United States Several studies have examined the economic impacts and activity created by restoration work in numbers. These have typically been for individual projects, e.g. a large hazardous fuels reduction contract in
Arizona, or a $113 million
mine reclamation project in
Montana that was estimated to generate a total of 3,563
full-time equivalent (FTE) positions. A study looking at the economic out of a restoration program across an entire county (
Humboldt County, California) determined that the $12.5 million invested in the program in 2002 supported 300 direct jobs that year. A study that looked at investments in restoration projects through both federal agencies and
nongovernmental organizations across the state of Oregon found that restoration investments have similar economic and employment impacts as other public infrastructure projects such as road building. Per million invested, 15-24 jobs were created, and each invested dollar generated an additional 1.4 to 2.4 dollars in economic activity as it cycled through the economy, depending on the specific type of project. Workers, or restoration practitioners, in the restoration economy are also vulnerable to policy changes, and the "volatility of restoration funding." In Humboldt County, California,
private sector businesses and non-governmental organizations are often compromising with bureaucratic hindrances and drastic changes in funding.
South Africa Restoration economy has been implemented in South Africa as well. For example, the ARISE Project in the
Giyani district of the
Limpopo province, was a poverty-alleviation program contracted to a private company in 1999 by the
Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism, with the intention of raising the overall quality of life in that region. The program created jobs in ecological restoration of the surrounding landscape and helped to economically empower rural Africans in the short run. Restoration activities included creating fences around off-limit areas, planting approximately 8000 trees and creating a fifty-meter buffer zone on both sides of the
Klein Letaba River. Over 323 jobs were created, and employees were earning nearly twice the average daily income ($5.30 per household from $2.20). In South Africa, while the ARISE project was able to positively affect the Giyani District by providing jobs for a short period to low-income earners, it did not increase the likelihood of long employment later in the commercial sector.
Namibia In its efforts to control
woody plant encroachment, the
Namibian government deliberately supports the commercial utilisation of excess wood as an eocomic incentive and pull factor for restoration. This has resulted in the emergence of a so-called bush-biomass sector, boasting various different value chains. At the core of Namibia´s restoration economy approach is the sustainable harvesting of shrubs. Such harvesting is meant to reduce the density woody plants and allow for a better between grass and bushes in the affected savanna rangelands. A total of over 12,000 workers find employment in harvesting and processing of excess wood. It was estimated that the bush control and utilisation could lead to an aggregated net benefit of around USD 3.8 billion over a time period of 25 years, taking into consideration . == Ongoing benefits ==