Three Essays in Environmental Regulation

Three Essays in Environmental Regulation

Author: Paul Conant

Publisher:

Published: 2019

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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This dissertation research contributes to the areas of environmental economics and industrial organization. In the first essay, I set out to understand firms' induced innovation in response to environmental regulation with an emphasis on the temporal decision making of regulated firms. I find that firms anticipate future increases in environmental stringency and strive to have patent applications submitted three years prior to the increase in environmental stringency. I find evidence that increases in the level of environmental stringency spur GHG-related innovations. In my second essay, I use a latent class model to relax the assumption of homogeneity in preference for willingness to pay (WTP) for quality improvements to the Puerto Rican coral reefs. I determine distinct subclasses and their WTP for amenity improvements in the population of visitors to Puerto Rico. Determining different subclasses' WTP allows for government policies that price discriminate using entrance fees for beaches, entrance fees for the coral reefs, and/or excise taxes on goods and services. My results indicate the two groups are indirect (beach goers, fishermen, etc.) and direct (snorkelers, divers, etc.) coral reef users. I use the results to suggest an illustrative policy that could raise approximately $9.9 million annually with a minimal impact on tourism. In my third essay, I incorporate respondents' uncertainty for visitors' WTP for quality improvements to the Puerto Rican coral reefs and the Olympic Coast Marine Sanctuary. I use a novel methodological approach, the nested uncertainty measure (NUM), and three goodness of fit measures to make comparisons to existing approaches that incorporate uncertainty. I find that my NUM improves goodness of fit for almost every measure of goodness of fit across two datasets (visitors to the Puerto Rican coral reefs and visitor to the Olympic Coast Marine Sanctuary) and two identification strategies. However, it does put positive pressure on WTP estimates exacerbating hypothetical bias.


Three Essays on Environmental Regulation and Spatial Modeling

Three Essays on Environmental Regulation and Spatial Modeling

Author: Scott Elliot Lowe

Publisher:

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 456

ISBN-13: 9780542682452

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Three essays are presented that integrate spatial models of pollution and regulation into economic analyses of environmental quality. The first essay analyzes the reductions in PM10 concentrations in California over the past decade, and tests whether the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments influenced this decline. Of particular interest is the delegation of power from the Environmental Protection Agency to regional air quality management districts and the spatial resolution in the pollution data used. The second essay analyzes the Regional Clean Air Incentives Market (RECLAIM), and links the behaviors of elected officials with characteristics of the facilities that are being regulated. In particular, my results show that the South Coast Air Quality Management District may have penalized facilities based on specific characteristics such as size, employment, and location, as well as their emissions of related pollutants and the emissions of neighboring facilities. The third essay provides estimates of the benefits derived from automobile-related regulations to reduce air toxics emissions. I infer a value for reductions in the risk of cancer from exposure to air toxics using a spatial dataset of air toxics cancer risk levels along with housing attributes and amenities in the San Francisco Bay Area.


Three Essays on the Effects of Environmental Regulations on Supply Chain Practices

Three Essays on the Effects of Environmental Regulations on Supply Chain Practices

Author: Muhammad Shumail Mazahir

Publisher:

Published: 2016

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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Climate change and global temperature rise has made environmental legislations a focal point of discussion. This dissertation is devoted to the study of environmental legislations and their effect on supply chain practices. More precisely, our center of interest is the product recovery based legislation along with compliance based regulations. We explore the reuse potential and the environmental and economical aspects of different product recovery based legislation schemes by modeling a stackelberg game between a social welfare maximizing policy maker and a profit maximizing monopolistic firm and find that a combination of existing recovery policies i.e., a recovery target in combination with incentive structure such as taxation/subsidy may lead to better outcomesnot only from environmental perspective but also from economical aspects. In Chapter 2, we extend the discussion comparative performance of the recovery legislation based schemes in presence of innovation and product design issues and show how unintended environmental outcomes may appear if the policy framework is not adequately designed. In Chapter 3, wecapture the effect of recovery legislation and compliance based legislation on product selection when a firm serves a number of markets. We incorporate the effects of uncertainty associated with market demands and recovery cost parameters and present a robust optimization based method for product selection and allocation decisions.