Here's an exercise. Consider the following statements about the Chesapeake Bay for a few seconds:
Fish kills—more than 40 in Maryland from June to early August alone—due to algae or oxygen-deprived dead zones, ranged in intensity from approximately 50 to more than 20,000 dead fish.
An algal bloom that lasted for more than two months on the Potomac River eventually killed more than 300,000 fish.
Fish kills of smallmouth bass and redbreast sunfish in the Shenandoah River system (four years running) have now jumped to another watershed - the upper James and its beautiful Cowpasture and Maury River tributaries.
Now before reading below the fold ask yourself: Should we take action?
Continue reading "Why we need environmental economists" »
As I post this I'm late for a drive to Raleigh, NC to participate in the .5 part of the 1.5 day Triangle Resource and Environmental Economics Workshop tomorrow morning. I missed a bunch of great papers today, all co-authored by Triangle-esque authors. Tomorrow is focused on climate and I'm giving the first of three research presentations (my presentation can be found at http://econ.appstate.edu/climate in the right hand column), followed by a panel discussion (see below).
It should be way fun. The rest of the day includes lunch, a UNC-TV appearance with my co-authors (I'm doing it topless), dinner with friends (again, topless) and a drive back to Boone.
Continue reading "I'm out the door" »
Baby steps towards a global carbon market:
Brazil's largest city sold millions of dollars worth of carbon credits at an auction Wednesday in a deal that experts said paves the way for developing countries to make money fighting global warming.
Brazil's Mercantile and Futures Exchange called Sao Paulo's sale of $18.5 million in carbon credits to Dutch-Belgian Fortis Bank the first such sale to be held on a regulated stock market and a significant step toward institutionalizing the carbon market.
Continue reading "Carbon for sale" »
From the inbox:
Dear friends --
Earlier this evening, Rep. John Dingell, the senior Congressmember and a prime mover of U.S. energy policy, unveiled his draft carbon tax bill.
Continue reading "Breaking news from The Carbon Tax Center" »
Regular readers know we aren't shy about exposing ourselves--sometimes it's better to expose yourself than have someone else expose you--or something like that. Anyhow:
- Dani Rodrik provides evidence that there is a positive correlation between academic reputation and blog rankings for academic economists. This is notable for Env-Econ for a couple of reasons:
- Env-Econ made the list of highest ranked econ blogs. We're number 24 and by my view the highest ranked non-general econ blog.
- John and I have academic reputations--and they're really not that bad. John's reputation--as measured by total citations to academic papers--is a little better than mine, but I attribute that to John's willingness to whore himself (academically speaking) for the right price...that, or John's older than me...or, John's papers are better than mine....crap, I'm depressed*.
- CurrencyTrading.net has published a list of the Top 100 Academic Blogs Every Professional Investor Should Read--#24** on this unranked list? Env-Econ.
- Take a look at the current spotlighted research for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration--see, I told you I had an academic reputation.
Continue reading "From the Env-Econ Department of Blatant Self-Promotion" »
I wrote that headline, realized there must be dozens of other identical headlines out there, used The Google and found this one from an Alaska TV station. Anyway, last week the State of Alaska decided the bridge money would be better used elsewhere (Alaska seeks alternative to bridge plan):
Some called it a bridge to the future. Others called it the bridge to nowhere.
On Friday, Alaska decided the bridge really was going nowhere, officially abandoning the project in Ketchikan that became a national symbol of federal pork barrel spending.
See below for my attempt at a benefit estimate for the $400 million bridge.
Continue reading "The 'bridge to nowhere' is going nowhere" »
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