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case of fi shing licenses, and in other cases they may
relate to the use of the environment as a sink for emis-
sions. For a discussion of licenses and permits to use
natural resources, see A4.18–A4.50.
Environmental payments by governments
A7.128 Payments by government related to envi-
ronmental issues are recorded in a number of places
in GFS and the SNA. Th e treatment largely depends
on how the payments relate to production and con-
sumption and whether they are considered to be cur-
rent or capital in nature.
A7.129 All of the payments considered in this sec-
tion are transfers (see paragraph 3.10). Consequently,
this section does not include payments by govern-
ment for the purchase of goods and services related to
the environment.
Environmental subsidies and similar transfers
A7.130 An environmental subsidy or similar trans-
fer is a transfer that is intended to support activities
that protect the environment or reduce the use and
extraction of natural resources. It includes those
transfers defi ned in GFS as subsidies (25), social ben-
efi ts (27), grants (26), and transfers not elsewhere clas-
sifi ed (282).
A7.131 Subsidies or other transfers should be
treated as environmental when the primary intent
or purpose of the government is that resources
be used for either environmental protection or
resource management purposes. The determina-
tion of primary purpose should not be based on
whether the use of the resources by the recipient
of the transfer results in positive outcomes for the
environment. While it is reasonable to consider
that the purpose of the government in making the
transfer and the purpose of the recipient are the
same, it may not be the case that the expenditure of
the transferred resources results in beneficial envi-
ronmental outcomes even if this was the intent. For
detailed descriptions of the classification of these
transfers, refer to Chapter 6.
A7.132 In principle, a decision as to whether the
primary purpose of a transfer is environmental should
be made for each individual transfer. Th en, once a de-
cision on the primary purpose has been made, the
total value of the transfer is treated as being for that
primary purpose.
A7.133 In practice, information on transfers by
government is usually contained in budget and other
government expenditure data. Generally, these data do
not show individual transactions and more commonly
show information by type of government program,
thus including a large number of individual transfers.
It is usually the case that such programs have multiple
purposes, and hence determining the number and
value of individual transfers that have a primary pur-
pose of environmental protection or resource man-
agement may require additional information.
A7.134 In these situations, it may be necessary to
estimate the share of the value of transfers for a given
government program that refl ects the value of indi-
vidual transfers within the program that have envi-
ronmental protection or resource management as
their primary purpose.