Showing posts with label Environmental Economics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Environmental Economics. Show all posts

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Book: Factor Five-Transforming the Global Economy through 80% Improvements in Resource Productivity (13 March 2014)


Factor Five

Transforming the Global Economy through 80% Improvements in Resource Productivity

By Ernst Ulrich von Weizsacker, Charlie Hargroves, Michael H. Smith, Cheryl Desha, Peter Stasinopoulos

Routledge – 2009 – 448 pages

Description:
When first published in 1997, Factor Four: Doubling Wealth, Halving Resource Use by renowned economic and engineering experts Ernst von Weizs?cker, Amory Lovins and L. Hunter Lovins, transformed how economists, policy makers, engineers, entrepreneurs and business leaders thought about innovation and wealth creation. Through examples from a wide range of industrial sectors, the authors demonstrated how technical innovation could cut resource use in half while doubling wealth. Now twelve years on, with climate change at the top of the world agenda and the new economic giants of China and India needing ever more resources, there is a unique historic opportunity to scale up resources productivity and radically transform the global economy. And Factor Five is the book set to change all of this. Picking up where Factor Four left off, this new book examines the past 15 years of innovation in industry, technical innovation and policy. It shows how and where factor four gains have been made and how we can achieve greater factor five or 80%+ improvements in resource and energy productivity and how to roll them out on a global scale to retool our economic system, massively boost wealth for billions of people around the world and help solve the climate change crises. Spanning dozens of countries including China and India and examining innumerable cases of innovation in design, technology and policy, the authors leave no engineering and economic stone unturned in their quest for excellence. The book tackles sustainable development and climate change by providing in depth Factor 5 resource productivity studies of the following sectors: Buildings, Industry, Agriculture, Food and Hospitality, and Transportation. In its systematic approach to demonstrating how Factor 5 can be achieved, the book also provides an overview of energy/water nexus and energy/materials nexus efficiency opportunities across these sectors. Given that these sectors are responsible for virtually all energy usage and greenhouse gas emissions globally, this book is designed to guide everyone from individual households, businesses, industry sector groups to national governments in their efforts to achieve the IPCC recommended target of 80 per cent reductions to greenhouse gas emissions. It also looks at innovation in regulation to increase resource productivity, pricing, carbon trading, eco-taxation and permits and the role of international institutions and trade. The authors also explain exciting new concepts such as bio-mimicry and whole system design, as hallmarks for a new generation of technologies. The last part of the book explores transformative ideas such as a long term trajectory of gently rising energy and resource prices, and new concepts of well-being in a more equitable world. Like its predecessor this book is simply the most important work on the future of innovation, business, economics and policy and is top drawer reading for leaders across all sectors including business and industry, government, engineering and design and teaching. This book is full colour throughout. Published with The Natural Edge Project


Reviews:
"As economic, environmental, and security imperatives converge, advanced resource productivity is quickly rising to the top of the global agenda. But let's make no little plans: new technologies, artfully combined via integrative design, can now quintuple the work wrung from energy, water, and other resources. Building on our 1997 collaboration in Factor Four, and cross-pollinating with new findings from around the world, this exciting synthesis combines a powerful efficiency toolkit with farsighted policy insights - vital to ensure that efficiency's gains are not offset but reinforced to create a richer, fairer, safer, and cooler world."Amory B. Lovins, Chairman and Chief Scientist, Rocky Mountain Institute, USA, Co-Author of 'Factor Four'
"This book shows once again, even to the most conservative critics, that not only are significant improvements possible, they are profitable, and when coupled with the understanding that reducing environmental devastation is critical, provide a vital message of hope for the future."Hunter Lovins, President, Natural Capitalism Solutions, Co-Author of 'Factor Four'
"The fivefold increase of resource productivity described in this book is impressive, but perfectly feasible, and it would give the world a bit more time to learn how to adapt."Dennis Meadows, Co-author Limits to Growth and 2009 Japan Prize Laureate
"The exciting thing about Factor Five is the combination of boldness and realism, precisely what is needed to get civilization back onto an economic path that is environmentally sustainable."Lester R. Brown, President, Earth Policy Institute
"The potential to reduce emissions by 80% on an economically viable basis is good news for world leaders and their negotiators on climate change."Dr R K Pachauri, Chairman, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
"Factor Five is the clearest non-partisan handbook on ecological renaissance available to date and should be read by every policymaker and practitioner."Professor Calestous Juma, Harvard Kennedy School
"The arrival of Factor Five couldn't be more timely - or more significant."Jonathon Porritt, Founding Director, Forum for the Future, UK
"The mounting concern about climate change has distracted attention from the fact that CO2 emissions are just part of the existential problem facing humanity. We need urgently to reduce our use of ALL the resources, not just fossil fuels. This new book is the best point of departure I know for doing that. The fivefold increase of resource productivity it describes is impressive, but perfectly feasible, and it would give the world a bit more time to learn how to adapt to ecological collapse. The book has two especially important innovations. The authors deal seriously with the rebound effect, and they base their scenarios on a long term trajectory of rising energy prices."Dennis Meadows, Co-author Limits to Growth and 2009 Japan Prize Laureate
"Is it possible to imagine a world where we can actually phase out fossil fuels before the climate phases us out? It's now feasible by reading Factor Five."Peter Newman, Professor of Sustainability, Curtin University and author of Resilient Cities
"[There can be] no sustainable development without a sustainable development of companies. Factor Five provides compelling arguments and examples that sustainable business is achievable and profitable on a large scale and that companies play a key role in creating sustainable development. Factor Five confirms the crucial role of increasing eco-efficiency to foster sustainable development."Stefan Schaltegger, Professor of Sustainability Management, Leuphana University, Germany
"The world needs radical eco-innovation to shape an opportunity out of the current crisis. This book provides excellent key examples in a systems perspective. Written by radical thinkers with a unique experience on how change can be managed, this book is a must-reading for both leaders and academics."Prof. Dr. Raimund Bleischwitz, Wuppertal Institute, Co-Director 'Material Flows and Resource Management' Professor at the College of Europe, Bruges/Belgium
"Some may have ignored the message of Factor Four 15 years ago. We can no longer afford to ignore it, and should now embrace the strengthened message of Factor Five."Professor Bedrich Moldan, Senator, Czech Republic, Former Chairman, European Environment Agency, and former Czechoslovak Environment Minister
"We are living in the most exciting era of human history. We are in the process of expanding our perspectives from a focus on short-term economic and materialistic growth to a whole-system approach with true, long-term happiness for all at its core. We are adding the need for 'sufficiency' to 'efficiency' and 'productivity' in our discussions on how to reduce human impacts on the Earth. Economy and ecology are not an 'either-or' trade-off. We now know that both are critical in every aspect of society. We must advance science and technology based on values and vision. The 'leapfrog' effect should be promoted in developing nations-not only in terms of technology but also in terms of lifestyles and societal values. Our urgent imperative is to figure out how to maximize happiness while minimizing environmental impacts. Factor Five provides the West and East alike with a compass to set our visions and to measure our progress."Junko Edahiro, Environmental Affairs Journalist, co-Chief Executive, Japan for Sustainability
"Factor Five is the clearest non-partisan handbook on ecological renaissance available to date. It should be read by every policymaker and practitioner irrespective of their political position on global change."Professor Calestous Juma, Harvard Kennedy School
"We all know what will happen if we go on producing and consuming the same way as in the twentieth century. But we don't really know how to produce and consume in the planet-friendly way. This is why we need this book. So urgently."Brice Lalonde, French Climate Ambassador, former environment minister of France
"Strong economic signals and innovative technologies make a powerful combination, and are the best hope - indeed, the only hope - of the changes needed to protect the environment. Building on the robust foundation of Factor Four, Ernst von Weizsacker and his colleagues write an inspiring manifesto for change to reduce resource use while minimising the impact on living conditions. If their recipe is sometimes over-optimistic, that is a good fault. The environment needs some optimistic friends these days."Frances Cairncross, Exeter College, Oxford (Author of Costing the Earth)
"Climate change represents the biggest challenge our generation has experienced. Factor Five shows us through sustainable business practices we can achieve positive environmental and economic outcomes. They are not mutually exclusive concepts - sustainability is just good business."Dan Atkins, Managing Director, Shaper Group
"Even if the climate were not changing, the need for the transition from fossil fuels to renewable, regenerative systems would be just as urgent. This is a recipe book for a far more economically rational world, as well as a more sustainable one."Professor Janis Birkeland, Queensland University of Technology (QUT), and author of Positive Development
"Every lawyer and lobbyist who is asked to defend 'Business As Usual' should read Factor Five. This manual for re-engineering the future holds out both hope and profit in equal parts - if only we can get the political framework right, and align the lobbies with the interests of humanity."Tom Spencer, Former Member of the European Parliament, Founder and Executive Director of the European Centre for Public Affairs, and Vice Chairman, Institute for Environmental Security
"Today, the world is faced by many challenges which all derive from the unsustainable practices with which we use our resources. Despite the most severe global economic crisis, resource prices have not returned to the low price levels of the 1990's, demonstrating that we have to reduce our 'resource obesity' as an economy and come to sustainable levels of resource consumption. A factor five improvement in resource efficiency is not only necessary, it is imperative for economies and companies to survive in a new resource and atmosphere-constrained world. This book not only clearly makes this point, but also shows that it is possible with what we know today. This key message makes this book essential reading."Professor Ernst Worrell, Utrecht University, Lead Author, IPCC Working Group III, Fourth Assessment Report (2004 - 2007)
"Factor Five is about how to achieve the resource productivity gains that are necessary for the world to avoid a future with declining human wellbeing. It provides a clear way forward. In the past, the pursuit of efficiency gains has sometimes led to loss of resilience, resulting in unexpected and unwanted outcomes (like salinized irrigation systems). I applaud the Factor Five initiative, and urge it to embrace the equally important goal of maintaining resilience in the face of the looming global shocks confronting the world."Dr Brian Walker, CSIRO Research Fellow, Resilience Alliance Program Director and Chair of Board
"Surely the ingenuity and creativity of human civilisation can rise above economic activity saddled with collateral damage? The opportunity to build new markets, new industries and new jobs while rebuilding ecosystem resilience is an exciting challenge. Are we up to the task of our future? Well, only if we act speedily. Read Factor Five and rejoice that there are still options. Then ask what role you can play to make sure the global effort arrives in time and at sufficient scale."Fiona Wain, Chief Executive Officer, Environment Business Australia
"Factor Five links together the two pillars of future planetary sustainability: (1) implementation of 'five-times' as productive technologies and systems across resource intensive industries and (2) adoption of new political frameworks and understandings for promoting rapid, ethical and just transition away from a prosperity that creates unacceptable environmental damage. We now have the tools! Do we have the courage?"Professor Mary E. Clark, Author of Contemporary Biology, Ariadne's Thread, and In Search of Human Nature
"Factor Five is an essential reference which shows companies who were inspired to action by An Inconvenient Truth how to radically reduce CO2 emissions AND reduce costs. It is one of the first books to feature the world's best practice sectoral case studies and then explain how they have achieved such large CO2 reductions cost effectively. It will help all CEOs identify significant cost saving opportunities and strategies to reduce risks in a carbon constrained future. We must all be committed to achieving significant greenhouse gas reductions - and Factor Five shows us how!"Molly Harriss Olson, Founder National Business Leaders Forum on Sustainable Development and Phillip Toyne, Director EcoFutures
"There is a paucity of publications which holistically address the needs seen in pursuing the goal of sustainable development in a realistic way. Factor Five is thus a welcome addition to the body of knowledge and literature available today, since it shows to both policy makers and society as a whole the various solutions and policy options which are available. All we need to do now is to implement them."Professor Walter Leal Filho, Hamburg University of Applied Sciences (HAW Hamburg)
"Factor Five is an important contribution to a growing corpus of work regarding energy and resource efficiency, work that is critical if the world is to meet the looming challenges of greenhouse gas emissions, sensible resource use, marketplace success, and global equity. Factor Five is especially appealing because it asks the right questions about what we do, why we do it, and, most importantly, how we do it. The authors have not only delved into the major resource-consuming systems we humans create, but also rigorously explore how they can be improved - by at least five times or more." Cameron M. Burns, Senior Editor and Journalist, Rocky Mountain Institute
"Every day and all around us, you can see the earth's resources being wasted by us and our style of consumption, as if there is no tomorrow. Doing more with less has been around in many cultures for thousands of years, but not ours today, as you and me mostly don't do it at all. We all need to practice in our everyday work, business and home choices the immediate consideration and behaviours of using less in ways which allow both more and retention of a quality of life. If this new book, Factor Five, can provide us with inspiration from practical and meaningful examples then we better get on with it now, and start acting on its tips. Bring Factor Five into your consumption choices at home and at work, with your colleagues and friends and stop wasting our planet by 80% as if life on earth didn't count. Make Factor Five your first choice, not your last."Greg Bruce, Executive Manager - Integrated Sustainability, City of Townsville
"The Climate Exchange concept has proved that once GHG reductions programs build momentum there is no limit to the innovation and creativity that can be harnessed within companies. And of course innovation will be a critical part of the solution. Factor Five shows the potential for major resource intensive sectors to significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions in a cost-effective manner. Whether through emissions trading or other market-based mechanisms, our experience at the Chicago Climate Exchange and the European Climate Exchange has made clear that companies that lead to confront the challenge will be leaders in their sectors."Richard L. Sandor, Executive Chairman of Climate Exchange plc. (CLE.L), an AIM-listed company which owns the Chicago Climate Exchange, Chicago Climate Futures Exchange and the European Climate Exchange
"In an ever more crowded and production-oriented world, the need to reduce the global ecological footprint, and hence provide the 'space' for ecosystem services to support a healthy biosphere, is paramount. Factor Five, through its exploration of the interwoven roles of technology, regulatory and economic tools and socio-political frameworks in achieving greater resource use efficiency, provides the basis for transition to a lower footprint future. This is an important book not least because it provides clear directions for achieving a more secure and sustainable planetary future." Dr Ronnie Harding, Institute of Environmental Studies, University of New South Wales, Australia


Content:
Introduction by Ernst von Weizsacker - Factor 5: A Global Imperative Part I: A Whole System Approach to Factor 5, by The Natural Edge Project Preface to the Sector Studies 1. A Framework for Factor 5 2. The Buildings Sector 3. The Heavy Industry Sector 4. The Agricultural Sector 5. The Transport Sector Part II: Making it Happen, by Ernst von Weizs�cker 6. Regulation: The Visible Hand 7. Economic Instruments for the Environment, for Efficiency and for Renewable Energies 8. Addressing the Rebound Dilemma 9. A Long-Term Ecological Tax Reform 10. Balancing Public with Private Goods 11. Sufficiency in a Civilised World


Author Bio:
Professor Ernst von Weizsacker is Co-Chair, International Panel on Sustainable Resource Management. He is also the lead author of Factor Four (Earthscan 1998). Karlson Charlie Hargroves, Michael H. Smith, Peter Stasinopoulos and Cheryl Desha are members of The Natural Edge Project, a Sustainability Think-Tank hosted by Griffith University and the Australian National University.


Sujects:
  1. Climate Change
  2. Environmental Economics
  3. Economics
  4. Business, Management and Accounting
  5. Environmental Management
  6. Environment & Economics
  7. Cities & Infrastructure (Urban Studies)
  8. Energy


source from: http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415848602/

Monday, December 16, 2013

China News: Zhejiang's choking days rise by 20 times (12 Dec 2013)

Zhejiang's choking days rise by 20 times

Xinhua, December 12, 2013
Zhejiang Province, an economic powerhouse in the Yangtze River Delta, now has over 20 times the number of hazy days as it did 50 years ago, a research report has revealed.
Zhejiang Province, an economic powerhouse in the Yangtze River Delta, now has over 20 times the number of hazy days as it did 50 years ago.
The average number of hazy days in Zhejiang from the 1960s to the early 1990s was around seven. The figure rose to almost 200 after the millennium, said a report on the province's hazy weather.
Vehicle exhaust and industrial fume are blamed as the biggest causes, said the report by the Environmental Science Research and Design Institute of Zhejiang Province, which is in east China.
A project team collected and analyzed data from the provincial and local environmental and meteorological departments covering the past half a century.
Heavy smog shrouded north and east China on Saturday, with highways closed and flights delayed or canceled.
Cities in Zhejiang and its neighboring Shanghai municipality have been enveloped in grey sky for several days. Many pedestrians have been wearing masks.
The coastal province is known for its prosperous local economy. Private enterprises took off in the 1980s when China started with its market economic reforms.
But along with industrialization has come more smog.
Zhejiang's capital city Hangzhou and other industrial cities, such as Wenzhou and Huzhou, had on average over 40 hazy days annually before 2000.
"The number of hazy days showed an explosive growth after 2000," said Jin Jun, the team leader of the project and the deputy director with the institute.
"Some major cities in Zhejiang have seen an annual average number of 150 hazy days. In some cases about 200 hazy days -- about 30 times the number before reform and opening at the end of the 1970s," said Jin.
Vehicle exhaust is the primary cause of the increasing smog in downtown areas, the report said.
Though the report is based on Zhejiang, it is representative of the country. The main components of the haze are vehicle emissions and industrial sewage which are formed by dust, sulfuric acid and vitriolic acid, said Jin.
Diesel vehicles are the "prime culprit" that cause emissions of PM 2.5, a key indicator of air pollution. Oxynitride which is released from gasoline vehicles easily become particle pollutants, which also worsens air quality, said the report.
"Zhejiang used about seven million tonnes of gasoline and nine million tonnes of diesel last year, which makes the province the second largest consumer of these two fuels nationwide," said Wu Jian, a senior engineer with the institute.
At the end of June, Zhejiang had 13.38 million registered vehicles, and about 8.39 million were gasoline cars.

Monday, November 18, 2013

Book: Developing the Service Sector as an Engine of Growth for Asia (15 Nov 2013)

Developing the Service Sector as an Engine of Growth for Asia

Description

Date:October 2013
Type:Books
Subject:
ISBN:978-92-9254-262-7 (print), 978-92-9254-263-4 (web)
Price:US$55.25 (hard copy)
The service sector already plays a critical role in developing Asia’s economy and is set to grow even further in the future. Services are now a vital source of output, growth, and jobs in the region, but suffer from very low productivity levels. The central challenge for Asia’s service sector is to move from traditional, low value-added activities to modern, high value-added activities. This book analyzes the current state of the region’s service sector, the salient barriers to service sector development, and the prospects for the sector to serve as an engine for inclusive growth. The guiding principle for Asian policy makers must be to create more competitive service markets by breaking down regulatory barriers which protect vested interests. Such barriers keep out domestic and foreign competitors, and thus stifle efficiency and innovation. While tackling the vested interests requires a great deal of political will, doing so is absolutely essential for more productive services. Complementary investments in human capital and physical infrastructure will also speed up service sector development.

Key facts and findings

  • The service sector already plays a major role in developing Asia’s economies.
  • Services are a large and growing source of jobs across the region.
  • Services are set to expand even further in the coming years.
  • Developing Asia’s service sector suffers from markedly low labor productivity.
  • Low labor productivity partly reflects the dominant role of traditional services.
  • Regulatory, infrastructure, and human capital bottlenecks constrain service sector productivity.
  • Modern services of particular importance to Asia are business-related services.
  • Growing per capita gross domestic product will help to lift labor productivity in developing Asia’s service sector.
  • Trade in services also boosts productivity.
  • Developing Asia’s service trade has been growing, and there is scope for further growth.
  • The region's service industries face an inadequate regulatory environment.
  • Service sector development can contribute to poverty reduction and inclusive growth in developing Asia.

Conclusion

The future of the sector depends on whether the expansion of services in Asia is driven by dynamic, open competition or by the inflexible protection of vested interests. If competition prevails, Asia can establish a robust, highly productive sector generating collateral benefits for other industries and providing services that power inclusive growth. Competition, in particular foreign competition, worked miracles for manufacturing in Asia as the region transformed itself into the factory of the world. It can work new miracles for the region’s service sectors and for the broader economy.

Contents

  • Services as an Engine of Growth
  • Regional Studies
  • Country Studies
  • Key Findings and Recommendation

World News: IFAD Outlines Economic Benefits of Preparing Small-Scale Farmers for Climate Change (14 Nov 2013)


IFAD Outlines Economic Benefits of Preparing Small-Scale Farmers for Climate Change

IFAD










13 November 2013: As part of its Adaptation for Smallholder Agriculture Programme (ASAP), the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) has examined the economic justification behind five of its adaptation activities in Bangladesh, Bolivia, Kenya, Turkey and Viet Nam.

The IFAD report, titled 'The Adaptation Advantage: The Economic Benefits of Preparing Small-Scale Farmers for Climate Change,' was launched at the UNFCCC COP19/CMP9 in Warsaw, Poland. The report centers on examining community and household benefits of adaptation based on: avoided damages, increased production, net incremental income and employment gains. In the case of the Mount Kenya East Pilot Project for Natural Resource Management, IFAD undertook an economic and financial analysis of water resource management and environmental conservation, finding 15 to 50% increases in intervention related income, as well as increased energy efficiency and reduced soil erosion.

In Turkey's Murat River Watershed Rehabilitation Project, IFAD's investments are expected to lead to long-term erosion control, and achieve short-term net benefits in agricultural production related to irrigation and farming inputs. In Viet Nam's Adaptation in the Mekong Delta in Ben Tre and Tra Vinh Provinces, IFAD expects long-term profitability over a 20-year duration based on changes in production systems to involve more intercropping, and increased shrimp cultivation, as well as due to changes in rice production technologies and improved irrigation practices.

In Bangladesh, IFAD's work on the Climate Adaptation and Livelihood Project is expected to reduce vulnerability of villages to natural disasters through infrastructure investment and increase resilience by shifting crop varieties. In Bolivia, the Economic Inclusion Programme for Families and Rural Communities in the Highlands, Lowlands and Inter-Andean Valleys (ACCESOS) expects increased household income based on climate risk management and capacity building for community-based adaptation.

This research supports IFAD's call for climate finance to prioritize investment in small-scale agriculture. It acknowledges the challenges of predicting costs and benefits associated with climate change impacts, but encourages the use of available methodologies.


read more: http://climate-l.iisd.org/news/ifad-outlines-economic-benefits-of-preparing-small-scale-farmers-for-climate-change/223217/


Sunday, September 15, 2013

New Books: Environmental Economics and Natural Resource Management 4th Edition By David Anderson (15 Sep 2013)

Environmental Economics and Natural Resource Management

4th Edition

By David Anderson

Routledge – 2013 – 430 pages
Descriptions:
The tools of environmental economics guide policymakers as they weigh development against nature, present against future, and certain benefits against uncertain consequences. From reluctant-but-necessary calculations of the value of life, to quandaries over profits at the environment’s expense, the policies and research findings explained in this textbook are relevant to decisions made daily by individuals, firms, and governments.
The fourth edition of Environmental Economics and Natural Resource Management pairs the user-friendly approaches of the previous editions with the latest developments in the field. A story-based narrative delivers clear, concise coverage of contemporary policy initiatives. To promote environmental and economic literacy, we have added even more visual aids, including color photographs and diagrams unmatched in other texts. Ancillaries include an Instructor’s Guide with answers to all of the practice problems and downloadable slides of figures and tables from the book.
Contents:
  1. The Big Picture
  2. Efficiency and Choice 
  3. Market Failure 
  4. The Role of Government
  5. Trade-Offs and the Economy
  6. Environmental Quality 
  7. Energy 
  8. Sustainability 
  9. Population, Poverty and Economic Growth 
  10. Biodiversity and Valuation 
  11. International and Global Issues 
  12. Perspectives on Environmental Policy 
  13. Natural Resource Management: Renewable Resources 
  14. Natural Resource Management: Depletable and Replenishable Resources 
  15. Environmentral Dispute Resolution 
  16. Morals and Motivation

Sunday, August 25, 2013

New Books: Environmental Economics An Integrated Approach By Philip E. Graves (21 Aug 2013)

Environmental Economics

An Integrated Approach

By Philip E. Graves

CRC Press – 2013 – 264 pages
Descriptions:
Rigorous, yet written in a way that facilitates 
understanding of sometimes difficult material, this book provides practical and working knowledge of how environmental policy analysis is conducted in the United States and, to a lesser extent, elsewhere. It details the tools required to conduct that analysis and also discusses weaknesses in the existing methods, underlining areas for future improvement. This approach allows readers to get a sense of what is known and what is not known about environmental economics.

Contents:
Basic Theory: Introduction. The Economy and the Environment: Uncontrolled Case. The Economy and the Environment: The Case of Optimal Controls. Alternative Regulatory Approaches. 
Physical Effects: Optimal Controls in Real-World Settings: General Considerations. The Physical Effects of the Various Residuals: Air. The Physical Effects of the Various Residuals: Water. The Physical Effects of the Various Residuals: Solid Waste and Hazardous Materials. 
Valuation of the Physical Effects: Overview of Valuation Methods. Environmental Valuation: Voting and Referenda. Environmental Valuation: Constructed Markets. Environmental Valuation: The Sum of Specific Damages Approach. Environmental Valuation: The Hedonic Method. Environmental Valuation: The Travel Cost Method. Do Decision-Makers "Care" about Efficiency and Equity? 
The Role of Time and Benefit-Cost Analysis: The Role of Time in Economics: Interest Rates, Compounding, and Discounting. Benefit-Cost Analysis.
Appendices.