Title: Dr Roger Fouquet
1Tutorial 3
Environmental and Resource Economics Course
EC307 (DFL)
- Dr Roger Fouquet
- Department of Economics, SSED
- University of the South Pacific
2Part 1
3Course Objectives
- By the end of the course, you should have
- Knowledge of Key Environmental issues
- Knowledge of Main Ideas in Environmental
Economics - Ability to Use Tools to Analyse Environmental
Issues - Ability to access Important Sources of
Information - Knowledge of Main Institutions Addressing
Environmental Issues
4Lectures
- Environmental Economics (Units 1-4)
- Mid-Semester Break
- Resource Economics (Units 5, 8,9,10)
- Environmental Economics in Practice
- (units 6,7,10)
5ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS
THEORY
I. Economic Efficiency Market Failures
II. Environmental Policy
PRACTICE
IV. Cost-Benefit Analysis
III. Environmental Valuation
CASE STUDIES
VI. Air Pollution
VII. Climate Change
THEORY CASE STUDIES
X. Sustainable Development
V. Energy
VIII. Fisheries
IX. Further Resource Issues
NATURAL RESOURCE ECONOMICS
6Part 2 Summary of EC307
- Key Ideas from Environmental and Resource
Economics
7Key Ideas
- Market Failures and Environmental Policy
- Environmental Valuation
- Market-Based Instruments
- Optimal Rate of Resource Use through Time
- Substitution of Natural and Other Capital
81. Efficiency, Property Rights and Government
Intervention
- Markets Do Not Signal Accurately Relative
Scarcity and Value of Environmental Resources - Incentives to Over-Use Environmental Resources
- Degradation of Environmental Quality
- Lack of Property Rights
- Role for Government Intervention
9The Net Loss of Market Failures
Demand (MSB)
MSC
MPC
Q1
Q
Quantity of Tourists
10The Impact of Rent-Seeking/Corruption
Demand (MSB)
MSC
MPC
Q1
Q
Quantity of Tourists
112. The Role of Environmental Valuation in
Improving Efficiency
- Improving Allocation depends on
- Knowing Peoples Value of the Environment
- Government Intervention is Driven by
- Environmental Valuation Estimates
- Environmental Valuation is
- A New Discipline
- Inevitably Approximate
12Non-market valuation techniques
13NPV of Sustainable Farming
14The Net Loss from Excess Pollution
MCA
MBA
Total Net Benefits of Emissions at E instead of
E0
E0
E
Emissions/Pollution
15The Impact of Technology
MCA
MBA
Total Net Benefits of Emissions at E instead of
E0
E0
E
Emissions/Pollution
163. The Role of Market-Based Instruments in
Improving Efficiency
- Funds Available for Environmental Policy are
- Limited and Need to be Use Effectively
- Market-Based Instruments work by
- - Altering Incentives to Use Environmental Res.
- - Minimising the Cost of Reducing Pollution
- Governments Using M.B. Instruments
- Will Achieve Environmental Standards
- With Less Burden on the Economy
17COSTS of ABATEMENT under COMMAND and CONTROL
MCA1
MCA2
Permits/Emissions
18COSTS of ABATEMENT under COMMAND and CONTROL
MCA1
TOTAL COSTS OF ABATEMENT
MCA2
Permits/Emissions
19COSTS of ABATEMENT under FLEXIBLE MECHANISMS
MCA1
MCA2
MCA1MCA2
Permits/Emissions
20COSTS of ABATEMENT under FLEXIBLE MECHANISMS
MCA1
C gt A gt DECLINE IN TOTAL COSTS
MCA2
MCA1MCA2
C
B
A
Permits/Emissions
214. Value and Rate of NaturalResource Use through
Time
- Nature Provides Resources
- Stocks (e.g. Petroleum) or Flows (e.g. Wind
Energy) - Stocks and Flows (e.g. Fisheries and Forests)
- Past Rates of Use of Natural Resources are
- Important for Present and Future Consumption
- Maximising the Value of Natural Resources depends
on - Efficient Management of the Rate Through Time
- Good Resource Management will be Key to
- the Long-Run Survival of the Economy
22Resource Price Equilibrium
- If Pt lt P0 . (1 i )t
- gtExtract Resource Today
- gt Rise in Todays Supply,
- Reduce Future Supply
- gt Fall in Todays Price
- Rise in Future Price
- If Pt gt P0 . (1 i )t then Invest for Future
- gt Rise in Todays Prices
- Fall in Future Prices
- Equilibrium Pt P0 . (1 i )t
23Linking Gordon Model with the Sustainable Yield
Function
YE3
Equilibrium/ Sustainable Yield Function
Catch, Yield
YE2
CE2
CE3
CE1
YE1
F1
Fish Population (F)
24Open-Access and Fishing Efforts
- Optimal Effort gt Creates Profits
- Profits Signal Incentive to Enter Market
- Fisheries are (often) Open-Access
- Invest in Fishing Equipment, Skills
- gt Starting Fishing
- gt Increase Total Effort (e.g. to E3)
- gt Decrease Sustainable Yield (e.g. to C3)
- So, Open-Access Fishing
- Can Lead to Over-Fishing
255. Substitutability andIrreversibility of
Resources
- Important Questions are Raised
- To What Extent Can Natural Resources be
Substituted? - To What Extent Can Natural Resources be
Substituted - with Other Resources
- (e.g. Physical, Financial or Human Capital)?
- Natural Resources are Often Irreplaceable, so
- Decisions and Rates of Use may be Irreversible
- With Impacts on the Survival of the Economy
26The Process of Population Growth on Resource
Demands
Resource Limit?????
Resource Use
Dwellings
B
27Is an Optimal Growth Sustainable?
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29The Economy, Society EnvironmentAn
Interdependent System
Raw Materials
ENVIRONMENT
ECONOMY
Pollution
Assimilative Capacity Amenities
Information Culture
Income Goods
SOCIETY
Raw Materials include Land, Air and Water,
Primary Products and Energy
30Sustainable Development
- Current Civilisation is Growing
- Pressures on Resources and Environment
- How Stable is Current Civilisation to Shocks?
- What Shocks?
- Internal Terrorism
- External Climate Change
- Reduce Vulnerability to Shocks
- Develop Rules for Sustainable Development
31Sustainable Development
- Rule 3 Weak Sustainability
- Constant Total Stock of Capital
- gt Substitution between Capital Stocks
- What rate of Substitution?
- Rising Rate as Capital Stock Declines (EKC?)
- Extremes No Substitution
- Rule 4 Strong Sustainability
- Constant Stock of Each Form of Capital
32Key Ideas
- Market Failures and Environmental Policy
- Environmental Valuation
- Market-Based Instruments
- Optimal Rate of Resource Use through Time
- Substitution of Natural and Other Capital
33Part 6
- Timetable for EC307 (DFL)
34Assessment
- Assessment 1 (Week 4) 10
- Assessment 2 (Week 7) 10
- Mid-Semester Test (Week 8) 10
- Assessment 3 (Week 12) 10
- Exam - 60
35Exam
- Part A
- Understanding of Concepts
- 1 of 3 sets of questions 30
- Part B
- Analysis of Environmental Resource Problems
- 2 of 4 sets of questions 70
36How You Will Get Good Grades
- Process the Information
- Listening/Reading Well
- Think about What your Taking-In
- Ask Questions to Yourself, to Me!
- Use the Tools of Economic Analysis
- Understand How to Use the Tools
- Use them to Solve Problems
- Be Creative/Imaginative Explore/Take Risks
- In How You Look at Issues
- In the Questions You Ask
- In the Solutions You Propose
- In Finding Interesting Points to Make
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