Few see conservation efforts as
attractive financial opportunities. Yet environmentally minded investors might
be wise to take notice of one small, for-profit company in Australia that,
despite recent setbacks, is out to prove that market forces and conservation are
compatible under the right institutional framework. Earth Sanctuaries, which
develops and manages wildlife preserves in Australia, incorporated in 1988 as a
for-profit company and began growing rapidly, enlisting private shareholders. In
May 2000, Earth Sanctuaries was listed on the Australian Stock Exchange,
proclaiming itself as the world’s first publicly traded company whose "core
business is conservation."
The company actually started in 1969, when a mathematics
professor named John Wamsley purchased a dilapidated dairy farm in the Adelaide
hills of South Australia, with the modest goal of restoring native flora and
fauna. Because nonnative predators such as cats and foxes and pests like rabbits
are largely responsible for Australia’s 23 mammalian extinctions in the past 200
years, Wamsley eradicated them from the property. He then reintroduced woilies,
bilbies, numbats and other native critters, which thrived. Rechristened the
Warrawong Sanctuary, Wamsley’s project grew into a profitable tourist
attraction. His vision for what he could accomplish grew as well.
Wamsley developed a market-based business plan to protect every
representative habitat in Australia and to save threatened and endangered
species. By 2002, with money raised from investors, Earth Sanctuaries had
successfully reintroduced 25 mammal species to their former habitats and had
fenced and eradicated feral, nonnative fauna from more than 10,000 hectares. The
accomplishment, offering benefits to both investors and environmentalists,
fundamentally changed the way that both conservationists and government thought
about endangered species protection.
Shortly after going public, however, Earth Sanctuaries’ share
price tumbled from a listing price of AU$2.50 to a low of less than 20 cents. In
2003, the company was forced to reorganize, focusing on smaller properties
closer to population centers. By late 2005, the founders had left and the
business merged with another, larger company.
Policymakers and investors should understand why Earth
Sanctuaries was forced to reorganize. The primary problem was that it did not
own the rights to its greatest asset–the endangered species–so the market could
not capitalize that value into the share price. Endangered species are what drew
visitors to the properties; they took guided walks and spent money on gifts,
food and lodging. In any other business, asset growth (in this case, increases
in species population) would be capitalized into the market valuation of the
company. But in many countries, it is illegal to trade in endangered species.
Earth Sanctuaries’ market value went south from 2000 to 2005 because it could
not control a crucial component of its most valuable resources–the right to sell
them.
Eco-Equity Many believe laws should remain so, including the head of one
environmental group who, in criticizing Earth Sanctuaries, claimed that species
are "far more likely to be conserved if they haven’t got a value to be flogged
off somewhere." But perhaps we do need a different approach. Since passage of
the U.S. Endangered Species Act in 1973, almost 1,000 species have been listed
as endangered, but only eight have officially recovered; seven went extinct.
Putting a price on animals does, at first glance, seem like a recipe for
disaster. Indeed, it does spell disaster for species that no one owns. Yet when natural
capital is owned, it attains a higher value and spurs greater efforts to protect
it.
Such is the case in New Zealand’s fisheries, where a system of
tradable fishing quotas assigns ownership to a percentage of a total
commercial catch. Therefore, when fish populations increase, so does the annual
tonnage that accrues to each quota. These quotas are among the largest assets
owned by New Zealand’s fishing companies, the value of which is determined by
the expected future health of the fishery. Any short-term gains from
over-harvesting are offset by a long-term devaluation of the quota value.
Both conservationists and investors, whether looking to save the environment
or to put money into eco-friendly businesses, would do well to remember that who
owns what makes all the difference.
Michael De Alessi is director of natural resource policy for the
Los Angeles-based Reason Foundation. |  |
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