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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Washington :Taylor & Francis Group,
    Keywords: Climatic changes -- Economic aspects. ; Climatic changes -- Social aspects. ; Climatic changes -- Government policy. ; Climatic changes -- Environmental aspects. ; Climatic changes -- International cooperation. ; Environmental policy. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: What are the potential adverse impacts of climate change? How can society determine the amount of protection against climate change that is warranted, given the benefits and costs of various policies? In concise, informative chapters, Climate Economics and Policy considers the key issues involved in one of the most important policy debates of our time. Beginning with an overview and policy history, it explores the potential impact of climate change on a variety of domains, including water resources, agriculture, and forests. The contributors then provide assessments of policies that will affect greenhouse gas emissions, including electricity restructuring, carbon sequestration in forests, and early reduction programs. In considering both domestic and international policy options, the authors examine command and control strategies, energy efficiency opportunities, taxes, emissions trading, subsidy reform, and inducements for technological progress. Both policymakers and the general public will find this volume to be a convenient and authoritative guide to climate change risk and policy. It is a useful resource for professional education programs, and an important addition for college courses in environmental economics and environmental studies. Climate Economics and Policy is a collection of Issue Briefs, prepared by the staff of Resources for the Future (RFF) and outside experts. Many are adapted from pieces originally disseminated on Weathervane, RFF�s acclaimed web site on global climate change.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (289 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781936331437
    DDC: 363.738/747
    Language: English
    Note: Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- About Resources for the Future and RFF Press -- Resources for the Future -- Table of Contents -- Preface -- Contributors -- 1: Climate Change Economics and Policies: An Overview -- Part 1: Introduction -- 2: How the Kyoto Protocol Developed: A Brief History -- 3: The Energy-CO2 Connection: A Review of Trends and Challenges -- 4: How Much Climate Change Is Too Much? An Economics Perspective -- Appendix A: The Costs of the Kyoto Protocol -- Part 2: Impacts of Greenhouse Gas Emissions -- 5: Agriculture and Climate Change -- 6: Water Resources and Climate Change -- 7: Forests and Climate Change -- 8: "Ancillary Benefits" of Greenhouse Gas Mitigation Policies -- Appendix B: Climate Change, Health Risks, and Economics -- Part 3: Policy Design and Implementation Issues -- 9: Choosing Price or Quantity Controls for Greenhouse Gases -- 10: Using Emissions Trading to Regulate National Greenhouse Gas Emissions -- 11: Revenue Recycling and the Costs of Reducing Carbon Emissions -- 12: Confronting the Adverse Industry Impacts of CO2 Abatement Policies: What Does It Cost? -- 13: Carbon Sinks in the Post-Kyoto World -- 14: Environmentally and Economically Damaging Subsidies: Concepts and Illustrations -- 15: Electricity Restructuring: Shortcut or Detour on the Road to Achieving Greenhouse Gas Reductions? -- 16: The Role of Renewable Resources in U.S. Electricity Generation: Experience and Prospects -- 17: Energy-Efficient Technologies and Climate Change Policies: Issues and Evidence -- 18: Climate Change Policy Choices and Technical Innovation -- 19: Greenhouse Gas "Early Reduction" Programs: A Critical Appraisal -- Appendix C: Climate Policy and the Economics of Technical Advance: Drawing on Inventive Activity -- Part 4: International Considerations -- 20: Policy Design for International Greenhouse Gas Control. , 21: Establishing and Operating the Clean Development Mechanism -- 22: Allocating Liability in International Greenhouse Gas Emissions Trading and the Clean Development Mechanism -- 23: International Equity and Climate Change Policy -- 24: The Economics of Climate-Friendly Technology Diffusion in Developing Countries -- 25: Including Developing Countries in Global Efforts for Greenhouse Gas Reduction -- 26: Moving Ahead with Climate Policy -- Glossary -- Index.
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  • 2
    Keywords: Greenhouse gas mitigation -- Government policy -- India. ; Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (381 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781936331710
    DDC: 363.738740954
    Language: English
    Note: Intro -- India and Global Climate Change Perspectives on Economics and Policy from a Developing Country -- Copyright -- Contents -- Contributors -- Preface -- Chapter 1. Introduction -- PART I Economic Drivers of Greenhouse Gas Emissions -- CHAPTER 2. Future Energy Trends and Greenhouse Gas Emissions -- CHAPTER 3. Developmental Sustainability Implications of the Economic Reforms in the Energy Sector -- CHAPTER 4. Economic Policy Reforms: Implications for Energy Consumption -- CHAPTER 5. Some Issues in Greenhouse Gas Emissions from the Informal Energy-Using Sector -- CHAPTER 6. Endogenous Substitution of Energy Resources:Theory and Application to the Energy Sector -- PART II Options for Greenhouse Gas Mitigation -- CHAPTER 7. Policies for Carbon Abatement in the Presence of Regulatory Distortions:The Electricity Generating Sector -- CHAPTER 8. Carbon Sequestration in Forests: Potential and Incremental Costs -- CHAPTER 9. Evaluating Greenhouse Gas Control Strategies Using Multicriteria Approaches -- CHAPTER 10. Energy Economy Model Applications: Long-Term Greenhouse Gas Emissions Trends and Mitigation Costs -- CHAPTER 11. Incentive-Based Approaches for Mitigating Greenhouse Gas Emissions: Issues and Prospects -- PART III International Climate Policy -- CHAPTER 12. A Noncooperative Theory of Emissions-Cap Determination -- CHAPTER 13. The Kyoto Protocol and Developing Countries: Strategy and Equity Issues -- CHAPTER 14. Allocation of Greenhouse Gas Emissions:An Example of Short-Term and Long-Term Criteria -- CHAPTER 15. The Clean Development Mechanism: Issues and Options -- PART IV Conclusions -- CHAPTER 16. India's Efforts to Minimize Greenhouse Gas Emissions: Policies, Measures, and Institutions -- CHAPTER 17. Global Climate Change: Indian Perspective Revisited and Restated -- Afterword -- Climate Change Impacts on India -- Index.
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Milton :Taylor & Francis Group,
    Keywords: Climatic changes-Economic aspects. ; Global warming-Economic aspects. ; Greenhouse gas mitigation-Economic aspects. ; Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (583 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781351161596
    DDC: 363.738/74
    Language: English
    Note: Cover -- Half Title -- Series Title -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Series Preface -- Introduction -- PART I CLIMATE CHANGE AND ITS IMPACTS -- 1 John Houghton (2001), 'The Science of Global Warming', Interdisciplinary Science Reviews, 26, pp. 247-57. -- 2 Brent Sohngen and Robert Mendelsohn (1998), 'Valuing the Impact of Large-Scale Ecological Change in a Market: The Effect of Climate Change on U.S. Timber', American Economic Review, 88, pp. 686-710. -- 3 Kenneth D. Frederick and David C. Major (1997), 'Climate Change and Water Resources', Climatic Change, 37, pp. 7-23. -- 4 Gary Yohe and Michael Schlesinger (2002), 'The Economic Geography of the Impacts of Climate Change', Journal of Economic Geography, 2, pp. 311-41. -- 5 Allan D. Brunner (2002), 'El Nino and World Primary Commodity Prices: Warm Water or Hot Air?', Review of Economics and Statistics, 84, pp. 176-83. -- 6 Robert Mendelsohn, William D. Nordhaus and Daigee Shaw (1994), 'The Impact of Global Warming on Agriculture: A Ricardian Analysis', American Economic Review, 84, pp. 753-71. -- 7 John Quiggin and John K. Horowitz (1999), 'The Impact of Global Warming on Agriculture: A Ricardian Analysis: Comment', American Economic Review, 89, pp. 1044-45. -- 8 Robert Mendelsohn and William Nordhaus (1999), 'The Impact of Global Warming on Agriculture: A Ricardian Analysis: Reply', American Economic Review, 89, pp. 1046-48. -- 9 Roy Darwin (1999), 'The Impact of Global Warming on Agriculture: A Ricardian Analysis: Comment', American Economic Review, 89, pp. 1049-52. -- 10 Robert Mendelsohn and William Nordhaus (1999), 'The Impact of Global Warming on Agriculture: A Ricardian Analysis: Reply', American Economic Review, 89, pp. 1053-55. -- PART II EVALUATING THE COSTS AND BENEFITS OF CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION. , 11 William D. Nordhaus (1993), 'Rolling the "DICE": An Optimal Transition Path for Controlling Greenhouse Gases', Resource and Energy Economics, 15, pp. 27-50. -- 12 Richard S.J. Tol (1999), 'The Marginal Costs of Greenhouse Gas Emissions', Energy Journal, 20, pp. 61-81. -- 13 Tim Roughgarden and Stephen H. Schneider (1999), 'Climate Change Policy: Quantifying Uncertainties for Damages and Optimal Carbon Taxes', Energy Policy, 27, pp. 415-29. -- 14 Lawrence H. Goulder and Koshy Mathai (2000), 'Optimal C02 Abatement in the Presence of Induced Technological Change', Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 39, pp. 1-38. -- 15 Charles D. Kolstad (1996), 'Learning and Stock Effects in Environmental Regulation: The Case of Greenhouse Gas Emissions', Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 31, pp. 1-18. -- 16 Christian Azar and Thomas Sterner (1996), 'Discounting and Distributional Considerations in the Context of Global Warming', Ecological Economics, 19, pp. 169-84. -- 17 Richard B. Howarth (2000), 'Climate Change and the Representative Agent', Environmental and Resource Economics, 15, pp. 135-48. -- 18 Thomas C. Schelling (1995), 'Intergenerational Discounting', Energy Policy, 23, pp. 395-401. -- 19 T.M.L. Wigley, R. Richels and J.A. Edmonds (1996), 'Economic and Environmental Choices in the Stabilization of Atmospheric C02 Concentrations', Nature, 379, pp. 240-43. -- 20 Zhongxiang Zhang (2000), 'Decoupling China's Carbon Emissions Increase from Economic Growth: An Economic Analysis and Policy Implications', World Development, 28, pp. 739-52. -- 21 Robert C. Hyman, John M. Reilly, Mustafa H. Babiker, Ardoin De Masin and Henry D. Jacoby (2003), 'Modeling N on-C02 Greenhouse Gas Abatement', Environmental Modeling and Assessment, 8, pp. 175-86. , 22 Richard G. Newell and Robert N. Stavins (2000), 'Climate Change and Forest Sinks: Factors Affecting the Costs of Carbon Sequestration', Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 40, pp. 211-35. -- 23 Andrew J. Plantinga, Thomas Mauldin and Douglas J. Miller (1999), 'An Econometric Analysis of the Costs of Sequestering Carbon in Forests', American Journal of Agricultural Economics', 81, pp. 812-24. -- PART III POLICY DESIGN FOR GHG MITIGATION -- 24 Ian W.H. Parry and Roberton C. Williams III (1999), 'A Second-Best Evaluation of Eight Policy Instruments to Reduce Carbon Emissions', Resource and Energy Economics, 21, pp. 347-73. -- 25 William A. Pizer (2002), 'Combining Price and Quantity Controls to Mitigate Global Climate Change', Journal of Public Economics, 85, pp. 409-34. -- 26 Michael Grubb (1997), 'Technologies, Energy Systems and the Timing of C02 Emissions Abatement: An Overview of Economic Issues', Energy Policy, 25, pp. 159-72. -- 27 Adam B. Jaffe and Robert N. Stavins (1994), 'Energy-Efficiency Investments and Public Policy', Energy Journal, 15, pp. 43-65. -- 28 P.R. Shukla (1996), 'The Modelling of Policy Options for Greenhouse Gas Mitigation in India', Ambio, 25, pp. 240-48. -- 29 Scott Barrett (1998), 'Political Economy of the Kyoto Protocol', Oxford Review of Economic Policy, 14, pp. 20-39. -- 30 Adam Rose, Brandt Stevens, Jae Edmonds and Marshall Wise (1998),' International Equity and Differentiation in Global Warming Policy: An Application to Tradeable Emission Permits', Environmental and Resource Economics, 12, pp. 25-51. -- 31 Zili Yang (1999), 'Should the North Make Unilateral Technology Transfers to the South? North-South Cooperation and Conflicts in Responses to Global Climate Change', Resource and Energy Economics, 21, pp. 67-87. , 32 Mustafa Babiker, John M. Reilly and Henry D. Jacoby (2000), 'The Kyoto Protocol and Developing Countries', Energy Policy, 28, pp. 525-36. -- Name Index.
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