Browsing a few of my favorite Internet news sources earlier this week (some left leaning, some right leaning, some not leaning, and one 'fair and balanced') I came across Drudge's link to this DailyTech blogpost on evidence for global cooling. That's right, there is scientific evidence for global cooling. Or so DailyTech claims:
Over the past year, anecdotal evidence for a cooling planet has exploded
...and the reason for cooling? The sun.
Scientists quoted in a past DailyTech article link the cooling to reduced solar activity which they claim is a much larger driver of climate change than man-made greenhouse gases. The dramatic cooling seen in just 12 months time seems to bear that out. While the data doesn't itself disprove that carbon dioxide is acting to warm the planet, it does demonstrate clearly that more powerful factors are now cooling it.
Intrigued I decided to dig further. Is it possible that sun activity swamps any effects of CO2? Let's take a look.
Continue reading "Global Warming: Man versus Sun?" »
Ordinarily, a February 29 post wouldn't make it to the blog (I have several of these 2/29 posts that have vanished in previous common years).
What follows is the introduction to my chapter in the Cherry, Kroll and Shogren edited volume, Environmental Economics, Experimental Methods, that was orginally titled "Confessions of a Contingent Valuation Economist."
Continue reading "A leap day post" »
From the inbox:
Dr. Soren T. Anderson of the University of Michigan will be presenting a paper entitled "The Demand for Ethanol as a Gasoline Substitute" at the [Triangle Resource and Environmental Economics] workshop today (Thursday, February 28).
Continue reading "Another missed opportunity" »
Environmental Economics, Experimental Methods
By Todd L. Cherry, Stephan Kroll, Jason F. Shogren
The experimental method is one commonly applied to issues of environmental economics; this book brings together 63 leading researchers in the area and their latest work exploring the behavioural underpinnings of experimental environmental economics.
The essays in this volume will be illuminating for both researchers and practitioners, specifically in relation to questions of environmental policy and how a proposed change in incentives or benefits might affect behaviour and consequently, the likely success of a policy. This book argues that the experimental evidence complements theoretic insights, field date and simulating models to improve our understanding of the underlying assumptions and incentives that drive behavioural responses to policy.
Covering topical areas of interest such as tradable permit markets, common property and public goods, regulation and compliance and valuation and preferences, the critical advantage of this volume is that each section concludes with discussion points written by economists who do not use experimental methods.
One blogging irritant: where is the image file at the Routledge website? The book has a nice royal blue (i.e., University of Kentucky) cover that I'd like to highlight.
Continue reading "Book Review" »
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