While the term ‘land’ commonly refers only to terrestrial areas, in natural capital accounting terms, it may apply also to areas covered by water.
Stocks (assets)
Flows (benefits)

Area of land, by land use type and/or land cover type

Units

ha

Example approach

Estimate % of total land area within each land use and/or land cover type, multiplied by total land area

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Internal records

Notes

See Help & Glossary for land use and land cover classifications.

Land cover type as referred to in the SEEA-CF 2014 (para. 5.258) refers to the FAO international standard classification system, the Land Cover Classification System, version 3 (LCCS 3). Local land cover type classifications can be used instead, but should ideally be cross-referenced to LCCS 3. LCCS 3 implements an international classification standard, ISO 19144-2:2012 Geographic information – Classification systems — Part 2: Land Cover Meta Language (LCML), that allows different land cover classification systems to be compared and integrated.

Areas of land or inland waters which are significant for cultural reasons could potentially be recorded under SEEA land use types 1.6 or 2.3 (other uses of land/inland waters not elsewhere classified) or (if applicable) as a separate local land cover type, distinct from non-culturally significant areas of the same land cover type.

Units

ha

Example approach

Estimate area of each land use and/or land cover type using national/state/territory map data

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references
Notes

See Help & Glossary for land use and land cover classifications.

Land cover type as referred to in the SEEA-CF 2014 (para. 5.258) refers to the FAO international standard classification system, the Land Cover Classification System, version 3 (LCCS 3). Local land cover type classifications can be used instead, but should ideally be cross-referenced to LCCS 3. LCCS 3 implements an international classification standard, ISO 19144-2:2012 Geographic information – Classification systems — Part 2: Land Cover Meta Language (LCML), that allows different land cover classification systems to be compared and integrated.

Areas of land or inland waters which are significant for cultural reasons could potentially be recorded under SEEA land use types 1.6 or 2.3 (other uses of land/inland waters not elsewhere classified) or (if applicable) as a separate local land cover type, distinct from non-culturally significant areas of the same land cover type.

Units

ha

Example approach

Measure area of each land use and/or land cover type using remote sensing in combination with ground-truthing for detailed site mapping

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Notes

See Help & Glossary for land use and land cover classifications.

Land cover type as referred to in the SEEA-CF 2014 (para. 5.258) refers to the FAO international standard classification system, the Land Cover Classification System, version 3 (LCCS 3). Local land cover type classifications can be used instead, but should ideally be cross-referenced to LCCS 3. LCCS 3 implements an international classification standard, ISO 19144-2:2012 Geographic information – Classification systems — Part 2: Land Cover Meta Language (LCML), that allows different land cover classification systems to be compared and integrated.

Areas of land or inland waters which are significant for cultural reasons could potentially be recorded under SEEA land use types 1.6 or 2.3 (other uses of land/inland waters not elsewhere classified) or (if applicable) as a separate local land cover type, distinct from non-culturally significant areas of the same land cover type.

Quality of environmental asset

Units

Various

Example approach

Estimate based on own judgement

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Internal records

Notes

The ‘quality’ of land as an environmental asset includes its location and the uses for which it is suitable or permitted. These in turn determine its monetary value.

Units

Various

Example approach

Estimate based on third-party professional estimates

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

In Australia, estimates of the value (from which ‘quality’ can be inferred) of commercial and rural land can be obtained from state and territory Valuers-General offices. The value of residential land in Australian national land accounts is estimated based on the ABS Residential Property Price Index (RPPI) value of residential dwelling stock, which includes the value of land, minus the capital estimates of the value of dwellings derived by the Perpetual Inventory Method (see Australian System of National Accounts: Concepts, Sources and Methods, 2020-2021 financial year). Data on land asset value in Australia (for whole states and territories only) is available from the EEA Dashboard.

Notes

The ‘quality’ of land as an environmental asset includes its location and the uses for which it is suitable or permitted. These in turn determine its monetary value.

Units

Various

Example approach

Estimate based on detailed site-specific surveys and/or modelling

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

On-site data from site surveys and sampling

Notes

The ‘quality’ of land as an environmental asset includes its location and the uses for which it is suitable or permitted. These in turn determine its monetary value.

Land – Physical flows – N/A

Units

N/A

Example approach

N/A

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

N/A

Notes

No metrics are provided here because land does not provide a physical flow of natural inputs.

Units

N/A

Example approach

N/A

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

N/A

Notes

No metrics are provided here because land does not provide a physical flow of natural inputs.

Units

N/A

Example approach

N/A

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

N/A

Notes

No metrics are provided here because land does not provide a physical flow of natural inputs.

Land – Monetary flows – N/A

Units

N/A

Example approach

N/A

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

N/A

Notes

No metrics are provided here because land does not provide a monetary flow of natural inputs.

Units

N/A

Example approach

N/A

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

N/A

Notes

No metrics are provided here because land does not provide a monetary flow of natural inputs.

Units

N/A

Example approach

N/A

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

N/A

Notes

No metrics are provided here because land does not provide a monetary flow of natural inputs.

Last updated: 25th July 2023