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March 2010 Common Ground

 

Smart Shopping:
A New Strategic Conservation Tool

 

If you’ve ever studied a crowded supermarket shelf—Which brand? Size? Price?—you know the challenge of comparison shopping. So do conservationists. From state governments to local land trusts, cash-strapped conservationists must choose which of America’s special places to save. Today, with tight budgets, those choices are tougher than ever.

But we’ve developed a tool that can help.  Our strategic conservation team, working with a resource economist, has crafted a computer model that enables conservationists to shop smart—by evaluating potential conservation projects for best dollar value.

“We all want the most bang for our buck, and conservation is no different,” says Will Allen, our director of strategic conservation. “Are you spending too much money on expensive projects, or are you getting real value? With public budgets so tight, government officials must be able to justify how they’re spending these dollars wisely.”

The new model “optimizes” conservation decisions. It works by turning raw data about conservation decisions—project costs, benefits (scored numerically), budget constraints—into a user-friendly spreadsheet yielding comparison shopping conclusions.  Using the model, for example, a government agency can quickly compare the relative value of all possible projects and then make, and justify, an informed choice.

On the ground, the Baltimore County Agricultural Land Preservation Program in Maryland has already used our optimization model to save 22% more farmland than it would have otherwise over the past three years. Every year since 2007, Baltimore County has applied the optimization model to choose which agricultural lands to save. Optimization has helped the county protect an additional 680 acres of high-quality agricultural land, at a cost savings of roughly $5.4 million—a return on investment over three years of more than 60 to 1. In other words, for every $1 that Baltimore County spent using the optimization model, it has gained more than $60 in conservation benefits.

That's some successful shopping. In fact, for The Conservation Fund—an organization dedicated to saving land in ways that work environmentally and economically—it’s optimal.

For more about our strategic conservation work, click here

25 in 2010

The Conservation Fund turns 25 in 2010. Growing from a good idea into a conservation leader, we’ve  touched communities coast to coast. Visit our website to learn more about our work, including the ways we’ve touched these 5 communities:

 

  • Norwalk, CT: We made a new waterfront park possible.
    Learn more

 

  • Idaho Falls, ID: We saved prime fishing and boating spots along the Snake River.  
    Learn more

 

  • Lansing, MI: We're keeping the Sturgeon River a wild ride.
    Learn more

 

  • Milwaukee, WI: We're keeping floodwaters at bay.
    Learn more

 

  • Kona, Hawaii: We've helped Kona plan green.
    Learn more

 
 
 
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