Calculation, elasticity and regional differences of agricultural greenhouse gas shadow prices

Author(s):  
Yanqiu He
2018 ◽  
Vol 64 (No. 7) ◽  
pp. 291-300 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kroupova Zdeňka Zakova ◽  
Cechura Lukas ◽  
Havlikova Michaela ◽  
Halova Pavlina ◽  
Maly Michal

The paper presents an analysis of the shadow prices of the greenhouse gas emissions in the Czech dairy production industry. There is employed the stochastic frontier multiple output distance function with two market outputs and one non-market (undesirable) output – greenhouse gas emissions – as a representation of a negative public good. The results show that shadow prices differ significantly between producers. Moreover, the price is not stable over time. Significant differences can be seen in shadow prices for the greenhouse gas emissions among the researched group of farmers with respect to the degree of intensification. Most noticeably, the higher the intensification, the higher the shadow price. However, no evidence for a significant relationship between the greenhouse gas prices and technical efficiency was found, and not even the development of the greenhouse gas prices and technical efficiency suggested any common patterns.


2020 ◽  
Vol 33 (22) ◽  
pp. 9595-9613 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberta D’Agostino ◽  
Josephine R. Brown ◽  
Aurel Moise ◽  
Hanh Nguyen ◽  
Pedro L. Silva Dias ◽  
...  

AbstractPast changes of Southern Hemisphere (SH) monsoons are less investigated than their northern counterpart because of relatively scarce paleodata. In addition, projections of SH monsoons are less robust than in the Northern Hemisphere. Here, we use an energetic framework to shed lights on the mechanisms determining SH monsoonal response to external forcing: precession change at the mid-Holocene versus future greenhouse gas increase (RCP8.5). Mechanisms explaining the monsoon response are investigated by decomposing the moisture budget in thermodynamic and dynamic components. SH monsoons weaken and contract in the multimodel mean of midHolocene simulations as a result of decreased net energy input and weakening of the dynamic component. In contrast, SH monsoons strengthen and expand in the RCP8.5 multimodel mean, as a result of increased net energy input and strengthening of the thermodynamic component. However, important regional differences on monsoonal precipitation emerge from the local response of Hadley and Walker circulations. In the midHolocene, the combined effect of Walker–Hadley changes explains the land–ocean precipitation contrast. Conversely, the increased local gross moist stability explains the increased local precipitation and net energy input under circulation weakening in RCP8.5.


Nature ◽  
2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Quirin Schiermeier
Keyword(s):  

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