Title: Topic 9: Energy, water and agriculture
1Topic 9 Energy, water and agriculture
- Trade-offs between competing uses?
2Depletable Resources
- 1. Efficient intertemporal allocation
(revisited) - i.   Basic model
- ii.Change key parameters (e.g. DR, price
backstop, etc) - 2. Issues in Energy
- i.   Natural Gas price controls
- ii. Oil cartel, dependency imported oil
- iii.   Transition fuels coal, nuclear, etc
- iv.   Conservation aggregate demand, peak load,
internalize envt cost - v. Renewables hydro, biomass, solar, wind, etc
- 3. Water
- i.   Efficient allocation of surface and
groundwater - ii.Current market and policy failures
- iii.        Policy options
- 4. Agriculture
- i.   Global food scarcity
- ii.Current market and policy failures
- iii.        Policy options
31. Efficient intertemporal allocation (revisited)
- i. Basic Model
- Private profit maximizing objective maximize the
present value of economic rents from extracting
the exhaustible resource - ii. Conditions for achieving objective
- i) Flow condition The price of the resource in
any period t (Pt ) is equal to the price of some
initial stock (Po), compounded at rate r, the
discount rate. Resource owner is is - a. indifferent between a unit of resource at Pt
and a unit at Poert - b. indifferent between holding the reserve in the
ground and investing in anoth asset. - ii) Stock Constraint Cumulative extraction over
time equals the total stock of resources, and the
total stock of resources is depleted when
extraction ceases. With a backstop technology
(i.e. substitute), the stock goes to zero when
the price of the exhaustible resource equals the
'choke price' of the backstop technology and
demand for the exhaustible resource goes to zero. - iii) Terminal condition in the final period of
extraction, the marginal rent equals the average
rent and the average costs equals the marginal
costs on the last unit extracted. - When there are no extraction costs, prices rise
at the rate of interest Pt Poert - When there are extraction costs, rents (i.e.
prices minus costs) rise at the rate of interest
Rt Roert
4Determining the Optimal Extration Path
- To determine the optimal price path
(graphically) we need to determine the inital
price (Po) and how long it takes to exhaust the
resource (T). - Â
- Assuming we know the choke price (from backstop
technolgy or where demand curve intersects price
axis), we know the price of the resource in the
last period. - Â
- Given that prices rise at the rate of interest,
we can work back to get the initial price and the
time to depletion.
5Figure 1
- Â
- Quadrant 1. Optimal price path of the resource
against time with the price of backstop
technology - Â
- Quadrant 2. Dummy quadrant (450 line) to
transpose measure of time period - Â
- Quadrant 3. Relationship between quantity
demanded, time, and cumulative extraction (area
under curve) - Â
- Quadrant 4. Quantity demanded relative to price
(in reverse of conventional form)
6ii. The Effects of Changing Parameters
- Discount rates - increase in discount rate leads
to lower initial price and steeper price path.
New price path initially beolw old price path,
but rises quuicker and crosses over old price
path. Time to exhauustion is reduced. - Price of backstop - fall in price of backstop
technology leads to lower price but same slope of
price path. The price path is everywhere below
original price path and end price is lower. Time
to exhaustion reduced. - Resource stock - increase in resource stock leads
to a reduction in initial price but same slope of
price path. The price path is everywhere below
the original price path. Time to exhaustion
extended. - Costs of extraction - fall in costs of extraction
leads to fall in initial price and steeper price
path. New price path initially below old price
path, but rises quicker and crosses over old
price path. Time to exhaustion reduced. - Demand - increase in demand leads to increase in
price path with same slope of price path. Time
to depletion shortened. - Other factors
- 1. Stock declining quality
- 2. Different quality of resource
- 3. Set-up costs
- 4. Uncertainty
- 5. Monoploy
72. Issues in Energy
- i. Natural Gas price controls (i.e. price
ceilings on natural gas) imposed during times of
shortages inhibit the ability of the market
economy to respond to changing conditions. Leads
to an "overshoot and collapse" syndrome, due to
government interference (i.e. government failure)
which distorts allocation towards the present.
The implication is inefficient intertemporal
allocation, and a loss of consumer and producer
surplus, especially in the future. - ii. Oil OPEC cartel effectiveness depends on
- i.                price elasticity of demand
(i.e. low response of demand to change in price) - ii.            income elasticity of demand (i.e.
high increase in demand with increase in incomes) - iii.        non-OPEC supply responsiveness (i.e.
limited, as small suppliers) - iv.         cohesion of OPEC (i.e. incentive to
cheat and inability to agree price) - iii. Oil - dependency imported oil policy
options include import tax, domestic subsidy,
decrease in demand
8- iv. Transition fuels coal, nuclear, etc. may
have limited availability and/or environmental
problems - v. Conservation considered as an alternative
investment option to reduce aggregate demand,
reduce peak load. Internalize environmental
costs changes relative energy resource prices. - vi. Renewables hydro, biomass, solar, wind,
hydrogen, geothermal. Often relatively high
costs due to new technology, lower research and
development subsidies, storage problems.
93. Water
- i.   Efficient allocation of surface and
groundwater - Surface water is a renewable resource affecting
current resource users. Efficient allocation
requires that marginal net benefits are equal for
all users. - Groundwater is a depletable resource if
extraction is greater than recharge over time.
Efficient allocation requires that water is mined
at a rate where the price of water increase at
the rate of interest, and the point of exhaustion
is reached when the demand drops to zero (i.e.
due to high costs or substitute). - ii.            Current market and policy
failures - -Â restrictions on water transfers
- -Â subsides to federal reclamation projects
- -Â charging inefficiently low prices
- -Â common property problems
10- i.                Policy options
- Â
- -Â allowing transfers, e.g. conservers capture
the value of water saved by selling it - -Â seperate fishing/recreational water rights
- -Â water utilities use increasing block pricing
(i.e. marginal cost pricing that reflects the
scarcity value of water) - Â
114.Agriculture
- i.   Global food scarcityÂ
- Rising demand for food with fixed supply of land.
Leads to marginal land being brounght into
production, and more intensive use of existing
land (e.g. inputs, technical progress,
environmental problems) - ii.Current market and policy failures
- -Â subsidies to specific farming inputs
- - -Â guaranteed output prices
- -Â protectionist trade barriers
- iii.        Policy options
- -Â remove existing subsidies
- -Â encourage sustainable farming
- -Â remove trade barriers
12Dependency on imported resources the case of oil
Price (/barrel)
Supply of domestically produced oil (SD)
Supply of imported oil (SI)
PW
Domestic demand for oil (D)
Quantity of oil (Q)
Q1
Q2
Import dependency ratio (Q1 - Q2)/Q1
13Decreasing the import dependency ratio oil
(a) an import tax on foreign oil
(b) Increase domestic supply
P
P
SD
SD
SD
SI
PW PW(1t)
SI
SI
PW
PW
D
D
Q
Q2
Q1
Q
Q2
Q3
Q3
Q4
Q1
P
SD
(c) a fall in demand energy conservation or
recession
PW
SI
D
D
Q
Q2
Q3
Q1
14Global food scarcity optimism vs pessimism
Price of food (/ton)
Agricultural Supply (pessimistic)
P2
P1
Agricultural Supply (optimistic)
P0
Future demand
Current demand
Q0
Quantity of food (tons)
Q1
Q2