Center for Environmental and Resource Economic Policy

Works Published in 2019

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Displaying works 1 - 20 of 42 in total

Sorted by most recent date added to the index first, which may not be the same as publication date order.

2019 report

Evaluating Policy and Market Barriers for Forest Biomass Energy Development. Report prepared for the Office of the Chief Economist, United States Department of Agriculture

Washington, D.C: United States Department of Agriculture.

By: M. Benedum, C. Galik, M. Kauffman & D. Becker

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 3, 2023

2019 report

Demand Estimation with Strategic Complementarities: Sanitation in Bangladesh

(BREAD Working Paper No. 553).

By: R. Guiteras, J. Levinsohn & A. Mobarak

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: September 21, 2022

2019 journal article

Should I Stay or Should I Go: Coal Ash in North Carolina

NC State Economist. https://cals.ncsu.edu/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/Economist-Edwards-Sutherland-von-Haefen.pdf

By: E. Edwards, S. Sutherland & R. von Haefen

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: December 5, 2020

2019 journal article

North Carolinians Benefit from Water Pollution Credit Trading

NC State Economist. https://cals.ncsu.edu/agricultural-and-resource-economics/wp-content/uploads/sites/12/2019/12/NCState_Economist_waterpollution_fall_2019.pdf

By: R. Branan, E. Edwards, A. Hutchens & S. Sutherland

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: December 5, 2020

2019 report

A Guide to Municipal Water Conservation Pricing in Utah

In Utah State University Extension Factsheet, Applied Economics/2019-01pr. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2956&context=extension_curall

By: E. Edwards & S. Sutherland

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: December 5, 2020

2019 report

Community Impacts of Fishery Privatization

(CEnREP Working Paper No. 19-018). https://cenrep.ncsu.edu/cenrep/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/WP19-018.pdf

By: S. Sutherland & E. Edwards

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: December 4, 2020

2019 journal article

Projecting the Spatial Distribution of Possible Planted Forest Expansion in the United States

Journal of Forestry, 117(6), 560–578.

By: C. Wade*, J. Baker*, G. Latta*, S. Ohrel* & J. Allpress*

author keywords: plantation forest; land-use change; spatial econometrics; forest management
TL;DR: This study estimates a spatially explicit logistical regression function to assess the likelihood that forest plots will be planted based on physical, climate, and economic factors and offers insight into the factors that have driven forest planting in the United States historically and the potential distribution of new forest plantings in the coming decades. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, NC State University Libraries
Added: November 24, 2020

2019 journal article

The Influence of Parametric Uncertainty on Projections of Forest Land Use, Carbon, and Markets

Journal of Forest Economics, 34(1-2), 129–158.

By: B. Sohngen*, M. Salem*, J. Baker*, M. Shell* & S. Kim*

TL;DR: Assessment of the role of uncertainty in yield function and land supply elasticity parameters on land use, carbon, and market outcomes in a long-term dynamic model of the global forest sector suggests that understanding growth parameters in regions with large current carbon stocks is most important for making future projections of carbon storage. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: November 24, 2020

2019 journal article

Potential complementarity between forest carbon sequestration incentives and biomass energy expansion

Energy Policy, 126, 391–401.

author keywords: Bioenergy expansion; Forestry; Carbon sequestration
TL;DR: The results show that forest bioenergy expansion can complement carbon sequestration policies in the near- and medium-term, reducing marginal abatement costs and increasing mitigation potential, but by the end of the century these policies become substitutes. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: November 24, 2020

2019 journal article

Importance of Cross-Sector Interactions When Projecting Forest Carbon across Alternative Socioeconomic Futures

Journal of Forest Economics, 34(3-4), 205–231.

By: J. Jones*, J. Baker*, K. Austin*, G. Latta*, C. Wade*, Y. Cai*, L. Aramayo-Lipa*, R. Beach* ...

author keywords: Climate change; SSP; Forestry; Agriculture
TL;DR: A model of an economic model of the agricultural and forestry sectors found that agricultural sector emissions under a high income-growth world with increased livestock-product demand are fully displaced by substantial GHG sequestration from the forest sector with increased forest product demand, highlighting the potential limitations of single-sector modeling approaches that ignore important interaction effects between sectors. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: November 24, 2020

2019 journal article

Evaluating Potential Sources of Aggregation Bias with a Structural Optimization Model of the U.S. Forest Sector

Journal of Forest Economics, 34(3-4), 337–366.

By: C. Wade*, J. Baker*, G. Latta* & S. Ohrel*

TL;DR: This paper explores potential aggregation bias using the Land Use and Resource Allocation model (LURA), a detailed spatial allocation partial equilibrium model of the U.S. forest sector, and finds that age-class and forest type aggregations have the greatest impact on modeling results, with the potential to substantially impact market and greenhouse gas projections. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: November 24, 2020

2019 journal article

State of the Art Methods to Project Forest Carbon Stocks

Journal of Forest Economics, 34(1-2), 1–5.

By: J. Baker*, G. Latta*, N. Forsell* & B. Sohngen*

UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: November 24, 2020

2019 journal article

Do Random Coefficients and Alternative Specific Constants Improve Policy Analysis? An Empirical Investigation of Model Fit and Prediction

Environmental and Resource Economics, 73(1), 75–91.

author keywords: Discrete choice; Recreation demand; Revealed preference; Stated preference; Alternative specific constants; Random parameters; C25; Q51; L83
Source: Crossref
Added: November 19, 2020

2019 chapter

Payments for Ecosystem Services

In H. H. Sherman (Ed.), Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Environmental Science.

By: N. James & E. Sills*

Ed(s): H. Sherman

Sources: NC State University Libraries, ORCID
Added: November 13, 2020

2019 chapter

SDG 1: No Poverty – Impacts of Social Protection, Tenure Security and Building Resilience on Forests

In P. Katila, C. J. P. Colfer, W. De Jong, G. Galloway, P. Pacheco, & G. Winkel (Eds.), Sustainable Development Goals: Their Impacts on Forests and People (pp. 17–47). New York: Cambridge University Press.

By: K. Lawlor, E. Sills, S. Atmadja, L. Lin & K. Songawathan

Ed(s): P. Katila, C. Colfer, W. De Jong, G. Galloway, P. Pacheco & G. Winkel

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: November 6, 2020

2019 journal article

Toward a Resilience-Based Conservation Strategy for Wetlands in Puerto Rico: Meeting Challenges Posed by Environmental Change

WETLANDS, 39(6), 1255–1269.

author keywords: Adaptation strategies; Coastal wetlands; Decision models; Eleutherodactylus spp.; Puerto Rico; Resiliency; Sicydium spp.; Vulnerability; Watershed
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Source: Web Of Science
Added: March 30, 2020

2019 speech

The Effects of Weather on Recreational Fishing Demand and Adaptation: Implications for a Changing Climate

Haefen, & H, R. (2019, December). Shanghai, China: Academic Seminar at Fudan University.

By: Haefen & R. H

Source: ORCID
Added: January 31, 2020

2019 magazine article

Should I Stay or Should I Go? Coal Ash in North Carolina

English, E., Sutherland, S., & von Haefen, R. H. (2019, January). NC State Economist.

By: E. English, S. Sutherland & R. Haefen

Source: ORCID
Added: January 31, 2020

2019 journal article

Fixed Costs and Recreation Value

American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 101(4), 1082–1097.

By: E. English, J. Herriges*, F. Lupi*, K. McConnell* & R. Haefen n

author keywords: Deepwater Horizon; fixed and variable costs; Monte Carlo simulation; natural resource damage assessment; oil spills; recreation demand; recreational boating; short-run consumer surplus; two-part tariffs
Sources: Crossref, NC State University Libraries
Added: January 14, 2020

2019 journal article

Eliciting and Utilizing Willingness-to-Pay: Evidence from Field Trials in Northern Ghana

Journal of Political Economy.

Raymond Guiteras

TL;DR: This work uses the Becker-DeGroot-Marschak (BDM) mechanism to estimate willingness to pay for and heterogeneous impacts of clean water technology through a field experiment in Ghana and explores differences between BDM and take-it-or-leave-it valuations. (via Semantic Scholar)
Source: ORCID
Added: January 4, 2020

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