Enabling Environment is as real as it gets. The global commons are
jointly owned and their inhabitants are jointly obligated to ensure
their preservation. In the face of protracted negotiations, convoluted
documentation, discord, and incessant bickering among scientists,
activists, pressure groups of various hues, politicians and negotiators,
very often the people on the ground are ignored or taken for granted. In
the meantime, life meanders along. It is these 'everyday individuals'
who make consumption-related choices on their lifestyles, travel or on
preferring certain products or services over others. Enabling
Environment puts the individual front and center.
Ecosystem services need to be recognized, appropriately priced and the
costs allocated to the agents concerned. Enabling Environment is about
defining economic and non-economic incentive structures and utilizing
them to arrive at pro-environmental outcomes. This collection of
articles illustrates the use of existing social, economic and regulatory
structures, and the financial architecture and instruments, suitably
modified or extended, to help internalize the environmental externality.