32 research outputs found
Private Financing or Not, That is the Question: Lessons from the Light Rail Systems in Spain
The objective of this paper is to analyze if there
is any difference between the light rail systems in Spain
according to whether they have been carried out through
public financing or private financing (totally or partially).
The importance of this study lies in the fact that, for decades,
the public–private partnership has been proposed as
an alternative to public financing of public transport projects
in order to obtain additional financial resources,
reduce the public deficit, and increase efficiency. However,
there are hardly any detailed studies describing how these
initiatives have turned out. Therefore, the present study
analyzes if there is any difference in the main variables
explaining the performance of light rail projects in Spain
depending on their source of funding can be found. For
this, the relationship between variables related to design,
operation and costs of the projects, and the percentage of
private financing were statistically analyzed. As the most
relevant conclusion, we underline the fact that the investment
per passenger increases when financing is completely
private. This would indicate that the most cost-effective
lines, from a social standpoint, were financed totally or
partially by the public administrations, whereas the least
beneficial ones for society were assigned to private enterprises.
This finding provides an advance in the knowledge
of the consequences of private participation in the financing
of public transport projects, indicating, moreover, that
the biggest beneficiaries of this type of projects might be
the construction companies and the politicians involvedThe authors would like to thank the ERDF of
European Union for financial support via project ‘‘Herramienta para
la evaluacio´n previa de infraestructuras de transporte pu´blico’’
(GGI3003IDIE). We also thank to Public Works Agency and
Regional Ministry of Public Works and Housing of the Regional
Government of Andalusia (AOPJA) and the Ministry of Education,
Culture and Sports of the Government of Spain
Global Island Monitoring Scheme (GIMS): a proposal for the long-term coordinated survey and monitoring of native island forest biota
Islands harbour evolutionary and ecologically unique biota, which are currently disproportionately threatened by a multitude of anthropogenic factors, including habitat loss, invasive species and climate change. Native forests on oceanic islands are important refugia for endemic species, many of which are rare and highly threatened. Long-term monitoring schemes for those biota and ecosystems are urgently needed: (i) to provide quantitative baselines for detecting changes within island ecosystems, (ii) to evaluate the effectiveness of conservation and management actions, and (iii) to identify general ecological patterns and processes using multiple island systems as repeated ‘natural experiments’. In this contribution, we call for a Global Island Monitoring Scheme (GIMS) for monitoring the remaining native island forests, using bryophytes, vascular plants, selected groups of arthropods and vertebrates as model taxa. As a basis for the GIMS, we also present new, optimized monitoring protocols for bryophytes and arthropods that were developed based on former standardized inventory protocols. Effective inventorying and monitoring of native island forests will require: (i) permanent plots covering diverse ecological gradients (e.g. elevation, age of terrain, anthropogenic disturbance); (ii) a multiple-taxa approach that is based on standardized and replicable protocols; (iii) a common set of indicator taxa and community properties that are indicative of native island forests’ welfare, building on, and harmonized with existing sampling and monitoring efforts; (iv) capacity building and training of local researchers, collaboration and continuous dialogue with local stakeholders; and (v) long-term commitment by funding agencies to maintain a global network of native island forest monitoring plots
Why Should We Preserve Fishless High Mountain Lakes?
High mountain lakes are originally fishless, although many have had introductions of non-native fish species, predominantly trout, and recently also minnows introduced by fishermen that use them as live bait. The extent of these introductions is general and substantial often involving many lakes over mountain ranges. Predation on native fauna by introduced fish involves profound ecological changes since fish occupy a higher trophic level that was previously inexistent. Fish predation produces a drastic reduction or elimination of autochthonous animal groups, such as amphibians and large macroinvertebrates in the littoral, and crustaceans in the plankton. These strong effects raise concerns for the conservation of high mountain lakes. In terms of individual species, those adapted to live in larger lakes have suffered a higher decrease in the size of their metapopulation. This ecological problem is discussed from a European perspective providing examples from two study areas: the Pyrenees and the Western Italian Alps. Species-specific studies are urgently needed to evaluate the conservation status of the more impacted species, together with conservation measures at continental and regional scales, through regulation, and at local scale, through restoration actions, aimed to stop further invasive species expansions and to restore the present situation. At different high mountain areas of the world, there have been restoration projects aiming to return lakes to their native fish-free status. In these areas autochthonous species that disappeared with the introduction of fish are progressively recovering their initial distribution when nearby fish-free lakes and ponds are available