- People
- Certificate
- Reconciliation
- Public Lectures
- LEAP!
-
News
- Overview
-
Program Highlights
- Public Lecture Thursday, Oct 27
- Public Lecture Tues, Sep 27
- Info Sessions August 2022
- Alumni give us your feedback
- Public Lecture Wed, July 27
- Public Lecture Mon, June 20
- Public Lecture Wed, June 15
- Public Lecture Wed, May 25
- Public Lecture Wed, April 20
- Public Lecture March 23
- New Director!
- Public Lecture February 9
- January Newsletter
- SFU Contributes $200,000 Towards Economic Reconciliation; Hires Sxwpilemaát Siyám of the Squamish Nation
- Sponsored Tuition Tides Canada
- Sponsored Tuition 2018 - Pipeline Communities
- Welcome, 2017 SFU CED Cohort!
- SFU CED at EconoUs
- Meet the $12,500 Social Innovation Challenge Winners
- Celebrating Success and Building Solutions Together with Hopeful Economics
- VIDEO: The SFU CED Program Takes You to that Next Level
- SFU Talks CED and Reconciliation
- CED Certificate Program: Changes and Applications for Fall 2020
- Covid-19 Recovery: SFU CED Resources and Supports
- Thank You 2020
- Public Lecture Thursday, Nov 24
- Public Lecture Thursday, Dec 8
- Info Sessions
- Alumni Stories
- Transformative Storytelling
- CED Stories and Research
- Newsletters
- Contact us
x
close
Natural Assets Management in CED with Roy Brooke, Executive Director, Municipal Natural Assets Initiative
Thursday, October 27, 2022
How can local governments understand, value and make informed decisions regarding the benefits they receive from nature and ecosystems? By including natural asset management practices, community services provided by nature — including water quality, waste removal, disaster resilience, and recreation — can be provided in a cost-effective and sustainable manner now and into the future.
F T I