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Contents Introduction of Metsähallitus Use of decision support tools Experiences

Experiences on the use of decision support tools in participatory forest planning at Metsähallitus Robin Wood conference 11.10. 2013 Veikko Hiltunen, Metsähallitus, Forestry - senior adviser. Contents Introduction of Metsähallitus Use of decision support tools Experiences

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Contents Introduction of Metsähallitus Use of decision support tools Experiences

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  1. Experiences on the use of decisionsupporttools in participatoryforestplanning at MetsähallitusRobin Wood conference 11.10. 2013 Veikko Hiltunen, Metsähallitus, Forestry - senior adviser • Contents • Introduction of Metsähallitus • Use of decisionsupporttools • Experiences • References: - ForestPolicy and Economics 10 (2008) 117-127 - ForestPolicy and Economics 9 (2009) 1-9 - Can. J. For. Res. 37: 853-865 (2007) - Silva Fennica 46(4): 539-554 (2012)

  2. Forest land in commercial forests, 3.6 million ha Poorly productive and non-productive land, 1.5 million ha (excluded from forestry) Protected areas, wilderness reserves and other areas, 4.0 million ha Water areas, 3.4 million haPublic water areas In total12.5 million ha = 1/3 of the country Ownership of forest land in Finland State (Metsähallitus)CompaniesOther Private forest owners Metsähallitus’ lands and waters

  3. History of the use of desionsupport (DS) tools • Participationwasstarted in early 1990’s • Regionalstakeholdergroupsare in the keyrole • Citizenshavealsotheirsays in the planning • Use of decisionsupporttoolsstartedparallelwithparticipation • Evaluation of alternativeplansweresupportedfirst • Withnumerical, cardinalDS methods, likeaplications of AHP and SMART • Wehavenormally5 - 8 differentoptionalplans in comparison • Support for criteriaselection and preferenceelicitingstarted in early 2000’s • OrdinalDS methods, likevotingmethods, wereadapted • Combineduseof ordinal and cardinal DS methodswastaken into use in late 2000’s • In evaluation

  4. Votingtechniquesapplied 1(2) • Plurality voting and approval voting (AV) • Have been used in selection of the decision criteria • objectives (= whatwewant) arediscribed in moredetails in terms of criteria • In deciding the number of the criteria • In selectionbetweencompetitavecriteriacandidates • In plurality voting every voter has one voice that she/he casts to the candidate she/he prefers. The candidate getting most votes is the winner. • In approval voting every voter gives a vote to so many candidates than she/he “approves”. The candidate getting most votes is the winner.

  5. Traditionalvotingtechniquesapplied 2(2) • Borda count and cumulative voting • Have been used in eliciting preferences of stakeholders • (= howimportantaredifferentobjectives in relation to eachothers) • In Borda count method, in a case of n candidates, a voter gives points to the most preferred candidate, n-1 to the second preferred candidate, etc., until one to the least preferred one • In a common application of cumulative voting, a voter distributes 100 points to the candidates in a way she/he prefers • In bothmethods the group’spreferencesconsist of the sum of the individuals’ preferences

  6. Multicriteriadecisionsupport (MCDS) methodsapplied in the evaluation of the alternativeplans • Multicriteria approval (MA) • Approval borders (thresholds)are first decided for every criterion • Plan alternatives are classified as approved or disapproved in regard of every criterion • In holistic evaluation of the alternatives importance order of the criteria is utilised • Provides the rank of the alternatives(= ordinalevaluation) • Interactive utility analysis (IUA) • Structuring the decisionhierarchy of the problem (Valuetreeanalysis) • Deciding the weights of the criteria on eachlevel (by AHP or SMART) • Providescardinal,numericalevaluation of the alternatives • Combination of MA and IUA • Ranking the alternatives by MA • Deeper cardinal analysis with IUA (for best alternatives) • Wehavetestedalsosomeothertechniques, buttheyarenotrepotedhere

  7. Experiences on the use of DS methods 1(2) • Votingmethods • Plurality voting and approval voting (AV) • Both work well in criteria selection, our experiences recommend using AV • Borda count and cumulative voting • Bothwork in preferenceeliciting, ourexperiencesrecommend the use of Borda Count method • MA- method • EvaluationsolutioncanoftenbefoundbyMA-voting, • Example of Kainuu • Ifnot, deeperanalysiscanbecarried out withcardinalmethods • In thatphase, the participantsarewelleducated into the planningproblem, whichhelps in selecting an appropriatemethod and finding a common solution • Allowonlysimplesensitivityanalysis

  8. Example 1. Results of cumulativevoting and Borda Count voting in the planning case of Kainuu • Preference of the criteria in the stakeholder group by different votings •  results differ by methods and by a priori / posteriori eliciting • Cumulative voting, Borda count voting, Borda count voting, • a prioria priori posterior • criterion • - CUT - ECONETWORK - JOBS • - QUAL OF ENW - SCENERY - CUT • - SCENERY - CUT - SCENERY • - JOBS - JOBS - QUAL OF ENW • - ECONETWORK - QUAL OF ENW - ECONETWORK • - TURNOVER - GAME - TURNOVER • - GAME - INCOME - GAME • - INCOME - TURNOVER - INCOME • Importanceorder of the criteria is differentbydifferentmethods and in a priori and posteriorivotings • In groupdiscussions, Borda Count posterioriwasassessed as the mostvalid and to beused in evaluation

  9. Example 2. Results of MA evaluation of the alternativeplans in Kainuu region-Alternative 5 became a clearfavoriteCriteria in theirimportanceorder

  10. Experiences on the use of DS methods 2(2) • Cardinal methods(like IUA) • Provide ”exact” prefenceinformationbetween the alternativeplans and allowsophisticatedsensitivityanalysis • Participantsneed to know and understand the methodswell • An outsider expert / facilitator is generallyneeded for use the method • Combineduse of ordinal and cardinalmethods • The plansarefirstanalysedbyordinalvotingmethods • Deepercardinalanalysis for bestalternativeswithcardinalmethods, like IUA • Example of Western Finland

  11. Example 3. Results of MA evaluation of the alternativeplans Western Finland region • Criteria in their importance order • ECONET RECR JOBS RICH CUT BEAUT INC TURN • Alternative • BASIC - - + - + - + + • ECONO - - + - + - + + • CONS - - + + + - + - • CONS2 + + - + - + - - • REC + + - + - + - - • COMB + + - + - + - - • PROTEC + + - + - + - - • Alternatives (4) – (7) seem to doequallywell

  12. Example 4. Results of IUA evaluation of alternatives in Western Finland regionGlobalpriorities of the alternatives - Alternative 5 carrieshighestutility

  13. Lessons • Multi-goalapproachis the basicmatter in participatoryplanning • Use of DS toolsimproveswork of the participatorygroups and makesitmoreefficient • Mutuallyagreedconcepts pointlessarguingdecreases • Emphasis on elements to bedecided, likepriorities and criteria • The processbecomesmoretransparent and fair • Also the ”shy and silent” becomeequallyheardwith DS tools • Transparencyimprovesunderstanding of otherparticipants’ sights in the groupfacilitatesgroupnegotiations and finding the group’s common decision • However, finaldecisionshave in allourcasesbeen a matter of humanjudgement • Acceptance of the resultshasimproveddue to the applied DS methods

  14. Lessons Behavioralaspectsareimportant • Easiness to use and understandappliedmethodsis especiallyimportant in participatoryapproaches • Manypeoplemoreeasilyaccept a satisfactorysolution the rationale of whichtheycanunderstandthanresults of sophisticatedmethodswhicharetoocomplex for them • Facilitators, visualisation, etc. is needed to interpretcalculations, alternatives, results • Inquiriesneeded in a DS methodshouldnotbetoodifficult • e.g. ifit is hard for stakeholders to express cardinalimportance for the criteria, forcingthem to answercorresponginginquiriesmightlead to biasedresults • Interactivity is a precondition of the effectiveness of mostdecisionsupportprocesses (withanymethod)

  15. Main messages • Generally, keep a participatoryprocess as simple as possible • Usedecisionsupportmethodsadaptively • Apply ”easy” ordinalmethodsfirst, • Cardinal methodsthereafterifnecessary • Votingmethodsproviderelevantsupportalso for evaluation • Votingmethodsarefamiliar to mostparticipantsfromothercontexts (likeelections), easy in theirprinciples, and easy to use • Ifdeeperanalysisareneeded, the votingresultsserve a naturalbasis for cardinalanalysis • Directholisticevaluationseldomprovides the bestsolution

  16. Thankyou !

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