Environmental amenities as a renewable resource: management and conflicts

The major assumption made in this paper, is that the environment offers at large two distinct services each of different kind. First, the environmental resources may serve as inputs to the production of conventional goods. An example is the exploitation of an oil source from which, one firm extracts...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental economics and policy studies 2016-07, Vol.18 (3), p.303-325
Hauptverfasser: Halkos, George E., Papageorgiou, George J.
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Papageorgiou, George J.
description The major assumption made in this paper, is that the environment offers at large two distinct services each of different kind. First, the environmental resources may serve as inputs to the production of conventional goods. An example is the exploitation of an oil source from which, one firm extracts the oil which in turn is used as a fossil fuel for an industry. In the worst case, the use of the natural resources for industrial purposes will negatively affect the environment, e.g. the air quality over an industrial area. Nevertheless, saving abatement costs, production cost decreases due to possibility to pollute. Therefore, this first environmental service is evaluated positively by the economic agents (firms and consumers). The second service provided is the environment itself which offers amenities (i.e. clean air, blue coasts, natural creeks, clean rivers and lakes etc.) The crucial difference between the uses of the above services is how environmental quality affected and how much is the environmental degradation. From the pure economic point of view, the uses of the environmental services are consumptive and non-consumptive. Conversely in natural resources means, the environmental stock may be used as a raw material for the industrial production of conventional goods providing simultaneously a positive externality. Hence, the main purpose of this paper is twofold. First it considers the management at which the social planer has to steer emissions in an optimal way, meaning that both environmental quality and stock of pollutants remain optimal. Second it considers the conflict between the representative polluting producer and the representative environmental quality enjoyer which actually abates. In both cases we explore the complex limit cycle equilibrium, but additionally in the second case the analytical expressions of the crucial variables of the model are computed.
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source SpringerNature Journals; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete
subjects Air pollution
Air quality
Developing countries
Dynamical systems
Economic models
Economics
Economics and Finance
Eigenvalues
Emissions
Environmental degradation
Environmental Economics
Environmental policy
Environmental quality
Environmental services
Equilibrium
Growth models
Industrial areas
Industrial production
LDCs
Natural resources
Pollutants
Pollution
Pollution control
Renewable resources
Research Article
Social Policy
Studies
title Environmental amenities as a renewable resource: management and conflicts
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