Heterogeneity in citizens’ valuation of ecosystem services resulting from a lagoon public restoration project: Evidence from Tunisia

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Heterogeneity in citizens’ valuation of ecosystem services resulting from a lagoon public restoration project: Evidence from Tunisia
Authors: Missaoui, Sameh, Rahmani, Djamel, Colombo, Sergio, Kallas, Zein, Gil Roig, José María, Faiçal, Akaichi
Publisher Information: 2025.
Publication Year: 2025
Subject Terms: Choice experiment, Bizerte citizens' preferences, Àrees temàtiques de la UPC::Desenvolupament humà i sostenible, Lagoon restoration, Latent heterogeneity, Developing countries
Description: The North African region's lagoon ecosystems face numerous challenges, including urbanization, wastewater pollution, and overexploitation. The negative impact of these challenges on the ecological health of lagoons is evident, leading to socioeconomic consequences that have proven to be detrimental. Therefore, we conducted a choice experiment to assess citizens' preferences for Mediterranean Sea-Connected lagoon restoration in Tunisia, as a case study and their willingness to support the EcoPact endeavor to enhance the prevailing circumstances and halter environmental degradation. This research devised two improvement scenarios and utilized a Latent Class Model to gauge citizens' utility in a lagoon restoration. The results revealed two citizen classes, "Pro-restoration" and "Reluctant to Restore". The majority are pro-restoration citizens willing to voluntarily pay (WTP) up to $165.58 for one-year contribution for a high-impact scenario. The other class, Reluctant to Restore, appear to recognize the value of the project's attributes, as evidenced by their significant WTP for high-level attributes. However, they still prefer to maintain the current situation for other reasons, resulting in an insignificant WTP for the overall high or medium scenario. The results showed that the aggregated benefits is very close to the required project cost for the high-impact scenario, suggesting that the project is almost viable only if the improvement is highly significant. Hence, further evaluation is required to validate these results.
Document Type: Article
File Description: application/pdf
Language: English
Access URL: https://hdl.handle.net/2117/428666
Rights: CC BY
Accession Number: edsair.od......3484..e7c07bbf5bf4b21658718ec5e83445d1
Database: OpenAIRE
Description
Abstract:The North African region's lagoon ecosystems face numerous challenges, including urbanization, wastewater pollution, and overexploitation. The negative impact of these challenges on the ecological health of lagoons is evident, leading to socioeconomic consequences that have proven to be detrimental. Therefore, we conducted a choice experiment to assess citizens' preferences for Mediterranean Sea-Connected lagoon restoration in Tunisia, as a case study and their willingness to support the EcoPact endeavor to enhance the prevailing circumstances and halter environmental degradation. This research devised two improvement scenarios and utilized a Latent Class Model to gauge citizens' utility in a lagoon restoration. The results revealed two citizen classes, "Pro-restoration" and "Reluctant to Restore". The majority are pro-restoration citizens willing to voluntarily pay (WTP) up to $165.58 for one-year contribution for a high-impact scenario. The other class, Reluctant to Restore, appear to recognize the value of the project's attributes, as evidenced by their significant WTP for high-level attributes. However, they still prefer to maintain the current situation for other reasons, resulting in an insignificant WTP for the overall high or medium scenario. The results showed that the aggregated benefits is very close to the required project cost for the high-impact scenario, suggesting that the project is almost viable only if the improvement is highly significant. Hence, further evaluation is required to validate these results.