Title: ERE7: Renewable Resources
1ERE7 Renewable Resources
- Fisheries
- Growth rates in biological resources
- Steady-state harvest
- Perfect market
- Open access
- Dynamic harvesting
- Policy intervention
2Last week
- Resources and Reserves
- Social optimum and a model for a perfectly
competitive market - Sensitivity analysis
- Increase in interest rate and resource stock
- Change in demand and extraction costs
- Market failure
- Monopoly
- Taxes and subsidies
- Reality
3Renewable Resources
- Renewable flow resources
- Such as solar, wave, wind and geothermal energy
- These energy flow resources are non-depletable
- Renewable stock resources
- living organisms fish, cattle and forests, with
a natural capacity for growth - inanimate systems (such as water and atmospheric
systems) reproduced through time by physical or
chemical processes - arable and grazing lands as renewable resources
reproduction by biological processes (such as the
recycling of organic nutrients) and physical
processes (irrigation, exposure to wind etc.). - They are capable of being fully exhausted.
4Fish catch
5Catches, 1995-97, cf 85-87
- Sea fish 73 mln t, 7
- Freshwater fish 6 mln t, 19
- Mollusc 11 mln t, 38
- Aquaculture 34 mln t, 166 (mostly Asia)
- Fish provides 16 of animal protein, 6 of total
protein
6State of world stocks in 1999
Source Garcia and de Leiva Moreno (2001)
7Biological growth processes
- Change of population
- g is the intrinsic growth rate (birth rate minus
mortality rate) of the population - With an upper bound it becomes
- An example (simple) logistic growth curve
?
or
8Logistic growth curve
Stock (S)
SMAX
SMIN
SZERO
Time
9Steady state harvest
G, H
Rate of change
In steady state
MSY
G(S)
Smax
S0
Stock
10A Simple Harvesting Model
11Exploitation
Effort
Harvest
G, H
eE3S
eE2S
E3gt E2 gt E1gt E0
eE1S
h3
h2
h1
eE0S
h0
S
S0
12Exploitation (2)
H
E3gt E2 gt E1gt E0
h2
h1
h3
h0
E
E0
E1
E2
E3
13Profit Maximisation
Total costs
V, C
Total revenue
CwE
VProf
V-CMAX
VPH
CProf
E
E0
EProf
14Open Access, Steady State
Net growth of stock in steady state
Harvest
Cost
Revenue
For open access
Equilibria
and
15Profit maximisation and open access equilibrium
Revenue
16Open access vs Restricted access fisheries
- Consequences of open access entry continues
until all rents are dissipated (profit per boat
zero). - Stock sizes will tend to be lower, and harvest
rates will tend to be higher (but may not always
be) compared with a restricted access fishery. - Extinction is more likely, but will not
necessarily happen.
17Introducing time
Objective function
Equations of motion
Hamiltonian
Necessary conditions
Social optimum is market outcome iff
18Interpretation
19Interpretation (2)
20Profit maximisation and stock effect (1)
and
In steady state
Fundamental equation
Stock effects if
Add units to the stock if
Harvest additional units if
21Profit maximisation and stock effect (2)
- If harvesting costs do not depend on stock size
- If harvesting costs depend on stock size
- For a given i
- Stock size is higher
- dG/dS is lower since (dC/dS)/p is negative
- igt dG/dS
22Harvest Costs and Stock Effect
23Sum up
- Equilibrium conditions
- Dynamic
- Static
- Static profit maximisation equilibrium only if
i0 - Open access equilibrium is independent of
discount rate
24Fisheries
- If HgtG, fish stocks fall, perhaps to (local)
extinction - Reasons
- Open access, little incentive to preserve
- It may be profitable ...
- Ignorance and uncertainty
- Variability, shocks, disturbances
- Contributing factors
- High market price, high elasticity
- Low harvesting costs
- Low stock growth
- High discount rate
25Renewable Resource Policy
- End open access
- Information
- Create forward or future markets
- Taxes
- Tradeable permits
- Technical restrictions
- Time restrictions
26Fishery Policy in the EU
- Early 1970s first common fishery policy (CFP)
- Equal access to waters of the member states to
all EU fisherman - Principal instrument species-specific total
allowable catch (TAC) - Set annually based on scientific advise
- Divided into quotas
- Discarding and black fish make TAC difficult to
determine
27Why did the CFP fail?
- Principle of equal access is not shared by the
fisherman - Political interference with the TAC to protect
fisherman - Centralised structures
- Fishing fleet is far too large
- Flag ships
- Tension between support for ship building
industry and economic efficiency
28What could be done?
- Individual tradable quotas
- A large number of fisherman will exist the
industry - Does nothing to stop cheating
- Political interference
- Might lead to buy out
- Vessel licensing
- No pretence for monitoring
- Difficult to determine total killing power
- Conflicts with social objectives
- Abandoning the principle of equal access