Applied Environmental Economics: Bridging the divide between policy and theory within the context of recycling, macro-level environmental indicators, and water trading

Download files
Access & Terms of Use
open access
Copyright: Longden, Thomas
Altmetric
Abstract
By focusing upon a range of topics and utilising a range of techniques, this Thesis provides a review of a range of issues related to successful environmental economics policy prescriptions. How and why certain policies are selected will be crucial to making effective policy prescriptions and this is the central focus of this Thesis. Spanning from a review of a policy prescription that was not followed to the development of a model that is applied to the review of a policy proposal; examples of policy failure, policy success, and policy prescriptions are at the core of the discussion throughout. With an appraisal of policy-making on a local level, the case of recycling and the household charge for waste collection is reviewed using data from municipalities in New South Wales, Australia. This analysis shows that without an adequate pricing scheme, different levels of the household charge for waste collection across municipalities have little association with different levels of recycling. An appraisal of intergovernmental agreements (including the Montreal Protocol) follows and finds that evidence points to an induced policy response, rather than the Environmental Kuznets Curve relationship. While declines in emissions cannot be solely attributed to the timing of the targets prescribed, the Montreal Protocol was associated with notable emission reductions. The last area of research covers a range of issues surrounding water trading between agricultural firms. Chapter four introduces a distinctive and innovative agent based model built to provide projections of trading that allow for: - the constraint of transaction costs, - the mixture of firms within the trading scheme, - out of equilibrium market operation, and – a range of crop water demands. This model is then utilised to gauge the impact of the implementation of a ‘Network Trading Scheme’ which has the aim of reducing the impact of transaction costs on otherwise viable trades.
Persistent link to this record
Link to Publisher Version
Link to Open Access Version
Additional Link
Author(s)
Longden, Thomas
Supervisor(s)
Fox, Kevin
Creator(s)
Editor(s)
Translator(s)
Curator(s)
Designer(s)
Arranger(s)
Composer(s)
Recordist(s)
Conference Proceedings Editor(s)
Other Contributor(s)
Corporate/Industry Contributor(s)
Publication Year
2014
Resource Type
Thesis
Degree Type
PhD Doctorate
UNSW Faculty
Files
download public version.pdf 3.19 MB Adobe Portable Document Format
Related dataset(s)