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Book Essays on the Economics of Hazardous Waste

Download or read book Essays on the Economics of Hazardous Waste written by Denise Marie Jarvinen and published by . This book was released on 1995 with total page 236 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book The Economics of Hazardous Waste and Contaminated Land

Download or read book The Economics of Hazardous Waste and Contaminated Land written by Hilary Sigman and published by Edward Elgar Publishing. This book was released on 2008 with total page 528 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Professor Sigman has selected the most authoritative previously published papers for this pathbreaking collection. This timely book examines private decision-making and government policy for the management of hazardous waste, the clean-up of contaminated land and the redevelopment of brownfield sites. Issues explored include the success of economic incentive policies such as 'green taxes' and tort liability, environmental decentralization and attitudes toward risk by both regulators and households. The additional focus on empirical analysis will help economists understand this challenging public policy area and will make economic insights accessible to policymakers.

Book The Economics of Waste

    Book Details:
  • Author : Richard C. Porter
  • Publisher : Routledge
  • Release : 2010-09-30
  • ISBN : 1136524371
  • Pages : 520 pages

Download or read book The Economics of Waste written by Richard C. Porter and published by Routledge. This book was released on 2010-09-30 with total page 520 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In this concise, engaging, and provocative work, Richard Porter introduces readers to the economic tools that can be applied to problems involved in handling a diverse range of waste products from business and households. Emphasizing the impossibility of achieving a zero-risk environment, Porter focuses on the choices that apply in real world decisions about waste. Acknowledging that effective waste policy integrates knowledge from several disciplines, Porter focuses on the use of economic analysis to reveal the costs of different policies and therefore how much can be done to meet goals to protect human health and the environment. With abundant examples, he considers subjects such as landfills, incineration, and illegal disposal. He discusses the international trade in waste, the costs and benefits of recycling, and special topics such as hazardous materials, Superfund, and nuclear waste. While making clear his belief that not every form of waste presents the same amount of risk, Porter stresses the need for open-minded approaches to developing new policies. For students, policymakers, and general readers, he provides insight and accessibility to a subject that others might leave out-of-sight, out-of-mind, or buried under an impenetrable prose of statistics and jargon.

Book Essays in Nonmarket Valuation with Applications to Environmental Economics

Download or read book Essays in Nonmarket Valuation with Applications to Environmental Economics written by Adam Matthew Domanski and published by . This book was released on 2010 with total page 119 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Keywords: Economics, environment, discrete choice, hazardous waste, smart growth.

Book The Economics of Waste Clean up from Resource Extraction Projects

Download or read book The Economics of Waste Clean up from Resource Extraction Projects written by Sara Aghakazemjourabbaf and published by . This book was released on 2018 with total page 128 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This thesis contains three essays spanning the fields of environmental economics and investment in a non-renewable resource under uncertainty. All essays relate to the analysis of the clean-up of hazardous waste resulting from natural resource extraction. The first essay addresses the problem of inadequate hazardous waste clean-up by resource extraction firms. It compares the impacts of an environmental bond and a strict liability rule on a firm's ongoing waste abatement and eventual site clean-up decisions. The firm's problem is modeled as a stochastic optimal control problem that results in a system of Hamilton Jacobi Bellman equations. The model is applied to a typical copper mine in Canada. The resource price is modelled as a stochastic differential equation, which is calibrated to copper futures prices using a Kalman filtering approach. A numerical solution is implemented to determine the optimal abatement and extraction rates as well as the critical levels of copper prices that would motivate a firm to clean up the accumulated waste under each policy. We have found that the effect of an environmental bond relative to the strict liability rule depends on certain key characteristics of the bond - in particular whether the bond pays interest and whether the firm borrows at a premium above the risk-free rate to fund the bond. If the firm can borrow at the risk-free rate, and if the government pays the risk-free interest rate on the bond, the value of the mine prior to construction, optimal abatement rates, and optimal operating decisions are the same under the bonding policy and strict liability rule. In contrast, if no interest is paid on the bond, the value of the project is reduced compared to the strict liability rule and the firm undertakes a larger amount of waste abatement under the bond. Because the mine is less pro table, it is less likely that the firm will invest in this mine. In the more realistic case that the firm borrows to fund the bond at a premium over the risk-free rate, the value of mine is reduced further and waste abatement levels are increased. The prospect of investment in the mine is even less likely compared to the previous case. The model developed in the first essay allows that the firm temporarily mothballs the project, but eventually clean-up must occur at the end of the project life. However, the possibility of firm bankruptcy was not explicitly included in that model, and thus mothballing is the only option available to the firm to delay waste clean-up. The second essay contributes to our previous study by considering another important option available to the firm, i.e., the possibility of declaring bankruptcy. A firm's decision to declare bankruptcy is specified as a Poisson process that treats bankruptcy as an exogenous, risky event governed by a hazard rate. The hazard rate at a project level depends on waste stock and output prices, while at the company wide level depends on the commodity prices only. For both default scenarios, the paper demonstrates that the firm operating under a bonding policy, that covers the full cost of waste clean-up, is less able to avoid its liability costs, particularly if the bond is financed from retained earnings. If the firm borrows to finance the bond, it is possible that the firm avoids clean-up costs by defaulting on the loan following a bankruptcy. In contrast to the results of the first essay, if the firm finances the bond out of its retained earnings, and if the government pays the risk-free rate of interest on the bond, the bond and the strict liability rule do not give the same outcome when bankruptcy is possible. Such a bond encourages a higher abatement rate and makes site clean-up more likely compared to the strict liability rule. Firms operating under the liability rule have stronger incentives to delay their clean-up costs by sitting idle and they may eventually go bankrupt at the mothballed stage. Therefore, the possibility of bankruptcy makes the firm worse off under the bonding policy, while benefits the firm under the strict liability rule. Modelling uncertain commodity prices is a key component of the analysis of optimal firm behavior in hazardous waste clean-up. The third essay investigates the dynamics of copper prices by comparing and contrasting three different stochastic models, which are a one-factor mean-reverting model, a two-factor model, and a one-factor long-term model. These models are calibrated to copper futures prices using a Kalman filtering approach. The first model assumes spot prices are mean-reverting in drift. The second model defines two correlated stochastic factors that are spot prices and convenience yield. The third model transforms the two-factor price model into a single factor model. We have found that the first model fails to describe the term structure of copper futures prices with long maturities. In contrast, the two-factor and the long-term models are shown to provide a reasonable fit of the term structure of copper futures prices and can be applied to long-term investment projects. The results highlight the importance of stochastic convenience yield in copper price formation.

Book The Economics of Hazardous Waste and Contaminated Land

Download or read book The Economics of Hazardous Waste and Contaminated Land written by Hilary Sigman and published by . This book was released on 2008 with total page 489 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Professor Sigman has selected the most authoritative previously published papers for this pathbreaking collection. This timely book examines private decision-making and government policy for the management of hazardous waste, the clean-up of contaminated land and the redevelopment of brownfield sites. Issues explored include the success of economic incentive policies such as 'green taxes' and tort liability, environmental decentralization and attitudes toward risk by both regulators and households. The additional focus on empirical analysis will help economists understand this challenging public policy area and will make economic insights accessible to policymakers.

Book Essays in Environmental Economics

Download or read book Essays in Environmental Economics written by Justin Gallagher and published by . This book was released on 2011 with total page 232 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The first chapter of the dissertation examines the learning process that economic agents use to update their expectation of an uncertain and infrequently observed event. The standard Bayesian updating model is restrictive in that it reflects the strong neo-classical assumption that economic agents efficiently incorporate new information with all available information when updating beliefs. I consider the case of flooding and estimate the effect of first-hand experience on flood insurance take-up. I compile a new nation-wide panel dataset of large regional floods and flood insurance policies in the US. First, I show that flood insurance take-up in flooded communities increases by 9% after a flood and then steadily declines, fully dissipating after 9 years. Floods do not affect take-up in geographically neighboring non-flooded communities unless these communities are in the same media market. The take-up rate in non-flooded communities that share a media market with a flooded community is one-third as large as in flooded communities. I interpret this evidence using the standard Beta-Bernoulli Bayesian learning model and a Beta-Bernoulli model that includes a forgetting/first-hand experience parameter. I find that the standard Bayesian model can not explain both the spike in insurance in the year of a flood and the decay rate of this effect on insurance take-up in the years after the flood. I conclude that the evidence is most consistent with a Bayesian model augmented with a forgetting/first-hand experience parameter. The second chapter of my dissertation examines the causal link between localized exposure to hazardous waste pollutants from motor vehicle exhaust and adverse human health outcomes for newborns. I explore whether an exogenous event--the 1994 Northridge Earthquake--can be used as a quasi-experiment to test how birth outcomes change from a sudden and unexpected increase in pollution. The Northridge Earthquake closed down portions of four busy highways in Los Angeles, CA for periods of 1-6 months. The highway traffic was diverted onto secondary roads that previous to the earthquake had a much lower traffic volume. The paper focuses on two health outcomes for newborns: birth weight and gestation period. Infants born preterm or with low birth weight are less likely to survive infancy, more likely to suffer from childhood illness, and have lower future earnings. Overall the results of this study are inconclusive due to the relatively small number of new births included in the sample design. However, the results do suggest that a mother's race, age, and level of education are more important than proximity to a highway. Being a minority race, a teenage mother, or not having any college education are correlated with lower birth weight. The size of these correlations are approximately an order of magnitude larger than the point estimates for the effect of living in close proximity to a road with heavy traffic. The third chapter of the dissertation uses the housing market to develop estimates of the local welfare impacts of Superfund sponsored clean-ups of hazardous waste sites. We show that if consumers value the clean-ups, then the hedonic model predicts that they will lead to increases in local housing prices and new home construction, as well as the migration of individuals that place a high value on environmental quality to the areas near the improved sites. We compare housing market outcomes in the areas surrounding the first 400 hazardous waste sites chosen for Superfund clean-ups to the areas surrounding the 290 sites that narrowly missed qualifying for these clean-ups. We find that Superfund clean-ups are associated with economically small and statistically indistinguishable from zero local changes in residential property values, property rental rates, housing supply, total population, and the types of individuals living near the sites. These findings are robust to a series of specification checks, including the application of a regression discontinuity design based on knowledge of the selection rule. Overall, the preferred estimates suggest that the local benefits of Superfund clean-ups are small and appear to be substantially lower than the $43 million mean cost of Superfund clean-ups.

Book Waste in Ecological Economics

Download or read book Waste in Ecological Economics written by Katy Bisson and published by Edward Elgar Publishing. This book was released on 2002 with total page 232 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Nine papers were commissioned on specific topics to mostly British researchers in social sciences in order to approach the unity of approach and breadth of coverage that a single-author might achieve. The goal is to fill the gap between studies of waste that focus narrowly on such problems as pollution and management, and economic studies that do not mention waste at all. They cover physical and historical perspectives, waste policy, and specific waste issues. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

Book An Economic Analysis of Risk Associatied with Hazardous Waste Disposal

Download or read book An Economic Analysis of Risk Associatied with Hazardous Waste Disposal written by Hans W. Gottinger and published by . This book was released on 1991-01-01 with total page 23 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays on the Economics of the Generation and Management of Waste

Download or read book Essays on the Economics of the Generation and Management of Waste written by David Nathan Beede and published by . This book was released on 1996 with total page 354 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Waste Trading among Rich Nations

Download or read book Waste Trading among Rich Nations written by Kate O'Neill and published by MIT Press. This book was released on 2000-06-19 with total page 318 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: When most people think of hazardous waste trading, they think of egregious dumping by U.S. and European firms on poor countries in Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean. But over 80 percent of the waste trade takes place between industrialized nations and is legal by domestic and international standards. In Waste Trading among Rich Nations, Kate O'Neill asks why some industrialized nations voluntarily import such wastes in the absence of pressing economic need. She focuses on Britain as an importer and Germany as an exporter and also looks at France, Australia, and Japan. According to O'Neill, most important in determining whether an industrialized democracy imports waste are two aspects of its regulatory system. The first is the structure of the regulatory process—how powers and responsibilities are allocated among different agencies and levels of government—and the structure of the hazardous waste disposal industry. The second is what O'Neill calls the "style" of environmental regulation, in particular access to the policy process and mode of implementation. Hazardous waste management is in crisis in most industrialized countries and is becoming increasingly controversial in international negotiations. O'Neill not only examines waste trading empirically but also develops a theoretical model of comparative regulation that can be used to establish links between domestic and international environmental politics.

Book Economics of the Environment

Download or read book Economics of the Environment written by Robert Dorfman and published by W. W. Norton. This book was released on 1993 with total page 517 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Economics and Liability for Environmental Problems

Download or read book Economics and Liability for Environmental Problems written by Kathleen Segerson and published by Routledge. This book was released on 2018-01-12 with total page 524 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This title was first published in 2002. This convenient reference brings together notable contributions examining all aspects of the liability for environmental accidents. Articles included in the Part I of this volume examine the role of liability as a policy instrument, and provide detailed examinations of the incentive effects created by the imposition of liability, ie. Bankruptcy, litigation costs, delegation of responsibility and insurance. Those in Part II study specific environmental issues such as hazardous waste disposal and oil spills. The International Library of Environmental Economics and Policy explores the influence of economics on the development of environmental and natural resource policy. In a series of twenty five volumes, the most significant journal essays in key areas of the contemporary environmental and resource policy are collected. This convenient reference brings together the notable contributions examining all aspects of the liability for environmental accidents.

Book Three Essays on Environmental Economics

Download or read book Three Essays on Environmental Economics written by Sophie Bernard and published by . This book was released on 2010 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book International Trade in Hazardous Wastes

Download or read book International Trade in Hazardous Wastes written by D.K. Asante-Duah and published by Routledge. This book was released on 1998-03-12 with total page 202 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This book discusses the need for a regulated and informed forum for international trade in hazardous waste. The authors argue that with careful planning, health and ecological risks can be minimized and net economic benefits realized fairly. The book examines the key parameters that should be considered by potential trading nations to ensure an optimally safe and mutually beneficial partnership. The authors provide comprehensive coverage of the political, environmental, industrial and economic issues involved in this complex and increasingly controversial practice.