated levels
due to deviant agricultural management. Actual yield is a function of biophysical as well as the socio-economic conditions
Levels of production and required data for its assessment. (Modified from Rabbinge, 1993).Rabbinge, R., 1993. The ecological background in food production . In: Crop protection and
sustainable agriculture. John Wiley and Sons, Chichester (Ciba Foundation Symposium 177), pp. 2-29.
INPUT-OUTPUT PROCESS RELATIONSHIPS
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.fao.org/docrep/w7365e/w7365e08.htm....................
5/11/2012 .
Figure illustrates some differently shaped production functions for the case of a single-variable input production process.
Each graph shows the physical input-output relationship or total physical product curve as the level of the single variable input is increased with all other
input factors held constant. In graphs A and B, the law of diminishing returns (sometimes called the law of variable proportions) prevails - beyond some point, as the level of the variable input increases with no change in the level of other input factors, increases in
output occur at a diminishing rate (the marginal product is decreasing) and eventually, beyond the point of maximum output, output declines in absolute
terms (the marginal product becomes negative).
Stylized Production Functions or Input-Output Relationships for a Single Variable Input
Keterkaitan Faktor Produksi
Diunduh dari Sumber: ocw.usu.ac.id/...PERTANIAN/sep_203_handout_faktor-faktor_prod....................... 5/11/2012 .
Kaitan Faktor Manajemen Dengan Faktor Produksi Lain
Ada empat faktor produksi pertanian yaitu:Alam (lahan, iklim, radiasi matahari, air, udara, dll), Tenaga kerja,
Modal, dan Pengelolaan (manajemen).
Faktor produksi alam dan tenaga kerja sering disebut sebagai faktor produksi primer,
faktor produksi modal dan pengolaan disebut faktor produksi sekunder.
EKSTERNALITAS
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://lecture.ub.ac.id/anggota/marno/activity/16054/ ....................
5/11/2012 .
Dalam proses produksi pertanian, masukan-masukan yang berupa material, tekno¬logi, menejemen dan unsur-unsur agro ekologi akan diproses untuk menghasilkan keluaran-keluaran
yang berupa hasil-hasil tanaman dan ternak.
Hasil-hasil sampingan dan limbah dari proses produksi tersebut dapat berupa hasil sedimen, hasil air, dan bahan-bahan kimia
yang dapat menjadi pencemar lingkungan. Limbah ini biasanya diangkut ke luar dari sistem produksi dan menimbulkan biaya
eksternal dan efek eksternalitas.
Biasanya sistem produksi pertanian di daerah hulu sungai mempunyai efek eksternal yang cukup luas dan akan diderita
oleh masyarakat di daerah bawah.
Dalam suatu daerah aliran sungai yang mempunyai bangunan pengairan seperti bendungan, waduk dan jaringan irigasi, efek eksternalitas tersebut menjadi semakin serius, karena dapat
mengancam kelestarian bangunan-bangunan tersebut.
EKSTERNALITAS
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://dickyhendramulyadi.blog.com/2012/02/04/eksternalitas-
lingkungan/.................... 5/11/2012 .
“Eksternalitas” timbul kalau kegiatan produksi (dan konsumsi) memiliki pengaruh yang tidak diharapkan
(tidak langsung) terhadap produsen dan /atau konsumen lain.
“Eksternalitas positif” terjadi kalau kegiatan yang dilakukan oleh seseorang memberikan manfaat pada
pihak lain tanpa melalui mekanisme pasar. “Eksternalitas negatif” terjadi kalau kegiatan oleh
individu menghasilkan dampak yang merugikan pihak lain.
Pencemaran air sungai atau air sumur dapat ditimbulkan oleh proses produksi pertanian yang
berasal dari penggunaan pestisida dan pupuk.
Adanya eksternalitas menyebabkan terjadinya perbedaan antara manfaat (biaya ) sosial dengan
manfaat (biaya) privat. Perbedaan manfaat (biaya ) ini berkaitan dnegan alokasi sumberdaya yang tidak
efisien. Pihak yang menyebabkan eksternalitas tidak memiliki dorongan untuk menanggung dampak dari
kegiatannya yang diderita oleh pihak lain.
EKSTERNALITAS EROSI TANAH.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://ryniforfun.blogspot.com/2010/03/erosi-tanah-dampaknya-bagi-kehidupan.html.................... 5/11/2012 .
“Erosi tanah” merupakan proses terangkutnya material tanah atau sedimen oleh aliran air yang terjadi di
permukaan tanah.
Kerusakan yang dialami oleh tanah di tempat yang ada erosi a.l.:1. Kehilangan unsur hara dan bahan organik.2. Menurunnya kapasitas infiltrasi (kemampuan tanah
untuk meresapkan air) dan kemampuan tanah menyimpan air.
3. Meningkatnya kepadatan dan ketahanan penetrasi tanah.
4. Berkurangnya kemantapan struktur tanah yang pada akhirnya menyebabkan memburuknya pertumbuhan tanaman dan menurunnya produktifitas.
Eksternalitas lingkungan akibat erosi tanah a.l.:5. Sedimentasi dan pendangkalan waduk6. Tertimbunnya (sedimentasi) jaringan irigasi.7. Memburuknya kualitas air sungai , air sumur, air
permukaan lainnya,8. Kerugian ekosistem perairan.
EKSTERNALITAS
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.tutor2u.net/economics/revision-notes/a2-micro-externalities-overview.html
.................... 16/11/2012 .
The problem is that the way owners use their land may affect others. If they dump garbage on their neighbors' land, clearly they are infringing upon
others' rights. But how about if they burn garbage and the resulting smoke blows onto nearby properties?
What if they pollute a stream and it ends up affecting everyone's water source, or flush sewage away and it ends up in an ecologically stressed bay?
Although the field of economics traditionally likes to deal with items that can be easily demarcated, quantified, and tagged with ownership, this becomes
difficult when dealing with our shared ecosystems. Economics has dealt with this largely by labeling such items externalities, costs
for which the responsible party does not pay. It then becomes up to the community, and usually the government, to decide
how to deal with externalities.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.compilerpress.ca/ElementalEconomics/271%20Environmen
tal/Econ%20271%202.0%20Environmental%20Economics%20b.htm .................... 5/11/2012 .
Until now we have assumed that market price includes or 'internalizes' all relevant costs and benefits. This means the consumer captures all
benefits and the producer pays all the costs. An externality refers to costs and benefits that are not captured by market price for whatever reasons, i.e., they are external to market
price.
EXTERNALITY
In effect, the market demand curve reflects only marginal private benefits (MPB) of consumers but not the external benefits accruing to society. When such external benefits are added, vertically, we derive the marginal social benefit curve (MSB) inclusive of both private and public benefits.
Similarly, the market supply curve reflects only marginal private costs (MPC) but not costs external to the firm’s
accounting, e.g., pollution that society must pay.
When social costs are added, vertically, to the supply curve we derive the marginal social cost (MSC) curve inclusive of
both private and public costs.
EXTERNAL BENEFIT
Diunduh dari Sumber: .................... 5/11/2012 .
EXTERNAL COSTMSC = marginal social cost; MC =
marginal cost
MEC = marginal external costMPC = marginal private cost
MC = MPC
MSC = MC + MEC
EKSTERNAL COST - INEFISIENSIAdanya biaya eksternal mengakibatkan in-
efisiensi dalam proses produksi
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://cnx.org/content/m38612/latest/.................... 5/11/2012 .
A negative externality is a cost associated with an action that is not borne by the person who chooses to take that
action. Inefficiency from Negative Externality
When there is a negative externality, the market equilibrates where the total social marginal cost exceeds the marginal benefit of the last unit of a good and society
is not as well off as it could be if less were produced.
NEGATIVE EXTERNALITIES
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.grin.com/en/doc/230776/a-computable-general-equilibrium-analysis-of-aggregates-materials-
recycling.................... 5/11/2012 .
The failure to internalize the negative externality results in diminished social well-being.
The over-production occurs when the external costs of waste disposal in the community are ignored (not internalized).
In this figure, the private profit- maximizing quantity of landfill deposits produced (Qp ) are greater than the socially optimal production that
occurs when the external costs are included (Q s ). The amount of overproduction is equal to the distance from Qp to Qs . In order to account for the external costs imposed on the community from producing additional (aggregates) deposits into the landfill, it is
important to increase the costs of these deposits from Pp to Ps .
Over-production with a negative externality
Pp
Ps
QpQs
Diunduh dari Sumber: .................... 5/11/2012 .
What happens when one form of government intervention (a Pigouvian tax on the disposal of aggregates) is implemented.
With a Pigouvian tax, the tax is set equal to the marginal external costs at the socially optimal point of production.
In this case, the tax on deposits elevates the price of disposal, leading to a reduction in the amount of deposits.
A reduction of deposits into the local landfill would most likely result from corresponding reductions in the amount of
aggregates waste created in the production process or from finding alternative means of disposal of the waste.
Pigouvian tax applied to a negative externality
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.tcd.ie/Economics/staff/amtthews/FoodPolicy/LectureTopics
/Environment/Lecture20.htm .................... 5/11/2012 .
These environmental costs are externalised, and there is thus divergence between the marginal private cost of
production (to which the producer responds) and the
marginal social cost of production (which
determines the socially optimal level of production).
Over-production of farm output which causes
environmental damage is shown in the following
diagram. The farmer would produce at Q1 where his marginal
private cost equals marginal revenue, although the
socially efficient level of output is Qo which takes
into account the additional social costs of agricultural
production.
. Adverse environmental impacts as negative externalities
Some adverse environmental impacts may be internalised into a farmer's decision-making process, e.g. soil erosion, as this may
impact on the revenue-generating potential of the farm in the future. However, the problem with many environmental impacts is that the
costs are not borne by the producer because there is no mechanism to price the damage being done and require the producer to pay.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0301420704000340
.................... 5/11/2012 .
The paper defines the concept of land degradation and costs and effects of soil erosion. Through the concept of optimal levels of soil erosion, a conceptual model of the social costs of soil degradation is
elaborated. The discussion focuses on the measurement aspects of the economic scarcity of soil in the agriculture sector. Reliable estimates of the true
impacts of soil degradation can only be made if data on marginal damage costs and marginal conservation costs are available.
The different scarcity indicators are evaluated and competitive land rental prices are considered as appropriate in indicating soil scarcity in
agriculture.
Divergence between private and social costs of upland production.
Optimal level of soil quality and soil costs.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0301420704000340 .......
............. 5/11/2012 .
EKONOMI LAHAN
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://ckmurray.blogspot.com/2009/11/some-empirical-support-for-land.html.................... 31/10/2012 .
There has been a paper recently published by Andrew Leigh, Economics Professor at ANU, which empirically estimates the impact
of stamp duties on the housing market.
His main finding is that if stamp duties are raised, house prices will fall by more than in the increase in the tax.
Did you get that? If you increase stamp duty, the total price of housing (price plus stamp duty) will fall. Sellers suffer, buyers benefit. It’s a classic land tax - there is no deadweight loss, as
shown in the figure.
PASAR LAHAN
Diunduh dari Sumber: .................... 31/10/2012 .
How can such a thing occur? For any other product, assuming a competitive market, if you add costs to
production, prices will have to go up (even if quantity sold goes down), or margins will go down (temporarily at
least).
Land, however, has some characteristics that make it quite different to other goods
1. There is a fixed supply (vertical supply curve), and2. It is costless to produce (the producer surplus starts at
a price of zero)
Some would argue that land available to be developed is not in fixed supply, and that town planning regulations can
change that supply. I agree. But these are regulations, they are not market players, and that does not make
supply of land price elastic (although I would suggest the supply curve for serviced residential lots above the
intersection with demand is quite elastic as land parcels are brought to market).
I think both sides would agree that from a theoretical standpoint, the supply curve is vertical below the
intersection with the demand curve.
PASAR LAHAN
Diunduh dari Sumber: .................... 31/10/2012 .
It is the second point that is far more important to understanding the land market. Land itself is costless to produce. That means that the level of demand determines the price of land at any point in time. Not supply, demand. So when you increase a tax on land the total
land and tax price stays constant, but the underlying value of the land declines (as shown by the reduced producer surplus in the figure
above).
I have been quite baffled by the success of Christopher Joye’s argument that the supply of housing is a major factor determining
prices. He maintains two contradictory positions. The first is that we have a land price boom, not a house price boom. The second is that
we should elastify the supply of housing to avoid further unnecessary price increases. Hang on chap. We don’t have a problem supplying housing. Our problem is that we all decided to pay ridiculously high
prices for land.
There are two more characteristics to the land market that make analysis difficult. There is competitive behaviour in the market for buying land, both development sites and serviced land parcels, but
not a competitive market for the sale of land.
RATIONALITAS
Land resources support life, underpin the economies of nations and the livelihoods of people across the world
In many places these resources are being degraded by a series of pressures, and climate change will only make things worse
Unsustainable land uses and practices take place for many different reasons, and may produce irreversible losses in fragile ecosystems
The value of land resources to national development and poverty reduction is often not understood properly
Investments in land, sectors or technologies driven by short-term gains may generate huge negative externalities, leading to serious depreciation of natural capital
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.sbs.utexas.edu/resource/onlinetext/definitions/resources.
htm .................... 31/10/2012 .
"Value" has multiple meanings, and we must get a clear understanding about what we
mean. Monetary or "market" value is determined by exchange of money. If I have a tree and you
want a tree, how much money will I accept and give you my tree in exchange?
The market value, therefore, depends on a tension between one person wanting to retain what they have, and another person wanting
to have what the first person has. The resolution of the tension is achieved when ownership changes simultaneously with a flow of money from the buyer to the seller, and a flow of ownership from the first owner to the
second owner. Market value refers only to what we can obtain
from other humans. What can people have? What can people exchange for money?
Are natural resources always exchangeable for money? Can humans "make" a tree? Who or
what makes it "ownable," or makes it "property"?
APAKAH SUMBERDAYA ALAM ?
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.sbs.utexas.edu/resource/onlinetext/definitions/resources.
htm .................... 31/10/2012 .
Humans make artifacts (production) and can give their time and labor (services).
Humans do not make natural resources, which are unrelated to either human time or human production. Humans may only modify natural
resources. Natural resources are made by Nature and the
energy to make them comes from geochemical, geophysical and solar energy.
Humans cannot make petroleum, which once was living plants that have been processed for millions of years before humans existed, slowly becoming petroleum.
Petroleum is a natural resource that we consider to be "nonrenewable" because it takes too long to make by the
time scale that we can experience. But we can change where petroleum is located, and we can process it into
components parts.
APAKAH SUMBERDAYA ALAM ?
APAKAH SUMBERDAYA ALAM ?
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.sbs.utexas.edu/resource/onlinetext/definitions/resources.htm ....................
31/10/2012 .
So, when we say that petroleum is valuable, we refer only to what we do with it. Humans may own the use of petroleum and control the ways that other
people can use it. Ownership is a concept of humans, who invented laws to formalize the concept.
Groups of humans then agreed to abide by the rules spelled out in the laws. Laws are also artifacts and laws make money "legal tender." If we "own the
right to modify a right to modify a natural resource" then we may exchange our right of modification with other people who give us money.
Money is another human artifact and its value is defined by laws, and ultimately, by many people's opinion about its value. Money cannot be used to make natural resources, but money and laws are used to influence what other
humans do with natural resources.
The effects of soil productivity on food quality, health and environmental quality.
Sumber: http://www.naturewatch.ca/english/wormwatch/about/ecology.html
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.sbs.utexas.edu/resource/onlinetext/definitions/resources.htm ....................
31/10/2012 .
So, the monetary value of natural resources is what
people believe the value to be. Our ignorance can cause the resources to be greatly
undervalued, which is a major problem. We may not consider the "replacement cost" of a limited natural
resource when we establish a monetary value. Humans are
inherently ignorant; we simplify complex things and
processes because we do not understand the "whole"! Natural resources and the
ecosystem processes producing them are the most
complex systems we can imagine -- if, in fact, we
actually can imagine them accurately. Why are natural resources valuable to us?
What do we assume about natural resources and their
"value" when we equate their existence and use with
money?
Ecosystem services keep our habitat comfortable and
livable without the outlay of money. Nature's processes
work for free, powered totally by solar energy. Some
examples are:
Pest control Flood control
Water filtration
Soil fertilization
Food production
Oxygen production
Climate stabilization
Recreation opportunities
APAKAH SUMBERDAYA ALAM ?
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.sbs.utexas.edu/resource/onlinetext/definitions/resources.
htm .................... 31/10/2012 .
These services to some extent also can be achieved by technological means, but at significant monetary investment. Furthermore,
continuing costs are necessary to maintain the services. The ecosystem, however, will maintain these services without cost,
unless we interfere with these processes. In certain instances there is a "loss of opportunity value," such as avoiding building highways or
buildings in such a way that they destroy or damage the ecosystem processes.
The loss of opportunity value is offset by the ecosystem services value they supply.
We may choose one form value over another form of value, such as short term use value for long term service value.
Such a choice resembles a decision to save or invest money in order to allow the investment to grow (increase in monetary value) or to
preserve future options and benefits that may not be fully recognized. Such long range value requires imagination of future needs and
recognition of the benefits of preserving options for those that may be valuable in ways we cannot imagine today.
Such projected values require understanding of management of systems, and possibilities regarding the "replacement value" of a
resource. Making good decisions implies an awareness of many factors and consequences not easily understood today, or a belief that present
people have an obligation to future generations of people to have options, opportunities, similar to those we have today.
APAKAH SUMBERDAYA ALAM ?
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.sbs.utexas.edu/resource/onlinetext/definitions/resources.
htm .................... 31/10/2012 .
Sedimentation in the aquifer cannot be removed, and chemicals flush very slowly through the aquifer. Those
people who "develop" the areas that damage the aquifer do not pay the costs of cleaning the water and keeping it clean. Nor do they pay the cost of sedimentation filling in
the aquifer. This cost is "externalized" by the perpetrators of the
damage since it is paid with tax funds (the public pays) or by the individuals who acquire their water from the aquifer directly. The permanent loss of the capacity of the aquifer
by sedimentation filling it instead of water is paid by all who eventually lose its "free" services or "use potential" of
unknown possibilities in the future.
Externalizing costs while retaining the right to have an income from the development seems unfair, but it has been
declared legal. The developers thereby are subsidized by others who receive no benefits from the ecologically
damaging development. This is a "market failure" for monetized value whereby the
human(s) who benefit do not pay the cost of their benefits.
APAKAH SUMBERDAYA ALAM ?
NRDA : Natural Resources Damage ASSESSMENT
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuation.pdf..................
.. 31/10/2012 .
The NRDA valuation techniques considers five general classes of valuation techniques: 1. Market-based techniques, which rely on historical information on market
prices and transactions to determine resource values; 2. Nonmarket techniques that rely on indirect estimates of resource values; 3. Nonmarket techniques that are based on direct estimates of resource
values; 4. Cross-cutting valuation techniques, which combine elements of one or
more of these methods; and 5. Ecological valuation techniques used in the emerging field of ecological
economics.
Diunduh dari Sumber: . http://www.isric.org/projects/calculating-productivity-loss-due-land-degradation................... 16/11/2012 .
Calculating productivity loss due to land degradation
New method to assess the loss of productivity due to soil degradation.
There is compelling evidence that soils are degrading because of problems such as erosion and soil depletion. However, nobody
knows how serious the problem really is. Estimates of the rate of global soil degradation, the economic
losses, and the impact on food security are extremely variable.
This variability is due to various reasons such as lack of an objective definition of soil degradation and uncertainties in
underlying information. Consequently, soil degradation appears to be underemphasized on policy agendas and the investments required to safeguard future
food security are unknown.
TEKNIK-TEKNIK VALUASI SUMBERDAYA ALAM
Valuation Techniques, Benefit Types, and Selected Case Studies
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
TEKNIK-TEKNIK BERBASIS PASAR
The pioneers of natural and environmental resource valuation relied on
the “law of demand” as a way to measure the market values for natural
resources and environmental amenities. While the same is true today, the
degree of sophistication in the measurement of these values has increased
considerably.
Three market-based techniques that have recorded a significant history of natural and environmental resource
valuations are described here: 1. The market price approach, 2. The appraisal method, and3. The resource replacement
costing.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
PENDEKATAN HARGA PASAR
Demand for natural resources is measured on the assumption that many factors that might influence demand, such as personal income,
the prices of related goods and services, and individual tastes and preferences, remain unchanged during the study period.
Under these assumptions, the estimated demand curve is a systematic measure of how people value the resource.
To illustrate, the figure shows that 20,000 acres of land were sold at a market price of $1500 per acre. In the course of these land
transactions, $30.0 million exchanged hands in the land market, i.e., 20,000 x $1500. Had land become increasingly scarce, this scarcity
would ultimately be reflected in higher land prices. Diunduh dari Sumber:
http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuation.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
Demand, Supply, and Market Valuation
CONCUMER SURPLUS…
Now, consider the total area beneath the demand curve up to 20,000 acres, as defined by A+B. This area measures the value of the resource in terms of the
maximum willingness to pay for the 20,000 acres of land. The total willingness to pay for 20,000 acres is calculated by adding up what
was actually spent in buying the land, A = $30 million, plus the additional triangular area B, which defines consumer surplus.
Consumer surplus is the difference between people’s maximum willingness to pay for 20,000 acres of land (A+B) and what they actually paid (A).
In essence, the area gives a dollar measure of satisfaction that people received from the land, less what they actually pay for it.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
Economic surplusDiunduh dari Sumber:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_surplus.................... 3/10/2012 .
PRODUCER SURPLUS …
Producer surplus and economic rent are two other measures of the
benefits (or damages) associated with natural resources and resource
services.
Producer surplus measures monetary gains from the production of natural resources, which is the difference
between revenues (C+D) and the economic costs of producing these resources (D). Similarly, economic rent
measures monetary gains from using natural resources as factors of production, which is the difference between the actual payments made in using resources and the lowest
payment that their owners would have been willing to accept in supplying these resources or resource services.
Thus, producer surplus refers to the sellers’ gains from trade in the product market, while economic rent measures
the sellers’ gains from trade in the input market.
Accordingly, the use of producer surplus or economic rent in resource valuation problems depends on whether the
natural resource is considered as a final product or as an input in the production of a final product.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
Referring again to Figure 1, producer surplus is shown by the area C, which is bordered by the resource supply
curve and the market price of the resource, P = $1500. This measure reflects changes in the availability of the natural resource. For example, if the natural resource
were damaged, its supply curve would shift leftward and producer surplus would diminish.
A similar description could be given to natural resource damages that result in a reduction in economic rent.
Here, the damages would be incurred by the owners of the resources. As in the case of measuring the consumer
surplus, both producer surplus and economic rent require historical information on the market prices and
quantities of natural resources. In addition, the measures of producer surplus and economic rent require information relating to the economic costs of producing
and/or supplying the resource to the market.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
PRODUCER SURPLUS …
APPRAISAL METHOD…
Appraisal methods are particularly well suited to cases involving natural resources that have been damaged. In the case of land,
for example, the appraiser identifies the fair market value for comparable properties in both the uninjured and injured
conditions.
The fair market value of the resource (land) is roughly defined as the amount a knowledgeable buyer would pay a knowledgeable seller for the resources. This value should reflect, as closely as
possible, the price at which the resource would actually sell in the market place at the time of the injury.
The application of appraisal methods would seem to hold particular promise in DOE natural and environmental resource
planning and guidance. However, the point to keep in mind is that the method is, in fact, quite dependent on the appraiser’s
judgment.
It may be very difficult to identify comparable sales, particularly for properties that are “comparably” injured. In addition, the
types of natural resources to which this method can be applied are limited since many natural and environmental resources are
not traded in markets.
Nevertheless, appraisal methods are applicable to soil and water treatment at federal facilities. Therefore, it is instructive to consider a notable protocol in applying appraisal methods.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
Scott, M.J., et al. 1997. “The Valuation of Ecological Resources and Functions.”
Environmental Management (forthcoming). …
Scott et al. (1997) estimated the “fair market value” associated with shrub-steppe conversions based on
sample data from Benton-Franklin Counties of eastern Washington State. The data were obtained from the Benton County Assessor’s Office and represent sales transactions
in Benton County involving 7700 acres during the 1993- 1994 calendar year.
The sample was selected to ensure the identification of recent patterns in the regional development of shrub-steppe land. Consequently, the sample contained 17
transactions of property for residential and/or commercial development (urban use) and 31 transactions involving
property destined for agricultural development (agricultural use).
The authors categorized the sales of predisposed agricultural land according to whether it was irrigated, or whether it would be used as dry pasture land or dry farm
land. The sampling of real estate transactions found that shrub
steppe for urban development had the highest average value, $9208 per acre. Dry pasture land had the lowest
average value, $67 per acre. Meanwhile, irrigated farm land sold for $1484 per acre.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
RESOURCE REPLACEMENT COST METHOD…
The costs of replacing natural and environmental resources are sometimes a useful way of approximating resource values under specific conditions. The resource
replacement cost method determines damages for natural resources based on the cost to restore,
rehabilitate, or replace the resource or resource services without injury to the level of the resource stock or
service flow. In instances where the underlying resource is not unique and substitutes are readily available, the
application of the replacement cost method is relatively straightforward.
The investigator proceeds by gathering a sample of values for the substitutes from primary or secondary
source information. Based on this sample of cost information, the analyst then prepares an estimate of the
most likely range of expected replacement costs for the underlying resource or service.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
Shechter, M. 1985. “Economic Aspects in the Investigation of Groundwater
Contamination Episodes,” in Ground Water, Volume 23, Number 2, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
Guidance Manual for Minimizing Pollution from Waste Disposal Sites, EPA 600/2-78-142, Washington, D.C. Environmental Science and Technology. 1980.
Groundwater Strategies, Vol. 14, pp. 1030-35.…
Shechter (1985) applied the replacement cost method at the Price Landfill in New Jersey to obtain cost estimates of alternatives to deal
with groundwater contamination.Estimates were based on information obtained from the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (1978) and Environmental Science and Technology (1980). Excluding excavation and reburials, the
estimated costs ranged from $5 million to $8 million (in 1980 dollars) and included containment and management of the plume, along with
the performance of water treatment until the aquifer had been purged of noxious substances.
If excavation and reburial were undertaken as part of the restoration process, the researchers suggest that the period of plume management
and groundwater flow control could be shortened, but that total cost would rise by about $15 million to $18 million.
Other site restoration activities included in their estimation focused on securing alternative sources of water to meet Atlantic City’s water
demand for the foreseeable future. These included cost estimates for the development of a well field to replace four threatened wells,
varying between $6.5 million and $9.3 million. The researchers omitted other administrative costs from consideration in applying the method,
such as the costs of undertaking various federal, state, and local studies on the landfill problem, and the attendant litigation costs that might be
involved. It was believed that these administrative costs had the potential to raise the total cost by another $1.5 million.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
Nonmarket Valuation: Indirect Techniques…
Using market-based techniques to measure the monetary value of natural resources is feasible provided there is
sufficient market data. In many cases, however, market information relating to prices and quantities is not available to estimate the value of the resource or
resource service. In these cases, researchers must employ what are referred to as nonmarket valuation methods.
These methods include indirect techniques that rely on observable behavior in order to deduce how much something is worth to individuals. Value estimates
obtained using indirect nonmarket valuation techniques are conceptually identical to the otherwise unobservable
market value.
The indirect nonmarket valuation techniques considered in this section include the travel cost method, the
random utility method, the hedonic pricing method, and the factor income method.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
TRAVEL COST METHOD..
The travel cost method is popular for describing the demand for the natural resource service(s) and
environmental attributes of specific recreational sites. Designated wilderness areas, ecological parks, fishing
and hunting sites, and scenic sites are examples. People visit such sites from diverse distances or points of origin.
This observed “travel behavior” is then used to evaluate the willingness to pay to visit the site; essentially, the
different travel costs from these diverse points of origin serve as proxies for willingness to pay to visit the site. Intuitively, one would expect that the environmental
attributes of sites influence the use of these sites.
As such, changes in visitation rates may reflect changes in the quality of natural resources particular to the site,
thereby providing an estimate of the value of changes in natural resource and environmental quality.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
The greatest disadvantage of travel cost and other indirect techniques is that they cannot be used unless there is some easily observable behavior that can be used to reveal values. In addition, travel cost models
can be technically and statistically complicated.
Data must be employed to statistically estimate increasingly sophisticated econometric models that
take into account sample selection problems and nonlinear consumer surplus estimates.
In addition, the resulting estimates sometimes have been found to be rather sensitive to arbitrary choices of the functional form of the estimating equation, the
treatment of the value of an individual’s time, the existence of multiple stops during the travel period,
and the recognition of substitute sites.
Finally, the travel cost approach requires that the analyst be in a position to correlate environmental
changes with the behavior of visitors.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
TRAVEL COST METHOD..
. Hedonic Price Method - Amenity Value.
Hedonic pricing is a useful tool in the assessment of amenity value. Early analysis related residential property values to neighborhood amenities.
These models provided an inferential measure of people’s willingness to pay for the amenity under study.
The method is used mostly to estimate the willingness to pay for variations in property values due to the presence or absence of specific environmental
attributes, such as air quality, noise, and panoramic vistas. By comparing the market value of two properties having different degrees of a specific attribute,
analysts extract the implicit value of the attribute to property buyers and sellers.
A variation on the approach is to compare the price of a single piece of property over successive sales. By correcting for other factors that might have influenced
the value of the property, the analyst can isolate the implicit price of an amenity or bundle of amenities that have changed over time.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
The relationship between house price and the presence of trees, in order to gain an awareness of the value of trees in the urban
environment.
.. HEDONIC PRICE FUNCTION
However, the reader should be made aware of caveats pertaining to the values obtained from hedonic price functions. In particular, the resource values that are obtained directly from
the estimated hedonic price function are subject to fairly restrictive assumptions.
It may be necessary to employ additional information from multiple commodity markets relating to the resource under
consideration. Overall, the resulting hedonic price will depend on the availability of market information pertaining to the
resource, and the revelation of buyer and seller preferences through market behavior.
Market data on property sales and characteristics are available through real estate services and municipal sources and can be
readily linked with other secondary data sources.
Despite these positives, a guarded interpretation of the estimated welfare changes is recommended. Estimation and
interpretation of these measures can be complex and the data requirements demanding, and there is a need to control for
many important socio-demographic characteristics.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
Hedonic Price Method - Value of Life..Hedonic pricing methods have also been applied in the estimation
ofeconomic damages associated with occupational health and safety risks and are becoming more widely accepted in the determination of personal injury awards in liability cases.
Application in this branch of the hedonic valuation literature often refers to the “value of life” or the “hedonic value of life.”
Clearly, there is no such thing as a unique value of life. Consequently, meaningful estimates of the hedonic value of life
vary according to the specific context under consideration.
For one, it must be made clear whose value is under consideration: Is it a worker who understands and accepts a
health/safety risk, or is it a passer-by who is unaware of the risk but nevertheless is predisposed to some adverse health impacts?
Moreover, does the hedonic value under consideration concern the prevention of adverse health consequences from a potential accident, or does it concern an after-the-fact compensation to be
given to survivors of an accident?
To better understand the significance of these questions, it is instructive to clarify the concepts that are involved by
distinguishing between two basic hedonic damage values: the insurance value and the deterrence value.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuation.pdf..................
.. 31/10/2012 .
. Adapted from W. Kip Viscusi. 1990. “The Value of Life: Has Voodoo
Economics Come to the Courts?” Journal of Forensic Economics 3(3): 1-15..
Consider a situation in which an ER worker faces a relatively small risk of losing his life, one that is equal to the average hazard posed by a
typical job - an annual risk of death of 1 in 10,000 accidents. Assume that a hedonic wage study of risk preferences across ER workers is
undertaken thereby revealing that such workers are willing to accept an annual wage premium (or income compensation) of $500 in order to
face this risk of death. Together, the presence of the health risk and the hedonic value estimate of the required wage offset establish the “risk-dollar tradeoff” for the typical worker. In other words, they establish a
price for bearing human health risk. In this example, $500 compensation for each risk of 1/10,000 of death implies a total
compensation level per statistical death of $5 million.
Assume next that risk mitigation measures are taken that effectively reduce the chances of an accident by one-half, consistent with an ALARA-calibrated risk involving the potential death of 1 in 20,000 accidents (or what is equivalent to 0.5 in 10,000). Assuming that
workers risk preferences remain unchanged as reflected by the $500 wage offset, the compensation level per statistical death would also be
reduced by one-half: from $5 million to $2.5 million.
As a measure of deterrence value, this $2.5 million reflects the workers’ valuation of riskmitigating measures. In this way, hedonic value
estimates concerning human health and safety would appear to have particular relevance in measuring the benefits of achieving ALARA-type
standards.Diunduh dari Sumber:
http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuation.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
FACTOR INCOME METHOD…The factor income method is used as a means of valuation in
applications where natural resources are used as inputs in the production of other goods and services.
Accordingly, the resulting economic costs of production are an important source of information in applying the factor income
approach. While the method of factor income is not as welldefined or widely referenced as the hedonic price or travel cost methodologies, it is recognized by the U.S. Department of
Interior’s natural resource damage assessment regulations.
There are several types of resources for which the factor income approach is potentially well-suited, including surface water and
groundwater resources, forests, and commercial fisheries. Surface and groundwater resources may be inputs to irrigated agriculture, to manufacturing, or to privately owned municipal
water systems.
The products in these cases (agricultural crops, sawlogs, manufactured goods, and municipal water) may all have market prices. Similarly, commercial fishery resources (fish populations
or stocks) are inputs to the production of a catch of saleable fish. A variation on this theme may be useful for valuing
damages to water resources.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
…FACTOR INCOME APPROACHThere are, however, potential problems in applying the
factor income approach. First, a particular treatment option might not be the
least-cost or optimal response on the part of the water-using entity.
For example, it might be cheaper to change the production process, buy municipal water or otherwise
obtain a different source of water, or make other changes to the equipment or materials used. In this case, changes
in water treatment costs may overstate damages. Second, it is possible that other things may change,
particularly price and output levels. These potential problems can complicate the analysis and
require the researcher to obtain additional technical information concerning the supply and demand of the
underlying resource or resource service.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
Nonmarket Valuation: Contingent Valuation…
Contingent market analysis has estimated a wide variety of use and nonuse values.
The most obvious way to measure nonmarket values is to ask people how much they would be willing to pay for the resource or avoid any damages that might be sustained by the resource. Alternatively, one could ask how much people would be willing
to accept as compensation for damages to the resource.
Measures obtained using this technique rely on people’s hypothetical willingness to pay rather than actual market-information on their behavior: hence, the term contingent
valuation (CV).
The contingent valuation method is a survey-based approach to the valuation of nonmarket goods and services. It uses
questionnaires to elicit information about the preference-related value of the natural resource in question.
The value is said to be contingent upon the existence of a hypothetical market as described in the survey put to
respondents. In principle, contingent valuation could be used to estimate the economic value of almost anything.
By default, it is the only method that holds the promise of measuring nonuse values since all other methods depend on
observing actual behavior associated with the natural resource.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
Contingent valuation surveys …
Contingent valuation surveys may be conducted as face-to-face interviews, telephone interviews, or mail surveys based on a
randomly selected sample or stratified sample of individuals. Face-to-face interviews are the most expensive survey administration
format, but they are generally considered the best, especially if visual material needs to be presented.
The central goal of the survey is to generate data on respondents’ willingness to pay for (or willingness to accept) some program or
plan that will impact their well-being.Each respondent is given information about a particular problem.
Each is then presented with a hypothetical occurrence (e.g., specie endangerment) or a policy action that ensures against the disaster
(e.g., species protection). Each respondent is asked how much he/she would be willing to pay either to avoid the negative
occurrence or bring about the positive occurrence.
The means of payment (i.e., the payment vehicle) can take on any number of different forms, including a direct tax, an income tax, or an access fee. The actual format may take the form of a direct question (“how much?”), a bidding procedure (a ranking of alternatives), or
referenda votes. Using a referendum to elicit values is preferred because it is the one that people are most familiar with.
Resulting data are then analyzed statistically and extrapolated to the population that the sample represents. These responses are gathered
along with socio-demographic information and test statistics required to determine the consistency of responses and the
sensitivity to scope.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
Kopp, R. J., and V. K. Smith. 1992. “Eagle Mine and Idarado.” In Natural
Resource Damage: Law and Economics, K. M. Ward and J. W. Duffield (ed.), John
Wiley and Sons, Inc. New York, pp. 365-388.…
The Eagle Mine case study (Kopp and Smith 1992) exemplifies how contingent valuation methods can be applied in resource damage assessments. Contingent
valuation questions were presented in both an Eagle County and a statewide survey, to elicit respondents’ willingness to pay for the Eagle River cleanup. The Eagle County survey asked respondents about their willingness to make annual
payments over 10 years to clean up 200 waste sites involving current legal action.
Respondents were given brief descriptions of each site. The survey requested each respondent to perform two allocations: 1) specify from a schedule of
percentages the percent of their total bid for all sites that they would like to assign to the seven sites, and 2) identify a most important site among these
seven and the percentage of their bid they would like to have allocated to this one particular site. In addition, respondents were asked to allocate the
percentages of their total bid (for cleanup of all 200 sites) that they associated with use and nonuse values.
The table below details the results of the analysis. In the Eagle County survey, questions were designed so that the willingness to pay estimates included both
use and nonuse values, but allowed for the disaggregation of water and nonwater-based values. In the survey of Colorado residents, no differentiation
between water-based and nonwater-based values was possible, but an allocation between use and nonuse values was made. The table displays the mean estimates of annual willingness to pay derived from each survey. In the
case of Eagle County residents, the analysts multiplied the annual mean willingness-to-pay estimates by growth of 6063 households, carried forward for 10 years, assuming a population growth of 2 percent, and then discounted back to 1985 at 10 percent. The analysts employed a similar aggregation procedure
for the statewide estimates.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
… CONTINGENT VALUATION SURVEY QUESTIONNAIRE
The quality of a contingent valuation survey questionnaire is sensitive to the amount of information that is known beforehand about the way people think
about the underlying natural resource. Certainly, prior information on the ecological attributes or environmental qualities of a particular resource are
critical factors in conducting a successful contingent valuation survey. The key point is that, while all the information necessary for assessing an
individual’s value of the resource is collected in the survey, the analyst must also be able to identify a truly representative sample of well-informed
respondents in order to allow extrapolation to the general subject population. Thus, information on who uses the resource and who knows about it is critical.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuation.pd
f.................... 31/10/2012 .
An individuals total value curve for increments and decrements in the level of provision of an environmental good (after Bradford, 1972).
CROSS-CUTTING METHODS …At the present time, there is considerable professional interest in natural
resource valuations that are based on cross-cutting methods. These valuation techniques combine elements from market-based methods with pre-existing
estimates of natural resource values based on either direct or indirect nonmarket valuation techniques.
The interest in applying crosscutting techniques is motivated by the relative simplicity of using a preexisting study based on an accepted method, as well as the cost considerations in undertaking a fresh natural resource valuation study.
Two cross-cutting resource valuation techniques that have gained increased professional attention due to their simplicity and economy of application are
discussed here: benefit transfer and unit day value.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921800910000339 ....
16/11/2012 .
Conceptual model of winegrowing impacts on ecosystem services.
Benefit Transfer …
Benefit transfer is the use of the estimated values or demand relationship in existing studies to evaluate a site or event for
which no site-specific study is available. Given the expense and time associated with the estimation of values of nonmarket natural resources and services, benefit transfer may be a
reasonable method by which to determine such values under well-defined conditions.
The analyst should consider all available estimates at the onset of the study. Each estimate should be evaluated by comparing the
methodology and results of the original studies that may have been undertaken in selecting one that best matches the policy
study under consideration.
The following criteria have proved to be potentially useful in making this determination:
1. Purpose of original value estimates2. User group(s) considered3. Nature of substitutes in the initial study area4. Geographic area5. Demographic and socio-economic characteristics6. Baseline conditions7. Specific or unique problem that may be influenced by the
magnitude of the estimates8. General attitudes, perceptions, or levels of knowledge9. Omitted variables described above.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuation.pd
f.................... 31/10/2012 .
Ulibarri, C. A. and S. Ghosh. 1995. “Benefit-Transfer Valuation ofEcological Resources.” Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland,
Washington; and Rowe et al. 1980. “An Experiment on the Economic Value of
Visibility.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 1-19. …
Ulibarri and Ghosh (1995) provide a willingness-to-pay estimate to reduce high particulate matter (PM ) levels using the benefit-transfer method. Their application focuses on willingness-to-pay estimates for improved visibility in Benton-Franklin Counties in eastern Washington state. The
authors’ estimates are based on key parameter values derived by Rowe et al. (1980) using a CV survey instrument.
In using the Rowe et al. parameter estimates, the authors note that their commodity specification (quality of visibility) is similar to the one evaluated by Rowe et al. However, to capture the aesthetic realities of the study site, the authors obtained daily observations of PM levels over the period 1990-
1994 from the Benton-Franklin County Clean Air Authority.
In addition, the authors adjusted the various independent variables identified in Rowe et al. using county-level census data on the urban/rural
population, age distribution, ethnicity and gender, and the levels of household income.
Upon making these adjustments, the authors found a measure of the collective willingness to pay across 54,000 household in the Benton-
Franklin area of approximately $364,395 per exceedance day, i.e., a day on which PM levels equal or exceed 150 micrograms per meter, the safe
minimum standards under the Environmental Protection Agency’s National Ambient Air Quality Standards.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
Unit Day Value Method …The unit day value method is similar to the benefit
transfer method, except that an average value is derived based on multiple value estimates from existing studies.
Consequently, the unit day value of the underlying resource reflects a resource having average preference-
related attributes, amenities, or qualities.
Any of the valuation approaches described above can potentially serve as underlying studies from which unit day values are drawn. The application of the unit day
value method may also involve groups of experts attempting to interpret from the existing set of estimates (regardless of method used in the original study) a best
estimate for each of a set of generic types of environmental resources or activities.
The unit day value approach then combines and converts these estimates into a standardized unit of measure that reflects the average value of one unit of the resource on
a per-day basis.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
ECOLOGICAL VALUATION …The conventional natural resource valuation techniques described above have
made little progress in providing a framework to assess the monetary value derived from ecological functions.
One reason is that ecological functions are often overlooked in terms of providing preferencerelated value to humans. Thus, the state of the art in
natural resource valuation is in search of a framework for addressing natural resource values derived from ecological functions.
The emerging field of ecological economics. It then considers gross primary energy valuation and non-glamorous resource
valuation, which are two approaches to measure ecological values in the emerging field of ecological economics.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.fsd.nl/naturevaluation/71609/5/0/30 ........ 16/11/2012 .
Valuing Ecosystem Goods and ServicesThe importance (or ‘value’) of ecosystems is roughly divided into three types:
ecological, socio-cultural and economic value. It is reasoned here that the concept of ecosystem goods and services is inherently anthropocentric: it is the presence of human beings as valuing agents that enables the translation of basic ecological
structures and processes into value-laden entities.
ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS…Although controversial, some resource valuation professionals believe that
changes in the service flows from ecological systems to human society can be valued in monetary terms, given existing knowledge, scientific data, and
estimation techniques. They believe that this would bring such services into management
discussions in terms symmetric with marketed goods and services. As a general matter, this could improve the efficiency with which society uses
resources. One reason for this view is the belief that such pricing would encourage
preservation by making explicit the opportunity cost of development and other economic activities.
These people support the continued refinement and extensions of economic valuation techniques based on people’s preferences over ecological
resources.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
VALUASI ENERGI PRIMER (PRODUKSI PRIMER) BRUTO
Gross Primary Energy Valuation
This procedure has been applied to the valuation of
different wetland types (Constanza et al. 1989). It is
argued that estimates of gross primary production have merit since the entire food chain depends upon this primary production.
The methodology is not without its problems,
however. For instance, it is not well understood whether those species supported by a particular food chain have
equal social values. In general, the embodied
energy approach measures only ecologically based
values.
Unlike an economic valuation approach, values
for such functions and services as storm
protection, aesthetics, and water treatment are completely ignored.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/v
aluation.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
PRODUKSI PRIMERPlants produce plant matter from soil
nutrients, water and carbon dioxide, using the energy of light. It is called primary
production. The diagram shows the carbon flows (is equal to energy flows).
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.seafriends.org.nz/enviro/soil/e
cology.htm.................... 3/10/2012 .
VALUASI SUMBERDAYA EKOLOGI
The need for a framework addressing the value of ecological functions is particularly acute in assessing policy choices that affect the integrity of ecological
systems.
Using the example of wind-blown dust, Ulibarri and Ghosh (1995) suggest that these policy decisions require
a weighting of ecological values based on two related subsets of information: what is valued by humans as an
eco-good (i.e., cleaner air) and what has intrinsic value to the natural eco-system (i.e., vegetative cover).
Using the term ecological resources, the authors focused attention on resource services that are functionally
important to ecosystems but frequently overlooked in terms of providing value to humans.
Such resources have received very little attention relative to their more glamorous cousins, such as endangered
salmon runs or old-growth timber stands.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
The preliminary work undertaken by Scott et al. (1997) considered social values associated with undeveloped shrub-steppe sites; these are arid environs which are traditionally overlooked in land-use decisions.
Relative to the perceived values, the authors attempted applications of the benefit transfer method, the travel cost method, and the method of
hedonic damage-pricing. In order to estimate the intrinsic values of natural ecosystems, they applied a replacement cost methodology
based on the idea of replacing the functions performed by the natural ecosystem through a human engineered analog.
Using these cross-cutting resource valuation techniques, the authors maintained that the economic value of shrub-steppe sites reflects both
their ecological services and recreational uses.
Given the uncertainty that exists as to the social benefits from preserving undeveloped shrub-steppe, they suggest the need for further analysis in order to establish credibility in ecological site
valuations.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
VALUASI SUMBERDAYA EKOLOGI
UNRESOLVED ISSUES…
The following discussion focuses on a series of distinct and challenging
issues in the valuation of natural resources and the environment:
1. The choice of a discount rate in assessing the present and future values of benefits and costs;
2. The individual’s time-preference in deriving benefits over the near term as opposed to later on;
3. The role of equity and fairness in resource valuations involving present and future generations;
4. The conceptual understanding of risk and uncertainty in the valuation of natural resources and the environment; and e) qualification of the measurement errors in the application of the natural resource valuation techniques discussed in this handbook.
Without identifying the potential importance of these factors in the valuation process, the analysis of natural
resource values will remain incomplete.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
Discounting and Time Preference
Discount rates enable one to determine the present value of the benefits and costs associated with the future use
and enjoyment of natural resources. If the analyst of future benefits and costs sets a high discount rate, say 10
percent, the present value of benefits in the distant future becomes insignificant when compared with the
present value of benefits in the near-term future.
For example, using continuous discounting at the rate of 10 percent, the present value of $1000 of benefits
obtained 2 years in the future is $818.73, and in 10 years becomes $367.88, less than half as much. By choosing a lower discount rate, say 2 percent, the analyst reduces
this temporal bias: $1000 of benefits 10 years hence becomes $818.73.
Given the implications of this basic arithmetic on natural resource valuations, it is no wonder there is so much controversy among economists, scientists, and policy makers over the applications of appropriate discount
rates.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
EQUITY AND FAIRNESS
The valuation of natural and environmental resources under ethical
criteria diverges sharply from that of the conventional utilitarian
approach. Land or water values provide some perspective on this.
Assume, for example, that a tract of land is privately owned. Its market price reflects the private benefits that it
can provide. If we assume there exists a well-specified system of property rights over the parcel of land, individual self-interest would lead to a negotiated settlement over the
rights to buy or lease the land according to the marginal values of the land in its various alternative uses. It would
be in the owner’s self-interest to ensure that the land would be allocated to those uses which command highest value before considering other uses which have lower marginal
values.
This typifies economically efficient resource allocations, whereby relatively lower-valued uses are effectively
excluded from consideration. It makes no difference if the land were under public stewardship, because a similar
means of allocation could be achieved by administering an auction for land-use rights, thereby ensuring that the land
was used where it commanded highest value.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
RISIKO & KETIDAK-PASTIAN…
Natural resource and environmental valuation is difficult, even when there is relative certainty over prevailing economic and environmental conditions. In the “real world,” analysts must
confront risky outcomes in proposing environmental decisions or taking regulatory actions under conditions of uncertainty
about the benefits and costs of these actions. Consequently, the notions of risk and uncertainty are related: risk relates to recurring events whose relative frequencies are known from past experience, while uncertainty relates to unique events
whose probabilities can only be subjectively estimated.
Uncertainty over the outcomes of environmental actions and policies can influence the valuation of natural and environmental
resources. For instance, can we say with certainty that the decontamination of DOE land will increase property values? If
not, the analyst may need to introduce probability beliefs into the valuation process.
The presence of risk and uncertainty affects both willingness to pay or willingness to accept compensation, with the extent of
each depending on the degree of economic and environmental uncertainty confronting individuals and on their attitudes towards
risk and uncertainty.
Together, risk and uncertainty affect the valuation of natural and environmental resources and are commonly examined by the
analyst based on extensions of the uncertainty affect the valuation of natural and environmental resources.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
MARGIN OF ERROR: AN ORDER OF MAGNITUDE?
The foregoing discussion points out that monetary valuations involvingnatural resources, human health, and the environment are fraught with
many difficulties. These difficulties are not in the economic theory, but
rather the application of relatively new valuation techniques.
Manypractitioners would agree that considerable progress has been made in
the application of the techniques described in this handbook — an empirical claim that can only be validated through further applications
and comparative analyses. However, in view of the uniqueness of circumstances surrounding each application and study site, it may be
inappropriate to compare the estimated values from one study to another.
For this reason, researchers have attempted to differentiate between the systematic biases in estimated values — ones which can be explained by site or sample characteristics — and their “purely
random” counterparts.
To illustrate, we consider the “margin of error” in value of life estimations investigated by Miller (1990).
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .
NILAI EKONOMI TOTAL
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
LAYANAN (JASA-JASA) EKOSISTEM
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
Ecosystem services
Direct market pricing
Factor Income
Avoided Cost
Replacement cost
Mitigation & restoration Cost
Travel Cost
Contingent Valuation
Benefit transfer
TEV
Total
Provisioning services 32.8 1.4 0.3 1.4 0.3 0.3 4.1 1.4 41.7
Regulating services 2.2 0.8 3.3 2.4 2.2 13.6 24.4
Supporting services 3.3 0.3 4.6 3.3 11.4
Cultural services 3.3 1.6 3.5 5.4 0.3 14.1
Sum of all services 38.2 5.4 3.5 4.1 2.4 1.6 8.4 26.3 1.6 91.6
TEV 0.3 0.5 4.9 2.7 8.4
Total 38.5 5.4 3.5 4.1 2.4 1.6 8.9 31.2 4.3 100.0
Methodologies for Economic Valuation of Drylands (J. Schild, Global Mechanism, 2010)
JASA-JASA PEMBEKALAN (provisioning services)
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
• Price per hectare per year (USD 2007) • Based on 346 data entries
KISARAN NILAI YG SANGAT BESAR
Ecosystem services
No. of data
entries
Average monetary
value
Monetary value range
Minimum Maximum
Provisioning 137 3 711 129 31 653
Regulating 85 7 991 66 38 776
Supporting 42 1 356 160 7 890
Cultural 53 1 505 0.32 10 209
All services 317 14 563 355 88 527
TEV 29 4 155 63 33 195
Total (TEV + all services) 346 18 718 418 121 722
Methodologies for Economic Valuation of Drylands (J. Schild, Global Mechanism, 2010)
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
NILAI EKONOMI TOTAL
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
ADAKAH HARGA KESETIMBANGAN UNTUK ASET-
ASET ALAMI?
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
KESETIMBANGAN
Kurva Permintaan
Kurva Suplai
Kuantitas Keseimbangan
Harga
Kuantitas
1. Ecosystem services should be compensated2. More transparency on opportunities and trade-offs 3. Better estimation of values4. Charge/benefit transfer mechanisms 5. Incentives to cooperate6. Enabling conditions7. Advocacy8. Political willSumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives.
Simone Quatrini. Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October
2010 .
Land ecosystem services
Sustainable land management : SLMWhat drives decisions to use/manage natural resources responsibly and sustainably?Why are the economic benefits of SLM not recognised?
Benefits of SLM are often difficult to specify
Several of these benefits have a public goods character and/or are not traded in a market
Often a mismatch between the stakeholders that pay the (opportunity) costs of maintaining an environmental benefit (e.g. by not converting a forest to cropland) and the beneficiaries of that benefit (e.g. downstream water users benefiting from the regulation of water flows).identification of incentives for SLM
mobilization of financial mechanisms
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
MEMAHAMI HAL YANG TIDAK DIHARAPKAN
Some of the costs of land degradation and benefits of SLM can be unexpected but of great significance
For example, agricultural lands are the source of 30% of GHG emissions, whilst conversely soils have the potential to be a major ‘sink’ for carbon sequestration
Even remote impoverished drylands and fragile ecosystems may be endowed with substantial natural wealth (e.g. Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia: the 10,000 sq km high-altitude salt flat stores more than half of the world’s supply of lithium, but is also a tourist attraction and a natural habitat for many species)
difficult choices and tradeoffs
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
EVL: supporting decision making
1. Reveal the economic costs and benefits of land use conversion, or of different types of land management
2. Show the interests of different groups of stakeholders in land and ecosystem management, thereby providing a basis for conflict resolution and integrated, participatory planning of resource management
3. Calculation of economic efficient land management options
4. Provide the basis for setting up Payment for Ecosystem Services type of schemes, for allocating funds from the beneficiaries of ecosystem services to the providers of these services
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
. Land Quality Indicators for Sustainable Land Management:
Yield Gap P.S. Bindraban, D.M. Jansen, J. Vlaming, J.J.R.
Groot
Sumber: http://www.ciesin.org/lw-kmn/yldgap/yldgap.html .... 3/11/2012 .
Actual yield is a function of biophysical as well as the socio-economic conditions.
Levels of production and required data for its assessment. (Modified from Rabbinge, 1993)
The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB)
• Quantification of global economic benefits of biodiversity
• Costs of biodiversity loss, ecosystem degradation and declines in ecosystem services
TEEB
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
Natural Capital Project (WWF, Stanford)• Integrated Valuation of Ecosystem Services and
Tradeoffs (InVEST)• Development of natural capital database
Land Degradation Assessment in Drylands (LADA)• Development of global indicators for land
degradation• Use of Sustainable Livelihoods Framework• Global baseline for future monitoring
Hein & de Groot• Partial valuation concept focussing on a small
number of ecosystem services providing the bulk of benefits
Global Methodology for Mapping Human Impacts on the Biosphere (GLOBIO)• Analysis of changes in land use and its impact on
ecosystem services
Dynamic Integrated Model of Climate and the Economy (DICE)• Estimated value on the negative effects of global
warming in a number of crucial areassuch as agriculture
INISIATIF LAINNYA YANG RELEVAN
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
OECD Driver-Pressure-State-Impact-Response (DPSIR) Framework• Development of DPSIR Framework for land
degradationOther relevant models:• Landscape Ecological Decision & Evaluation Support
System (LEDESS)• Conversion of Land Use and its Effects (CLUE)
INISIATIF LAINNYA YANG RELEVAN
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
Studies on the costs of land degradation (GM, Berry et al., 2003)• 7 country case studies showed 3 – 7 % loss of
agricultural GDP due to land degradation• Investment required in remedial action an order
of magnitude smaller than the estimated costs to the national economy
Studies on ‘costs of inaction’ (WB, Rydén, 2005)• 25% increase in number of hungry people in
Africa south of the Sahara due to land degradation and agricultural yield changes between 2000 – 2010
Economic returns in success stories (GM, Reij & Steeds, 2003)• 30 % in irrigation, Mali• 20 % in soil and water conservation, Niger• More than 20% in forestry, Ethiopia• 12 % in forestry, Tanzania• Over 40% small-scale irrigation in northern
Nigeria & Komadougou valley, Niger
KAJIAN-KAJIAN SEBELUMNYA
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
Multidimensional - modular approach integrating different methodologiesMultilevel approach • Top-down aggregated economic analysis• National-level sectoral economic impact
assessment• Sub-national local case studies• Assessment of aspects of the relation
between land resources and economic development
TERPADU DAN DINAMIK
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
Applicable to:• Different spatial scales (local,
national, regional, global)• Specific study objectives
Total Economic Value:
KOMPREHENSIF & TER-SEKALA
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
1) Scoping: Identification of scope, location, spatial scale and strategic focus based on stakeholder consultation Preparation of background information on socio-economic and environmental context
2) Assessment of land cover type: Assessment of quantity, spatial distribution & ecological characteristics of land coverMethod (national level): GIS analysis with categorization by agro-ecological zones (governments, FAO) Method (local level): participatory GIS, supplemented with CLUE or LEDESS model
IMPLEMENTASI BERTAHAP
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
3) Analysis of ecosystem services: Analysis of stocks and flows for each land cover category based on 4-fold categories of ecosystem services (MA)Expert judgement and stakeholder consultation on suitable methodologyMethod: Choice from common valuation techniques, including list of indicators for ecosystem services and their calculation
IMPLEMENTASI BERTAHAP
Stated Preference Methods
Revealed Preference Methods
Market Prices
Surrogate Market Approaches
Production Function Approaches
Cost-Based Approaches
MarketPrices
Travel CostMethods
Contingent Valuation
Hedonic Pricing
Conjoint Analysis
Choice Experiments
Change in Production
Mitigative or Avertive
Expenditures
Damage Costs Avoided
Replacement Costs
ecosystem valuation techniques
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
4.) Economic significance of study area: Analysis of role of ecosystem services in community livelihoods (local) and overall economic development (national)Method (local): Secondary statistics & field research Method (macro-economic): National accounting frameworks
5.) Assessment of land degradation: Identification of patterns, pressures, spatial distribution, causes, driving forcesAnalysis of future risks & vulnerabilities Assessment of ‘costs of inaction’Method: GIS analysis including defined set of degradation drivers
6.) Sustainable Land Management: Analysis of options for reducing/removing degradation pressures, including their economic viability and suitable locationsMethod: GIS analysis, perhaps supplemented by models as LEDESS or CLUE
IMPLEMENTASI BERTAHAP
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
EKONOMI SUMBERDAYA LAHAN
Rationale – why shall we care about the value of landMethodologies – which models are currently availableApproach – is there a cost-effective integrated approachCountry case studies – where is being applied
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
Nilai lahan
Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (MAFF)Economic Valuation Study (EVS) of land resources in Cardamom MountainsCapacity building at national level to undertake future valuationsIntegration of study results into national development planning processesIdentification of specific financial opportunities for scaling up SLM investmentsEconomic valuation approach:
1. Assessment of the inherent value of Cambodia’s land resources
2. Assessment of the costs of land degradation
3. Analysis of future risks and vulnerabilities4. Assessment of the costs of inaction5. Identification and assessment of SLM
options6. Policy dialogue with key stakeholders
KAJIAN-KAJIAN NEGARA : Cambodia
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
1. Vice President Office2. Economic Valuation Study (EVS) of land resources 3. Capacity building at national level to undertake future
valuations4. Integration of study results into national development
planning processes5. Identification of specific financial opportunities for scaling
up SLM investments6. Economic valuation approach
KAJIAN-KAJIAN DI NEGARA : Tanzania
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6
October 2010 .
The Relationships among Sustainable Development, Sustainable Land Management, Sustainable Agriculture, and Sustainable Soil
Management. (Redrawn from Dumanski 1997)
Sumber: http://www.agnet.org/library.php
?func=view&style=&type_id=4&id=20120808172707&print=1.... .
2/11/2012
Ministry of Tourism, Environment and Natural Resources (MTENR)Zambia Development Agency (ZDA) – Environmental Council of Zambia (ECZ)Macro-economic valuation of land in most affected regions Capacity building at national level to undertake future valuationsIntegration of economic valuation programme into 6th National Development PlanIdentification of mechanisms and incentives for scaling up SLM investmentsApproach (same as above)
KAJIAN-KAJIAN DI NEGARA : Zambia
Sumber: Economic Valuation of Land (EVL): Rationale and Objectives. Simone Quatrini.
Master’s Course on Integrated Drylands Management, CAREERI, Lanzhou, China. 4-6 October 2010 .
The Land Market and
Natural Resources
Fixed supply of land (to all uses)
The supply of land to all uses is fixedOwners receive economic rent
Land supply to a given useThe supply of land to a given use is upward slopingLand is shifted to its most valuable use (subject to restrictions in zoning laws, etc.)
The economic suitability of a land area for a land use ( Barlowe, 1986, land use capacity) is the
predicted net economic benefit to a specified party (e.g., landowner, land user, society) to be expected
if the land area is dedicated to the use.
The economic value of a land use system implemented on a given land area is not
synonymous with the market value of the land area (land evaluation) although the predicted return to a land unit of various land uses obviously influences
its price.
(In fact, the price should be at least the greatest Net Present Value of the possible land uses).
Renewable and Non-renewable resources
Nonrenewable resources (also known as exhaustible resources) have a finite supply that is depleted as the resource is consumedRenewable resources – can be replenished by producers
Economic suitability of land depends on three types of factors:
1. The in-situ resource quality, i.e. the response of the land to the use without regard to its location (Ricardo). Example: predicted crop yield.
2. The accessibility, and by extension, all costs and benefits associated with the specific location as opposed to the resource quality (von Thünen). Classic example: transportation costs for inputs and products.
3. Other spatial attributes of the site, not including accessibility, for example, size, shape, adjacency, and contiguity. Example: more efficient field work if the parcel is the correct shape and size.
Price of a nonrenewable resource over time
Price changes over time for nonrenewable resource:1. Owner may sell a unit today or sell it later at a higher price2. Owner supplies more today if the expected rate of price
increase is less than the interest rate: 1. leads to lower price today and higher price later
3. Owner supplies less today if the expected rate of price increase exceeds the interest rate:
1. leads to higher price today and lower price later4. In equilibrium – rate of price change = interest rate
BASIC CONCEPTS
OF ECONOMIC
VALUE
NILAI EKONOMI LAHAN
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.ecosystemvaluation.org/1-01.htm.................... 31/10/2012 .
Economic value is one of many possible ways to define and measure value. Although other types of value are often important, economic values are useful to consider when making economic choices – choices that involve tradeoffs in
allocating resources.
\Measures of economic value are based on what people want – their preferences. Economists generally assume that individuals, not the
government, are the best judges of what they want. Thus, the theory of economic valuation is based on individual preferences and choices. People express their preferences through the choices and tradeoffs that they make,
given certain constraints, such as those on income or available time.
The economic value of a particular item, or good, for example a loaf of bread, is measured by the maximum amount of other things that a person is willing to give up to have that loaf of bread. If we simplify our example “economy” so
that the person only has two goods to choose from, bread and pasta, the value of a loaf of bread would be measured by the most pasta that the person is
willing to give up to have one more loaf of bread.
Thus, economic value is measured by the most someone is willing to give up in other goods and services in order to obtain a good, service, or state of the
world. In a market economy, dollars (or some other currency) are a universally accepted measure of economic value, because the number of dollars that a person is willing to pay for something tells how much of all other goods and
services they are willing to give up to get that item.
This is often referred to as “willingness to pay.”
NILAI EKONOMI LAHAN
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.ecosystemvaluation.org/1-01.htm.................... 31/10/2012 .
In general, when the price of a good increases, people will purchase less of that good. This is referred to as the law of demand—people demand less of
something when it is more expensive (assuming prices of other goods and peoples’ incomes have not changed). By relating the quantity demanded and
the price of a good, we can estimate the demand function for that good. From this, we can draw the demand curve, the graphical representation of the
demand function.
It is often incorrectly assumed that a good’s market price measures its economic value. However, the market price only tells us the minimum amount
that people who buy the good are willing to pay for it. When people purchase a marketed good, they compare the amount they would be willing to pay for that good with its market price. They will only purchase the good if their willingness to pay is equal to or greater than the price. Many people are actually willing to
pay more than the market price for a good, and thus their values exceed the market price.
In order to make resource allocation decisions based on economic values, what we really want to measure is the net economic benefit from a good or service. For individuals, this is measured by the amount that people are willing to pay, beyond what they actually pay. Thus, two goods that sell for the same price may have different net benefits. For example, I may have a choice between wheat and multi-grain bread, which both sell for $2.00 per loaf. Because I
prefer multi-grain, I am willing to pay up to $3.00 for a loaf. However, I would only pay $2.50 at the most for the wheat bread. Therefore, the net economic benefit I receive for the multi-grain bread is $1.00, and for the wheat bread is
only $.50.
The economic benefit to individuals is often measured by consumer surplus. This is graphically represented by the area under the demand curve for a good,
above its price.
SURPLUS KONSUMEN LAHAN
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.ecosystemvaluation.org/1-01.htm .................... 31/10/2012 .
The economic benefit to individuals, or consumer surplus, received from a good will change if its price or quality
changes. For example, if the price of a good increases, but people’s willingness to pay remains the same, the benefit received
(maximum willingness to pay minus price) will be less than before. If the quality of a good increases, but price remains
the same, people’s willingness to pay may increase and thus the benefit received will also increase.
SURPLUS KONSUMEN
KURVA PERMINTAAN
Harga Pasar
Harga
Kuantitas
NILAI EKONOMI – HARGA LAHAN
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.ecosystemvaluation.org/1-01.htm .................... 31/10/2012 .
Economic values are also affected by the changes in price or quality of substitute goods or complementary goods . If the price of a substitute
good changes, the economic value for the good in question will change in the same direction. For example, wheat bread is a close substitute for
multi-grain bread. So, if the price of multi-grain bread goes up, while the price of wheat bread remains the same, some people will switch, or substitute, from multi-grain to wheat bread. Therefore, more wheat
bread is demanded and its demand function shifts upward, making the area under it, the consumer surplus, greater.
Similarly, if the price of a complementary good, one that is purchased in conjunction with the good in question, changes, the economic benefit
from the good will change in the opposite direction. For example, if the price of butter increases, people may buy less of both bread and butter. If less bread is demanded, then the demand function shifts downward, and
the area under it, the consumer surplus, decreases. Producers of goods also receive economic benefits, based on the profits they make when selling the good. Economic benefits to producers are measured by producer surplus, the area above the supply curve and
below the market price. The supply function tells how many units of a good producers are willing to produce and sell at a given price. The supply curve is the graphical representation of the supply function.
Because producers would like to sell more at higher prices, the supply curve slopes upward.
If producers receive a higher price than the minimum price they would sell their output for, they receive a benefit from the sale—the producer
surplus. Thus, benefits to producers are similar to benefits to consumers, because they measure the gains to the producer from receiving a price higher than the price they would have been willing to sell the good for.
MANFAAT EKONOMI DARI LAHAN
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.ecosystemvaluation.org/1-01.htm .................... 31/10/2012 .
When measuring economic benefits of a policy or initiative that affects an ecosystem, economists
measure the total net economic benefit. This is the sum of consumer surplus plus producer surplus, less any costs associated with the policy or
initiative.
Harga Pasar
Harga
Surplus Produsen
Kuantitas
Kurva Suplai dan Surplus Produsen
EKONOMI MLAHAN
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://people.hofstra.edu/geotrans/eng/ch6en/conc6en/landeconomics.html..................
.. 31/10/2012 .
Land Economics In a market economy, most of the urban land can be freely sold or purchased. Thus land economics are concerned about how the price of urban land is
established and how this price will influence the nature, pattern and distribution of land uses. The above figure provides some basic relationships between the quantity of land
and its price and assumes that there is a free land market. This market mechanism follows the standard relationship between supply and demand, where an equilibrium price is reached. A quantity of land Q1 would be available at a price of P1. However, what is
particular to cities is that the supply is fixed since there is a limited amount of available land. When land is reasonably available (Q1), the price (P1) will be moderate.
Moving towards the downtown the demand rises, land becomes scarcer (Q2) and its price goes up (P2).
Moving towards the periphery, more land is available, demand drops (Q3), and so does the price (P3).
Not every type of activities is willing to pay a price P1. Some may even need a price lower than P3. High land values impose a more intensive usage of space so a higher number of
activities can benefit from a central location. The logic behind the construction of skyscrapers is therefore obvious and takes place at optimal locations of competition for
land. Different type of activities, each having their own land use, are willing to pay different rents.
SOIL EVALUATION THE ROLE OF SOIL SCIENCE IN LAND EVALUATION…
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://edafologia.ugr.es/comun/congres/cartart.htm....................
31/10/2012 .
A review has been made on the concepts and the methodology of land evaluation.
The results of several evaluation methods have been compared, applying them to a selection of diverse soils. Although the studies on land evaluation have been conducted on a broad diversity of characteristics—not only physical but also social, economic and political—in practice, it is frequent to limit such studies to the physical medium, given the heterogeneity of these projects.
Land evaluation requires a team of multidisciplinary evaluators.
The difficulty of forming these teams makes it common for such studies on land evaluation to be reduced to the analysis of the
physical medium of the soil, creating a certain confusion. Therefore, we propose using the term “soil evaluation” for the
assessment of the soil properties as a phase prior to land evaluation, considering soil properties in their broader sense, both
the intrinsic ones (those of the soil itself: depth, texture, etc.) as well as the extrinsic ones (the soil surface: topography, climate,
hydrology, vegetation, use, etc.).
Soil evaluation would be similar to what today is understood as land evaluation, but excluding all the social, economic and political characteristics which would be covered under the concept of “land
evaluation.”
Environmental indicators of the degree of suitability of soils for agricultural use.…
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://edafologia.ugr.es/comun/congres/cartart.htm.................... 31/10/2012 .
Very favourable Favourable Unfavourable Very unfavourable
Intrinsic properties
Effective depth, cm >120 120-70 70-30 <30
Texture balanced moderate heavy heavy light
Course fragments, % <10 10-30 30-60 >60
Structure f, md, 3, 2 c, 1 sg, 0 ms, 0
Compact, cemen, gr, cm
Absent md, >60 md, >20 or st, >60
st, < 30
Available water, mm >100 100-60 60-20 <20
Internal drainage Without hydro Hydro > 80 cm Hydro > 40 cm Hydro a 0 cm
Permeability, cm/hour >2 2-0.5 0.5-0.1 <0.1
Organic matter, % >5 5-2 2-1 <1
CEC, cmol(+)kg-1 >40 40-20 20-10 <10
Saturation degree, % >75 75-50 50-25 <25
pH 7.3-6.7 6.7-5.5 or 7.3-8.0 5.5-4.5 or 8.0-9.0
<4.5 or >9.0
Carbonates, % <7 7-15 15-25 >25
Salinity, dSm-1 <2 2-6 6-12 >12
Extrinsic properties
Slope, % <4 4-10 10-25 >25
Surface stoniness,% <2 2-20 2-20 >50
Surface rockiness, % <2 2-20 2-20 >50
Flooding, months 0 <1 1-3 >3
Erosion, Tm/ha/year <10 10-20 20-60 >60
Ploughing no problems limited severe very severe
Precipitation, mm >1000 1000-600 600-300 <300
Frost, Tª<0º, months <1 1-3 3-6 >6
Comparisons between the classes defined by the soil-evaluation systems.
LCC, Land Capability Classification; Si, Storie Index; RPI, Riquier Productivity Index; FK, FAO Framework.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://edafologia.ugr.es/comun/congres/cartart.htm....................
31/10/2012 .
LCC SI RPI FK
Intensive soil cultivation I 1 P1 S1
Moderate soil cultivation II 2 P2 S2
Limited soil cultivation III 3 P3
Occasional soil cultivation IV 4 S3
Grazing V, VI 5 P4 N
Forestry VII 6 P5
Natural reserves VIII
… Storie Index (1933).
Diunduh dari Sumber: .................... 31/10/2012 .
This represents the first parametric approach that was developed. It is an index that uses the multiplicative scheme. In addition, it uses intrinsic properties of the soils (genetic profile, parent material, profile depth,
texture, drainage, nutrients, acidity an alkalinity), characteristics of the soil surface (slope and microrelief) and aspects of soil conservation (degree of erosion). The evaluation properties are grouped into four factors that are
quantified in the corresponding tables. The factors are weighed a priori, the more important being related on a scale from 5 to 100 and the less
important factors from 80 to 100.
With this index, general agricultural soil uses can be evaluated (hence it is a soil-capability evaluation method). To formulate the index, the four factors
are multiplied together and the index is expressed as a percentage. Six classes are defined at the degree level, with decreasing values from 1 to 6.
The degrees 1 to 3 are for agricultural use, degree 4 for very limited agricultural use, 5 for pasture and 6 without use. Subdegrees are
established according to limiting factors: “s” for depth, “p” for permeability, “x” for texture, “t “ slope, “d” for drainage and “a” for salts.
It is important to emphasize that this system does not consider climatic characteristics. Thus the evaluation is of the soil itself, valid for comparing
the soils of a certain region with the same type of climate.
This evaluation index was developed for California, and thus application to other regions of the world has involved numerous modifications (in Canada
by Bowser, 1940; in India by Shome and Raychaudhuri, 1960; in tropical countries by Sys and Frankart, 1972; in arid regions by Sys and Verheye,
1974).
Land Capability Classification. …
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://edafologia.ugr.es/comun/congres/cartart.htm....................
31/10/2012 .
This method was established by the Soil Conservation Service de USA according to the system proposed by Klingebiel and
Montgomery (1961) and has been widely used throughout the world with numerous adaptations. It is a categorical system that
uses qualitative criteria.
The inclusion of a soil within a class is made in the inverse manner—that is, without directly analysing its capacity, but rather its degree of limitation with respect to a parameter
according to a concrete use. Some factors that restrict soil use can be used to define the productive capacity (intrinsic: soil depth,
texture, structure, permeability, rockiness, salinity, soil management; extrinsic: temperature and rainfall) and yield loss
(slope of the terrain and degree of erosion). Five systems of permanent agricultural exploitation are considered: permanent soil cultivation, occasional soil cultivation, pasture, woods and natural reserves. This system seeks maximum production with
minimum losses in potential.
Depending on the type of limitation, various subclasses of capacity are established: e, for erosion risks; w, for wetness and
drainage; s, for rooting and tillage limitations resulting from shallowness, drought risk, stoniness, or salinity; c, for climatic
limitations. The capability units represent similar proposals of use and management.
Productivity index of Riquier et al. (FAO, 1970).
Diunduh dari Sumber: .................... 31/10/2012 .
The basic concept of this method is that agricultural-soil productivity, under optimal management conditions, depends on the intrinsic
characteristics. This is a multiplicative parametric method to evaluate soil productivity, from a scheme similar to the Storie index. The concept of productivity is defined as the capacity to produce a certain quantity of harvest per hectare per year, expressed as a percentage of optimal
productivity, which would provide a suitable soil in its first year of cultivation. The introduction of improvement practices leads to a potential productivity or potentiality. The quotient between the
productivity and the potentiality is called the improvement coefficient. The evaluation is made for three general types of use: agricultural crops, cultivation of shallow-rooted plants (pastures), and deep-rooted
plants (fruit trees and forestation). The determining factors of soil depth are: wetness, drainage, effective depth, texture/structure, base saturation of the adsorbent
complex, soluble-salt concentration, organic matter, cation-exchange capacity/nature of the clay and mineral reserves. The parameters of the
soil surface (e.g., slope, erosion, flood tendency, or climate) are not considered
The different parameters are evaluated in tables and, as also occurs in the Storie index, the evaluation factors present different
weights.
Productivity is expressed as the product of all these factors expressed in percentages. Five productivity classes are defined: class P1 = excellent;
class P2 = good, valid for all types of agricultural crops; class P3 = medium, for marginal agricultural use, suitable for non-fruiting trees;
class P4 = poor, for pasture or forestation or recreation; class P5 = very poor or null, soils not adequate for any type of exploitation.
Soil Fertility Capability Classification (FCC). …
Diunduh dari Sumber: .................... 31/10/2012 .
This was proposed by Buol et al., (1975) and modified by Sanchez et al. (1982) to evaluate soil fertility. In this system, three levels
or categories were established.
The first, the type, was determined by the texture of the arable layer, or of the first 20 cm, if this is thinner. Its denomination and range are: S, sandy (sandy and sandy loam); L, loams <35% clay
(excluding sandy and sandy loam); C, clayey > 35% clay; O, organic > 30% organic matter to 50 cm or more.
The type of substrate is the second level and is used when there is a significant textural change in the first 50 cm of the soil. It is expressed with the same letters, adding “R” when a rock or a
hard layer is found within this depth.The third level is comprised of the modifiers, which are the
chemical and physical parameters that negatively influence soil fertility. These are numerous and are represented by lower-case
letters.
In the denomination of the soil class, the principle limitations for use are directly represented. For example, for an Orthic
Solonchak, the FCC class that represents it is LCds, which signifies that it is a soil susceptible to severe erosion (L), limited drainage
(C), dry soil moisture regime (d) and with salinity (s).
KERANGKA EVALUASI LAHAN
Diunduh dari Sumber: .................... 31/10/2012 .
The FAO Framework for Land Evaluation (1976). The FAO Framework for Land Evaluation (FAO 1976 and subsequent
guidelines: for rainfed agriculture, 1983; forestry, 1984; irrigated agriculture, 1985; extensive grazing, 1991) is considered to be a
standard reference system in land evaluation throughout the world (Dent and Young, 1981; van Diepen el al., 1991), and has
been applied both in developed as well as developing countries. This framework is an approach, not a method. It is
designed primarily to provide tools for the formulation of each concrete evaluation. The system is based on the following
concepts: 1. The land is qualified, not only the soil. 2. Land suitability must be defined for a specific soil use (crop and
management). 3. Land evaluation was to take into account both the physical conditions
as well as economic ones; 4. The concept of land evaluation is essentially economic, social and
political. 5. The evaluation requires a comparison between two or more
alternative kinds of use. 6. The evaluation must propose a use that is sustainable. 7. A multidisciplinary approach is required (Purnell, 1979; van Diepen et
al., 1991).
These limiting factors are used to define the third category of the system, which is the subclass. In the symbol of each subclass, the number of limitations involved should be kept to the minimum one letter, or, rarely, two. The limitations proposed include: t,
slope; e, erosion risk; p, depth; s, salinity; d, drainage; c, bioclimatic deficiency; r, rockiness; i, flood risk.
Evaluation of 30 soils by four methods of soil-capability evaluation. …
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://edafologia.ugr.es/comun/congres/cartart.htm....................
31/10/2012 .
LCC, Land Capability Classification; SI, Storie Index; RPI, Riquier Productivity Index; FK, FAO Framework.
Limiting characteristics: e, erosion; d, depth; g, gravels; f, frozen; m, moisture; p, permeability or drainage or flooding; r, rocks or pebbles or stones; s, slope; t, texture or structure. In bold, the results that do not coincide with the evaluations of the other methods; in parenthesis the
results that would correspond with the other methods. In bold and cursive, results that strongly differ from those of the other methods.
Soil type Parent material
LCC SI RPI FK
1 Typic Cryosaprist micaschist IVsp 4ps P5fp-->(P3)
S3sp
2 Typic Xerofluvent alluvial II 2 P2 S2
3 Typic Xerofluvent alluvial I 1 P1 S1
4 Typic Xeropsamment dolomite VIIr 3g-->(6) P5g S3r-->(N)
5 Lithic Xerorthent micaschist VIIs 6dg P5dg Ns
6 Lithic Xerorthent dolomite VIgr 5dgr P5dg-->(P4)
S3d-->(N)
7 Typic Chromoxeret marl II 3p-->(2) P2p S3-->(S2)
8 Calcixerollic Xerochrept
marl IVd 4d P3d S3d
9 Calcixerollic Xerochrept
sandstone VIg 4gd-->(5)
P5g-->(P4) S2-->(N)
10 Calcixerollic Xerochrept
conglomerate III 3d P2-->(P3) S2
Evaluation of 30 soils by four methods of soil-capability evaluation. …
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://edafologia.ugr.es/comun/congres/cartart.htm....................
31/10/2012 .
LCC, Land Capability Classification; SI, Storie Index; RPI, Riquier Productivity Index; FK, FAO Framework.
Limiting characteristics: e, erosion; d, depth; g, gravels; f, frozen; m, moisture; p, permeability or drainage or flooding; r, rocks or pebbles or stones; s, slope; t, texture or structure. In bold, the results that do not coincide with the evaluations of the other methods; in parenthesis the
results that would correspond with the other methods. In bold and cursive, results that strongly differ from those of the other methods.
11 Lithic Xerochrept slate IIId-->(4) 5dr-->(4) P3d S3d
12 Lithic Xerochrept granite IId 3d-->(2) P2dt S2
13 Typic Humaquept micaschist Vp 5p P5p-->(P4) S3pf-->(N)
14 Typic Cryumbrept micaschist IIIs-->(IV) 4s 5fg-->(P3) S3sf
15 Typic Haplumbert micaschist VIIs 5sg-->(6) P5gf Ns
16 Vertic Haplargid andesite Vm 2-->(5) P5m-->(P4)
Nm
17 Petrogypsic Gypsiorthid
silts, gypsum IVdg 5dg-->(4)
P4dg-->(P3)
S3d
18 Lhitic Haploxeroll conglomerate VIIrd 6d P5dg Nd
19 Calcic Haploxeroll micaschist VIIs 4dg-->(6)
P2-->(P5) Ns
20 Typic Haploxeroll sandstone VIIs 5sg-->(6) P2-->(P5) Ns
Evaluation of 30 soils by four methods of soil-capability evaluation. …
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://edafologia.ugr.es/comun/congres/cartart.htm....................
31/10/2012 .
LCC, Land Capability Classification; SI, Storie Index; RPI, Riquier Productivity Index; FK, FAO Framework.
Limiting characteristics: e, erosion; d, depth; g, gravels; f, frozen; m, moisture; p, permeability or drainage or flooding; r, rocks or pebbles or stones; s, slope; t, texture or structure. In bold, the results that do not coincide with the evaluations of the other methods; in parenthesis the
results that would correspond with the other methods. In bold and cursive, results that strongly differ from those of the other methods.
21 Typic Haploxeroll micaschists VIIs 6s P5gf Ns
22 Udic Haplustoll serpentine IIId 3dt P3d S2
23 Mollic Haploxeralf limestone IVd 4d P3d S3d
24 Typic Haploxeralf slate IIIe 3e P2-->(P3) S3e
25 Xerochreptic Haploxeralf
slate IIIs 3se P1-->(P3) S3se
26 Typic Rhodoxeralf conglomerate I 1 P1 S1
27 Calcic Rhodoxeralf conglomerate IIg 1-->(2) P1-->(P2) S2m
28 Mollic Palexeralf limestone IIIr 3t P2t-->(P3) S2
29 Typic Palexerult slate IIIs 3r P2-->(P3) S2
30 Typic Palexerult clays IIes-->(III)
3t P3t S2
NILAI SEWA-EKONOMI
LAHAN
LAND ECONOMIC RENT = Sewa-ekonomi Lahan
Definition of 'Economic Rent'The amount of money an owner of a factor of production must receive in order for that owner to rent out that factor of production. Factors of
production include labor, capital and land.
Sewa-ekonomi “lahan” adalah bagian pembayaran atas “lahan” yang melebihi dari pendapatan yang diterima dari pilihan terbaik
penggunaan lahan yang mungkin dilakukan; dalam hal ini “lahan” dipandang mempunyai beberapa macam kegunaan.
Diunduh dari Sumber: .................... 5/11/2012 .
Land
Ren
t (do
llars
)
Acres of Land
R1
S
D2
D1R2
0
If demand decreases...
DETERMINATION OF LAND RENT
Changes in the demand for land...
rent decreases.
. SEWA-EKONOMI LAHAN - David Ricardo
Economic rent on land is the value of the difference in productivity between a given piece of land and the poorest [and/or most
distant], most costly piece of land producing the same goods (e.g. bushels of wheat) under the same conditions (of labour, capital,
technology, etc.).Productivity is defined here in terms of both:
1. The natural fertility of the soil; and the productivity of the existing technology in utilizing currently available labour and capital;
2. The relative distance from the same market:
3. We are discussing this in terms of regional economics with one market.
4. This part of theorem, on the ‘distance from the market’, did not originate with Ricardo, but rather with a German economist: Johann Heinrich von Thünen (1783- 1850), who noted , some years after the publication of Ricardo’s Principles, that the closer a piece of land was to the urban core the higher was its market rent (reflecting economic rent).
5. You can readily appreciate the significance of this by noting that Toronto rents in the heart of the financial district on Bay or University are higher than those in, say, Orangeville or Bolton to the north of Toronto.
3. Thus productivity differences reflect the cost differences in supplying grain to that one market from that piece of land.
Diunduh dari Sumber: .................... 5/11/2012 .
SEWA-EKONOMI LAHAN - VON THUNEN
Von Thünen mengembangkan teori dasar konsep marginal produktivitas secara matematis, dan menyusun
rumus sewa lahan:
R = Y(p − c) − YFm,
dimana R=sewa LAHAN; Y=hasil per unit tanah; c=pengeluaran produksi per unit komoditas; p=harga pasar per unit komoditas; F=harga pengangkutan; m=jarak ke pasar.
Model Von Thünen untuk lahan pertanian diciptakan dengan asumsi:1. Kota terletak terpusat di dalam keadaan terisolir2. Keadaan terisolir dikelilingi oleh alam liar.3. Lahan benar-benar datar dan tidak memiliki sungai
atau pegunungan.4. Kualitas tanah (kesuburan tanah) dan iklim yang
konsisten.5. Petani di keadaan terisolir mengangkut barang
mereka sendiri ke pasar melalui gerobak melewati tanah langsung ke pusat kota, tidak ada jalan.
6. Petani bersikap rasional untuk memaksimalkan keuntungan.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://id.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_Heinrich_von_Th
%C3%BCnen.................... 5/11/2012 .
KESUBURAN TANAH - PRODUKTIVITAS…
Ksuburan tanah merupakan “kualitas tanah” dalam hal kemampuannya untuk menyediakan
unsur hara yang sesuai, dalam jumlah yang cukup , dalam keseimbangan yang tepat dan lingkungan
yang sesuai untuk pertumbuhan dan produksi spesies tanaman.
Kesuburan tanah merupakan manifestasi dari sifat dan kemampuan tanah.
Produktivitas Tanah merupakan “kemampuan tanah” untuk memproduksi sesuatu spesies
tanaman dengan sistem pengelolaan tertentu. Aspek pengelolaan yang dimaksud misalnya
pengaturan jarak tanaman, pemupukan, pengairan, pemberantasan hama dan penyakit,
dll.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://ielmasblog.blogspot.com/2012/02/kesuburan-tanah-dan-
produktivitasnya.html .................... 5/11/2012 .
PRODUKTIVITAS TANAH
Produktivitas tanah pada dasarnya adalah konsep ekonomi dan bukan sifat tanah, ada tiga hal yang terlibat:
1. Masukan (sistem pengeloalaan khusus), 2. Keluaran (hasil tanaman tertentu), 3. Tipe tanah.
Dengan menetukan biaya dan haraga, keuntungan bersih dapat dihitung dan digunakan sebagai dasar untuk
menentukan nilai lahan, yang penting dalam penaksiran NILAI SEWA-EKONOMI LAHAN.
Ada dua segi penting produktivitas tanah, yaitu:
4. Tanah yang berbeda mempunyai kapasitas yang berbeda untuk menyerap masukan (INPUT) PRODUKSI untuk menghasilkan keuntungan tertinggi.
5. Tanaman yang berbeda mempunyai kapasitas yang berbeda untuk meyerap masukan (input) produksi untuk menghasilkan keuntungan tertinggi pada tipe tanah tertentu.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://ielmasblog.blogspot.com/2012/02/kesuburan-tanah-dan-
produktivitasnya.html .................... 5/11/2012 .
INDEKS PRODUKTIVITAS TANAH
Neill’s (1979) productivity index was modified by Pierce et al. (1983).
The productivity index was based on the use of simple easily measurable soil properties to
predict the effect of soil environment on root growth. This is expressed as follows:
rPI ∑ = S (Ai x Bi x Ci x Di x Ei x Wfi)
i=1
where: PI = productivity index; Ai = Sufficiency for available water capacity for the ith soil layer; Bi = Sufficiency for aeration for the ith soil layer; Ci = Sufficiency for pH for the ith soil layer; Di = Sufficiency for bulk density for the ith soil layer; Ei = Sufficiency for electrical conductivity for the ith soil layer; Wfi = Root weighting factor; r = Number of horizons in the rooting zone.
Other parameters like nutrients, management, climate and genetic factors are presumed to be constant.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.agrosciencejournal.com/public/agro7o3-1.pdf....................
5/11/2012 .
. Neill’s model (1979) did not take care of some soil parameters such as organic carbon, available phosphorus and
exchangeable aluminium that exert key influence on the productivity of tropical soils. Consequently, a modifixation
was carried out to include these three sufficiencies. The modified expressions are as follows:
rP1Mi = ∑ (Ai x Ci x Di x Wfi).
Where: P1Mi = Modified productivity index that involves the exclusion of sufficiencies for aeration and electrical conductivity.
P1M2 = ∑ (Ai x Ci x Di x Ji x Ki x Li x Wfi).
Where: P1M2 = Modified productivity index that involves the inclusion of sufficiencies for organic carbon, available phosphorus
and exchangeable aluminium with simultaneous exclusion of sufficiencies for aeration and electrical conductivity; Ji =
Sufficiency for organic carbon for the ith soil layer; Ki = Sufficiency for available phosphorus for the ith soil layer; Li = Sufficiency for
exchangeable aluminium for the ith soil layer.
The sufficiencies for available water capacity, bulk density, pH and root weighting factor for this modification were as
established by Pierce et al. (1983), while other sufficiencies were established in this research.
Diunduh dari Sumber: .................... 5/11/2012 .
INDEKS PRODUKTIVITAS TANAH
. KECUKUPAN KADAR C-ORGANIK
A sufficiency of 1.0 was assigned fororganic carbon content of 2.0 percent in the study area. It is presumed that soil productivity approaches zero at
organic carbon content of 0.5 or less (Enwexor et al., 1981).
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.agrosciencejournal.com/public/agro7o3-
1.pdf .................... 5/11/2012 .
The rating of organic carbon (Source: Enwezor et al.( 1981 )
Organic carbon content (%) Sufficiency0.50 0.00.65 0.10.80 0.20.95 0.31.10 0.41.25 0.51.40 0.61.55 0.71.70 0.81.85 0.92.0 and above 1.0
Source: Enwezor et al.( 1981 )
Enwezor, W.O. Udo, E.J. and Sobulo, R.A. (1981). Fertility Status and Productivity of acid sands. In: Acid of Southeastern Nigeria. Monograph No. 1 Soil Sci. Soc. of Nigeria 56-73pp.
. KECUKUPAN P-TERSEDIA
In this study, a sufficiency of 1.0 was assigned for
the highest available
phosphorus content of 50 Cmol
kg-1 and it is assumed that soil
productivity declines at available
phosphorus of 15 cmol kg-1 or less (Landon, 1991).
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.agrosciencejournal.com/public/agro7o3-
1.pdf .................... 5/11/2012 .
Sufficiency rating of available phosphorus
Available phosphoru
s
Sufficiency
5 0.110 0.215 0.320 0.1425 0.530 0.635 0.740 0.845 0.950 1.01. Landon, J.R. (eds). (1991). Booker tropical Soil Manuel: A Handbook for Soil
Survey and Agricultural land Evaluation in the Tropics and Sub-tropics. John Wiley and Sons Inc. Third Avenue, New York, U.S.A. 474pp.
. KECUKUPAN Al.dd
The highest sufficiency of 1.0 was assigned for
exchangeable aluminium
concentration of 2.8 cmol kg-1.
Soil productivity approaches zero at exchangeable
aluminium concentration of
14.0 cmol kg-1 and above
(Pratt, 1966;Mclean and
Gilbert, 1927).
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.agrosciencejournal.com/public/agro7o3-
1.pdf .................... 5/11/2012 .
Sufficiency rating of exchangeable aluminium
1. Mclean, F.T. and Gilbert, B.E. (1927). The relative aluminium tolerance of crop plants. Soil Sci. 24: 163-175.
2. Pratt, F.P. (1966) Aluminium. Department of Soil and Plant nutrition, University of California Div. Agric, Sci. 12pp..
Exchangeable aluminium
concentration (cmol kg-1)
Sufficiency
2.8 1.0
5.6 0.8
8.4 0.6
11.2 0.4
14.0 and above 0.2
…1. Bergstrom, J. C., B. L. Dillman, and J. R. Stoll. 1985. “Public Environmental
Amenity Benefits of Private Land: The Case of Prime Agricultural Land.” Southern Journal of Agricultural Economics 17(1):139-149.
2. Bergstrom, J. C., J. R. Stoll, J. P. Titre, and V. L. Wright. 1990. “Economic Value of Wetlands-Based Recreation.” Ecological Economics 2(2):129-147.
3. Crocker, T. D. 1985. “On the Value of the Condition of a Forest Stock.” Land Economics 61(3):244-254.
4. Diamond, D. B., Jr., 1980. “The Relationship Between Amenities and Urban Land Prices.” Land Economics 56(1):21-32.
5. Loomis, J., and Anderson, P. 1992. “Idaho v. Southern Refrigerator.” In Natural Resource Damages: Law and Economics, Ward, K. M. and
6. Duffield, W. J. (ed.), Wiley Law Publications, New York, pp. 389-414.7. Palmquist, R. B., and L. E. Danielson. 1989. “A Hedonic Study of the Effects of
Erosion Control and Drainage on Farmland Values.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 71:55-62.
Diunduh dari Sumber: http://www.hss.energy.gov/sesa/environment/guidance/cercla/valuatio
n.pdf.................... 31/10/2012 .