Résumé
The European Union designates 26% of its landmass as protected areas, limiting economic development for biodiversity. We use the staggered introduction of protected areas between 1985 and 2019 to study the selection of protected land and the causal eect of protection on vegetation cover and nightlights. We nd no meaningful impacts on either outcome across four decades, countries, protection cohorts, or land characteristics. These null eects are consistent with the political economy of EU land protection: weak incentives to internalize biodiversity gains, green-glow motives, and area-based targets shape local siting and stringency choices. In practice, strict protection is applied where development pressure is low{so that protection has little bite|while in high-pressure regions, protection is typically weak, imposing only limited constraints on economic activity.
Mots-clés
Land protection; protected areas; conservation; biodiversity, deforestation; vegetation; cover; nightlights; staggered dierence-in-dierences; Europe;
Codes JEL
- Q23: Forestry
- Q24: Land
- Q57: Ecological Economics: Ecosystem Services • Biodiversity Conservation • Bioeconomics • Industrial Ecology
- R14: Land Use Patterns
Référence
Tristan Earle Grupp, Prakash Mishra, Mathias Reynaert et Arthur Van Benthem, « An Evaluation of Protected Area Policies in the European Union », TSE Working Paper, n° 26-1703, janvier 2026.
Voir aussi
Publié dans
TSE Working Paper, n° 26-1703, janvier 2026
