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Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010 Tiago Domingos Assistant Professor Environment and Energy Section Department of Mechanical Engineering Collaboration: Rui Pedro Mota [email protected]

Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

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Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010. Tiago Domingos Assistant Professor Environment and Energy Section Department of Mechanical Engineering. Collaboration: Rui Pedro Mota [email protected]. Exercise 1.9 c). Return to capital is constant on a balanced growth path (BGP) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

Ecological EconomicsLecture 11

27th May 2010

Tiago DomingosAssistant Professor

Environment and Energy SectionDepartment of Mechanical Engineering

Collaboration: Rui Pedro Mota

[email protected]

Page 2: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

Exercise 1.9 c)• Return to capital is constant on a balanced growth path (BGP)

• Share of output going to capital is constant on a BGP

• Share of output going to labor is constant on a BGP

0r f f k

r f f

' ''

0 0r K Y

n g n gr K Y

rK

Y

wL

Y

0w L Y

g n n gw L Y

0w A kf k

gw A f kf

''

'

Page 3: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

Exercise 1.9 d)• Growth rate of r

• Growth rate of w

• For concave functions

0r f f k

r f f

' ''

w A kf kg

w A f kf

''

'

0f kf '

0f ''

Page 4: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

Expressions for GNNI and GS

• Green Net National Income:

• Genuine Saving (Adjusted Net Saving):

• The value of time

R(Q f ) S e ER tGNNI NNI Q

R(Q f ) SR tGS NNI C Q

( )( )t R s tst

Q t F e ds

RY RQI W

Page 5: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

GNNI in Portugal

• Starting from conventional SNA aggregates:

– Deduct the damage from flow pollution emissions,

– Deduct (add) the value of rents from resource depletion (or not),

– Add the value of technological progress .

e E

R(Q f ) SR

tQ

-20000

0

20000

40000

60000

80000

100000

120000

140000

1990 1995 2000 2005

Mill

ion

GNI

CFC

Air emissions

Forest Depl.

Tech. Progress

GNNI

Pot GNNI

GNNI, T=100

Page 6: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

• Models point to measure emissions at the – Marginal cost of abatement (MCA), or

– Marginal social cost (MSC) = Marginal benefit of abatement (MBA), a.k.a. Marginal Damage Costs (MDC)

• Measurement away from the optimum– c, over-polluting (assumed current state) => a is upper bound

– d, under-polluting => b is lower bound

Social costs vs Marginal abatement

Constant MDC

Page 7: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

• Use the marginal damage per tonne of emission estimated in the CAFE-CBA project.

– Pollutants: sulphur dioxide (SO2), nitrogen oxides (NOx), particulate matter (PM2.5), ammonia (NH3) and volatile organic compounds (VOC).

• Assess the costs and benefits of air pollution policies, and conduct analysis of scenarios.

• Impacts considered:– Exposure to PM2.5 and ozone

– Health damages of PM2.5 (both acute and chronic effects) and ozone, O3 (only acute). Both long-term (chronic) and short-term (acute). Both mortality (i.e. deaths) and morbidity (i.e. illness)

• Most important health damages relate to mortality, restricted activity days and chronic bronchitis.

CAFE-CBA

Page 8: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

• Regarding the effects of each pollutant on PM2.5 concentration:

CAFE-CBA

Page 9: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

• Regarding the effects of each pollutant on O3 concentration:

CAFE-CBA

Page 10: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

• Impacts quantified in monetary units. Beware of double counting.

CAFE-CBA

Page 11: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

• Impacts omitted from the analysis.

CAFE-CBA

Page 12: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

• Modelling and valuing of a uniform relative (?) reduction in emissions within each country.

• A change of 1000 t of each pollutant causes changes in concentration of PM2.5 and O3 in Europe.

• This regards a 15% emission reduction (the last 15%) of SO2, NOx, NH3, VOCs and PM2.5 at the emission level of current legislation in 2010.

CAFE-CBA – Marginal costs

Page 13: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

Impact Pathway Aproach

Page 14: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

• Quantification of emissions

• Description of pollutant dispersion across Europe (grid 50 x 50 km)

• Quantification of exposure of people, environment and buildings that are affected by air pollution;

– Source-receptor functions

• Quantification of the impacts of air pollution– Health damages, damages to crops and to buildings

• Valuation of the impacts

• Description of uncertainties

CAFE-CBA

Page 15: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

• Evaluate the impacts on health of air pollution, concentrating on the two main pollutants of concern to CAFE – PM and ozone.

• Monetization of chronic mortality in terms of changing longevity (years of life lost), i.e., Value of a Life Year (VOLY).

• Premature mortality due to air pollution is valued in terms of the Value of a Statistical Life (VSL).

• VSL involves dividing some estimate of the WTP for a mortality risk reduction by that risk reduction.

• VOLY involves dividing some estimate of the willingness to pay (WTP) for an improvement in life expectancy by that life expectancy improvement.

– VOLYs have been computed mainly through computational adjustments of existing VSL

CAFE-CBA – Health Damages

Page 16: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

• VSL can be multiplied by the statistical deaths averted by a policy to arrive at the benefits of that policy.

• Variation in the method used to value mortality

CAFE-CBA – Health Damages

Page 17: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

• Marginal PM2.5 damage (€) per tonne emission for 2010

– 3 sets of sensitivity analysis

• Quantification of ozone effects on mortality should use the metric SOMO35 (sum of means over 35 ppb)

– relationship of daily ozone with daily mortality should be restricted to quantifying the effects at concentrations greater than 35ppb daily maximum 8-hr mean, on days when the daily maximum 8-hr mean exceeded that level.

CAFE-CBA – Health Damages

Page 18: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

• Based on a scale of incapacity weights, ranging from 0 (healthy) to 1 (death).

• Weights are obtained from surveys.

Setting DALY’s

Severity weights

Indicator conditions

0.00-0.02 Vitiligo on face, weight-for-height less than 2 SDs

0.02-0.12 Watery diarrhoea, severe sore throat, severe anaemia

0.12-0.24Radius fracture in a stiff cast, infertility, erectile dysfunction,

rheumatoid arthritis, angina

0.24-0.36 Below-the-knee amputation, deafness

0.36-0.50 Rectovaginal fistula, mild mental retardation, Down syndrome

0.50-0.70 Unipolar major depression, blindness, paraplegia

0.70-1.00 Active psychosis, dementia, severe migraine, quadriplegia

Page 19: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

DALY’s in Portugal

Men Women

Healthy Life Expectancy at Birth 64.3 69.4

Expectation of Lost Healthy Years at Birth 8.5 10.7

Life Expectancy at Birth 72.8 80.1

Page 20: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

• DALYs transform any type of morbidity or mortality into an equivalent number of life years:

– Preferences over health and longevity may depend only on health consequences, and not on other characteristics of the individual (e.g wealth) or the risk (e.g.

uncontrollable, unfamiliar, dreaded).

• WTP is the rate of substitution between health and wealth– Preferences may depend on characteristics of the individuals and the risk.

– WTP to reduce mortality risk is the Value per Statistical Life (VSL or VOSL). VSL can be calculated using:

• the relationship bewteen job risks and wages paid,

• expenses made for safety gear

• people’s willingness to pay for risk reductions

– Value of a Statistical Life Year (VSLY or VOLY) can be calculated as the annuity equivalent to VSL (Pearce, 2000). Empirically, VSL is a decreasing function of age, has an income elasticity of 0.5-0.6, and depends on union status.

– However, standard applied economic analysis uses constant VSL

DALY’s in Portugal

Page 21: Ecological Economics Lecture 11 27th May 2010

• VSL (Value of Statistical Life)– Spain, 1999:

2.1-2.7 M€/VSL (Font et al., 2006)

– European Union:

1.7 M€/VSL (Pearce and Koundouri, 2004)

• DALY (Disability Adjusted Life Year)– Noise interference with communication; sleep interference:

45-125 kUSD(2000)/DALY (Hofstetter and Muller-Wenk, 2005)

– Health costs in the UK:

5.6 k€/DALY (Pearce and Koundouri, 2004)

– VSL in the UK:

90 k€/DALY (Pearce and Koundouri, 2004)

– Direct studies of the Willingness to Pay per DALY

10-400 kUSD/DALY (Gyrd-Hansen, 2005)

DALY’s in Portugal