A new resource has been uploaded to the Learn section on the CaBA website to provide guidance and suggestions for capturing more meaningful metrics on engagement (citizen science, volunteering etc) and the social and economic benefits of work by CaBA partnerships. We know that many engagement outcomes clearly improve people’s lives but it is often hard to quantify, particularly in monetary terms.
Take a look here at some suggested approaches.
The purpose of this resource is to provide guidance and suggestions for capturing more meaningful metrics on engagement (citizen science, volunteering etc) and the social and economic benefits of work by CaBA partnerships.
The Catchment Based Approach aims to deliver a range of environmental, social and economic benefits, and aims to protect our precious water environments for the benefit of us all. Hence a key goal of CaBA is to improve people’s lives (economists call this ‘improving wellbeing or social welfare’).
We are interested in benefits which have a clear monetary value (e.g. the reduced cost of water treatment) as well as the wider economic, social and other benefits that result from improvements to the water environment.
Many benefits fall under multiple headings; for example farmer uptake of nutrient management plans may result in financial cost savings for the farmer (economic), improved water quality (environmental), more angling (physical and mental health benefits), more jobs (social benefits) and more income for the businesses that supply anglers (economic).
The Catchment Based Approach, reflected in the annual reporting process, is to collect information on all types of environmental, social, economic and other benefits. In this guide, we do not separate benefits into these different categories since they all contribute to improving people’s lives, or ‘improved social welfare’, to use economic jargon.
CaBA may improve people’s lives in many ways including:-
- Increasing incomes for people/business from paid work, contracts, business and services
- Reducing costs for business e.g. reduced water treatment costs, cheaper flood risk insurance, more resource-efficient farm businesses
- Providing more or improved employment opportunities
- Reducing the risk of flooding (financial, social and health benefits)
- Capital gains e.g. higher house prices resulting from environmental improvement
- Increasing carbon sequestration – thus reducing future climate change
- Environmental improvements – a better place to live where people and wildlife flourish
- Provision of skills and training – leading to employment or wellbeing benefits
- Participating in environmental improvement through volunteering and citizen science
- More/improved recreation
- More/improved social interaction