6 edition of Economic implications of pollution control found in the catalog.
Economic implications of pollution control
Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development
Published
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Written in
The Physical Object | |
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Format | Unknown Binding |
Number of Pages | 78 |
ID Numbers | |
Open Library | OL9126537M |
ISBN 10 | 9264111816 |
ISBN 10 | 9789264111813 |
OCLC/WorldCa | 1036300 |
This chapter discusses the relationship between economics and air pollution: first, it presents the main characteristics of the economic growth-environmental pressure debate and introduces the concept of environmental Kuznets curve hypothesis (EKC). As an example of the EKC, the estimated relationship between CO2 emissions and economic growth, using a cross-sectional Author: Fernando Carriazo. Economic and environmental impacts of pollution control regulation on small industries: a case study. Total economic value of the impact of lead pollution control regulations is then the sum of the net return obtained at the firm level for investing money on abatement technologies, net environmental benefits achieved as a result of Cited by:
The Economic Consequences of Outdoor Air Pollution This report provides a comprehensive assessment of the economic consequences of outdoor air pollution in the coming decades, focusing on the impacts on mortality, morbidity, and changes in crop yields as caused by high concentrations of pollutants. Pollution Management and the Development of Prosperous Cities. This research aims to investigate the linkage between environmental pollution and the prosperity and competitiveness of cities, providing new evidence of the impact of pollution on productivity and its economic implications in fast-growing cities in Africa and Asia.
UNESCO – EOLSS SAMPLE CHAPTERS POINT SOURCES OF POLLUTION: LOCAL EFFECTS AND IT’S CONTROL – Vol. II - Economics, Social, Legal and Health Implications - Junfeng Niu and Gang Yu ©Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems (EOLSS) economic growth, and the use of scarce resources to manage and control Size: KB. Data, research, outlooks and country reviews on environment including biodiversity, water, resource and waste management, climate change, global warming and consumption., This report provides a comprehensive assessment of the economic consequences of outdoor air pollution in the coming decades, focusing on the impacts on mortality, morbidity, and changes in crop .
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Get this from a library. Economic implications of pollution control: a general assessment. [Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Economic Policy Committee. Working Party No. 2.]. Economic Implications of Pollution Control [OECD] on *FREE* shipping on qualifying : OECD.
The book begins with a general analysis of economic instruments of pollution control, and is followed by the application of these in CO2 emission control. The former presents the discussion of pollution control policies in general equilibrium settings, focusing on the comparison of pollution taxes and tradable permits in certain kinds of Cited by: 2.
Pollution is a negative externality. Economists illustrate the social costs of production with a demand and supply diagram. The social costs include the private costs of production incurred by the company and the external costs of pollution that are passed on to society.
Figure 1 shows the demand and supply for manufacturing refrigerators. The. THE ECONOMICS OF AIR POLLUTION: CENTRAL PROBLEMS HAROLD WOLOZIN* INTRODUCTION Afflicting damage and distress upon human, animal, and plant life, polluted air blankets most populated areas of the globe.
The salient economic consequence of this is that pure or relatively unpolluted air is no longer a free good; it costs money. 3. Perceptions and Attitudes in Pollution Control and Environmental Management by Raban Chanda 4.
Environmental Impacts of Urbanisation by Kwesi Darkoh 5. Environmental Protection in the Context of Sustainable Development by Jaap Arntzen 6. Population, Poverty and Environment in Africa by John O.
Oucho PART 2 7. J.S. Shortle, J.B. Braden, in Encyclopedia of Energy, Natural Resource, and Environmental Economics, The Nonpoint Pollution Problem. The theory of pollution control as it is presented in basic textbooks is fundamentally a theory Economic implications of pollution control book point source pollution.
Point sources discharge pollutants directly into environmental media (e.g., air or water) from discrete. Get this from a library. Economic instruments of pollution control in an imperfect world: theory and implications for carbon dioxide emissions control in China.
[Tingsong Jiang] -- "With its systematic evaluation of China's environmental policy, this thorough and rigorous assessment will be invaluable reading for academics in environmental economics and environmental. pollution exposure for a variety of reasons including occupation, housing, cooking fuel use, the common link being poverty8.
While environment, health and development are frequently pitted in adversarial roles in the discourse on economic growth, published evidence argues that they are very much in consonance.
A study published byFile Size: 1MB. Industrial water pollution stabilizes with economic development, but there is no evidence of a decline.
Abstract: This paper uses new international data to test for an inverse U-shaped, or ‘Kuznets,’ relationship between industrial water pollution and File Size: KB. The Economic Consequences of Air Pollution This report is an output of the OECD project on Costs of Inaction and Resource scarcity: Consequences for Long-term Economic growth (CIRCLE).
It contains an assessment of the economic consequences of outdoor air pollution in the coming decades. Read this book on Questia.
Based on their extensive research into the pollution-related activities of electrical utilities and companies in the pulp and paper industry, Freedman and Jaggi explore the fear that the cost of pollution abatement will damage a company's economic performance.
There are numerous effects of air pollution on the ecosystem which in turn have various economic implications.
In simple terminology, we can say that air pollution effects can be both direct and indirect. For instance, pollution of air primarily causes.
The Clean Air Act protects many Americans from pollution-related health problems and premature death, and improves the health and productivity of the U.S.
work force. For more than 40 years, the Clean Air Act has fostered steady progress in reducing air pollution, allowing Americans to breathe easier and live healthier. An interdisciplinary, quantitative assessment of the health and economic costs of air pollution in China, and of market-based policies to build environmental protection into economic development.
China's historic economic expansion is driven by fossil fuels, which increase its emissions of both local air pollutants and greenhouse gases. Annual pollution control costs were expected to rise from $ million in to $ million in A survey of the costs of pollution control alternatives available to leather tanneries found that, on average, pol- lution control costs were less than or equal to 1% of sales.
At most, costs were found to be 2%~3% of sales. national environmental pollution control laws were enacted, in the form of the Two Water Quality Regulation Laws for the regulation of pollution sources. Here again, the legislation lacked teeth, and environmental damage continued to worsen.
It should be remembered, though, that the pollution control measures were introduced in the context ofFile Size: KB. Until now, books on the economic theory of pollution control have tended to be pitched either at a very high technical level of exposition, or at a level which is too low to allow recent theoretical developments to be explained.
This book covers most of these developments without resorting to mathematical models, thus making the theory accessible to a wider range of economics.
This report asks what evidence exists for the ways in which local air quality could influence local economic growth through health and workforce issues, quality-of-life issues, or air-quality regulations and business operations and how those effects might Cited by: 1.
Economic Factors and Pollution: Economic Factors and Pollution Increased medical insurance claims Increased down time of workers Expensive maintenance costs Death and destruction of farms (animal and crops) Expensive pollution control measures Potential threat to World Peace 1/24/ COPYRIGHT (C) Dr.
Deryck D. Pattron. The significant variation in pieces collected in Figure 1 is also noteworthy, as this is critical for obtaining precise estimates of the impact of ozone. Figures 2 and and3 3 further illustrate this variation both within and across workers.
For Figure 2, we collapse the data to the worker level by computing each worker's mean daily productivity over by: The book, which is intended for both economists and air-pollution-control experts, is divided into two parts: the theory of benefit-cost analysis and its application to air-pollution control.
Both sections stress procedures for evaluation.As an economy grows, so does pollution. However, the two don’t move in lockstep, as a recent Economic Synopses essay shows that pollution increases at a slower rate than economic growth. An Environmental Kuznets Curve Ball. Research Officer and Economist Guillaume Vandenbroucke and Research Associate Heting Zhu’s conclusion contrasts with an older .