36 results on '"Dellink, Rob B."'
Search Results
2. Energy Levies and Endogenous Technology in an Empirical Simulation Model for the Netherlands
- Author
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den Butter, Frank A. G., Dellink, Rob B., Hofkes, Marjan W., Dinar, Ariel, editor, Zilberman, David, editor, Bovenberg, Lans, editor, and Cnossen, Sijbren, editor
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The effect of different mitigation strategies on international financing of adaptation
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Hof, Andries F., de Bruin, Kelly C., Dellink, Rob B., den Elzen, Michel G.J., and van Vuuren, Detlef P.
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- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. AD-DICE: an implementation of adaptation in the DICE model
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de Bruin, Kelly C., Dellink, Rob B., and Tol, Richard S. J.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Lessons learnt from a participatory integrated assessment of greenhouse gas emission reduction options in firms
- Author
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Stalpers, Serge I. P., van Amstel, André R., Dellink, Rob B., Mulder, Ivo, Werners, Saskia E., and Kroeze, Carolien
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Biomass and multi-product crops for agricultural and energy production—an AGE analysis
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Ignaciuk, Adriana M. and Dellink, Rob B.
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- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. An empirical analysis of dematerialisation:: Application to metal policies in The Netherlands
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Dellink, Rob B and Kandelaars, Patricia P.A.A.H
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. International Cooperation on Climate Change Adaptation from an Economic Perspective
- Author
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De Bruin, Kelly C., Dellink, Rob B., and Tol, Richard S. J.
- Subjects
Adaptation Funding/Climate change/Integrated Assessment Modeling ,jel:Q54 ,jel:H41 ,Climate Change, Adaptation Funding, Integrated Assessment Modeling ,jel:Q4 - Abstract
This paper investigates the economic incentives of countries to cooperate on international adaptation financing. Adaptation is generally implicitly incorporated in the climate change damage functions as used in Integrated Assessment Models. We replace the implicit decision on adaptation with explicit adaptation in a multi-regional setting by using an adjusted RICE model. We show that making adaptation explicit will not affect the optimal mitigation path when adaptation is set at its optimal level. Sub-optimal adaptation will, however, change the optimal mitigation path. Furthermore this paper studies for different forms of cooperation what effects international adaptation transfers will have on (i) domestic adaptation and (ii) the optimal mitigation path. Adaptation transfers will fully crowd out domestic adaptation in a first best setting. Transfers will decrease overall mitigation in our numerical simulations. An analytical framework is used to analyse the most important mechanisms and a numerical model is used to assess the magnitude of effects.
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- 2010
9. Sharing the Burden of Adaptation Financing: An Assessment of the Contributions of Countries
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Dellink, Rob B., Den Elzen, Michel, Aiking, Harry, Bergsma, Emmy, Berkhout, Frans, Dekker, Thijs, and Gupta, Joyeeta
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Burden-Sharing ,Historical Responsibility ,Environmental Economics and Policy ,Adaptation Financing - Abstract
Climate change may cause most harm to countries that contribute least to greenhouse gas emissions. This paper identifies deontology, solidarity and consequentialism as the principles that can serve as a basis for a fair international burden sharing scheme of adaptation costs. We translate these principles into criteria that can be applied in assigning contributions of individual countries, namely historical responsibility, equality and capacity to pay. Specific political and scientific choices are discussed, highlighting implications for international burden-sharing. Combining historical responsibility and capacity to pay seems a promising starting point for international negotiations on the design of burden-sharing schemes. From the numerical assessment, it is clear that UNFCCC Annex I countries carry the greatest burden under most scenarios, but contributions differ substantially subject to the choice of an indicator for capacity to pay. The total financial contribution by the Annex I countries could be in the range of $55-68 billion annually.
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- 2009
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10. How Harmful are Adaptation Restrictions
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De Bruin, Kelly C. and Dellink, Rob B.
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Climate Change ,Integrated Assessment Modelling ,Environmental Economics and Policy ,Adaptation - Abstract
The dominant assumption in economic models of climate policy remains that adaptation will be implemented in an optimal manner. There are, however, several reasons why optimal levels of adaptation may not be attainable. This paper investigates the effects of suboptimal levels of adaptation, i.e. adaptation restrictions, on the composition and level of climate change costs and on welfare. Several adaptation restrictions are identified and then simulated in a revised DICE model, extended with adaptation (AD-DICE). We find that especially substantial over-investment in adaptation can be very harmful due to sharply increasing marginal adaptation costs. Furthermore the potential of mitigation to offset suboptimal adaptation is investigated. When adaptation is not possible at extreme levels of climate change, it is cost-effective to use more stringent mitigation policies in order to keep climate change limited, thereby making adaptation possible. Furthermore not adjusting the optimal level of mitigation to these adaptation restrictions may double the costs of adaptation restrictions, and thus in general it is very harmful to ignore existing restrictions on adaptation when devising (efficient) climate policies.
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- 2009
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11. An economy model for GISMO: DART-PBL technical documentation
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Ignaciuk, Adriana M., Peterson, Sonja, Hübler, Michael, Dellink, Rob B., and Lucas, P.L.
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The Global Integrated Sustainability Model (GISMO), developed at the Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency (PBL), is a platform for analysing the complexity of sustainable development and human well-being with regards to the three sustainability domains: People, Planet, and Profit (PPP). The economic structure of the GISMO1.0 model is the International Futures model, developed at the University of Denver. To better address price behaviour in the model, the Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) model DART, developed by the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, was included in the GISMO framework and integrated with the International Futures model. The DART model is tuned to the needs of the GISMO project, and is further referred to as DART-PBL. This report provides an overview of the main changes and additions to the original DART model. The changes and additions include: 1) region and sector aggregation compatible with the GISMO framework; 2) human capital accumulation based on demographics, educational attainment and health level to better address human well-being; 3) introduction of a Linear Expenditure System to distinguish between basic and luxury consumption; 4) adjusted savings to take into account different saving patterns of a changing population structure; 5) heterogenic land prices linked with the IMAGE framework to address land scarcity and environmental impacts; and 6) partial labour mobility between agricultural and non-agricultural sectors, to assess changes in income distribution.
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- 2009
12. International cooperation on climate change adaptation from an economic perspective
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de Bruin, Kelly C., Dellink, Rob B., and Tol, Richard S. J.
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climate change ,Q54 ,Kooperation ,ddc:330 ,H41 ,Q4 ,Umweltschutzinvestition ,Wirkungsanalyse ,adaptation funding ,Integrated Assessment Modeling ,Internationale Umweltpolitik ,Theorie - Abstract
This paper investigates the economic incentives of countries to cooperate on international adaptation financing. Adaptation is generally implicitly incorporated in the climate change damage functions as used in Integrated Assessment Models. We replace the implicit decision on adaptation with explicit adaptation in a multi-regional setting by using an adjusted RICE model. We show that making adaptation explicit will not affect the optimal mitigation path when adaptation is set at its optimal level. Sub-optimal adaptation will, however, change the optimal mitigation path. Furthermore this paper studies for different forms of cooperation what effects international adaptation transfers will have on (i) domestic adaptation and (ii) the optimal mitigation path. Adaptation transfers will fully crowd out domestic adaptation in a first best setting. Transfers will decrease overall mitigation in our numerical simulations. An analytical framework is used to analyse the most important mechanisms and a numerical model is used to assess the magnitude of effects.
- Published
- 2009
13. Sticks and carrots for the design of international climate agreements with renegotiations
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Weikard, Hans-Peter and Dellink, Rob B.
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Sharing Rules ,International Environmental Agreements ,Optimal Transfers ,Umweltabkommen ,Renegotiations ,Partition Function Approach ,Internationale Umweltpolitik ,Koalition ,C72 ,Internationaler Transfer ,D62 ,Stability of Coalitions ,ddc:330 ,Klimaschutz ,H41 ,H77 ,Theorie - Abstract
This paper examines stability of international climate agreements for carbon abatement under an optimal transfer rule and renegotiations. The optimal transfer rule suggested to stabilise international environmental agreements (Weikard 2005, Carraro, Eyckmans and Finus 2006) is no longer optimal when agreements are renegotiated. We determine the conditions for optimal self-enforcing sequences of agreements. If these conditions are met, then transfer payments can be arranged such that no country wants to change its membership status at any stage. In order to demonstrate the applicability of our condition we use the STACO model, a 12-regions global model, to assess the impact of welldesigned transfer rules on the stability of an international climate agreement. Although there are strong free-rider incentives, we find a stable grand coalition in the first commitment period in a game with one round of renegotiations.
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- 2008
14. AD-DICE: An Implementation of Adaptation in the DICE Mode
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De Bruin, Kelly C., Dellink, Rob B., and Tol, Richard S.J.
- Subjects
Climate Change ,Integrated Assessment Modelling ,Environmental Economics and Policy ,Adaptation - Abstract
Integrated Assessment Models (IAMS) have helped us over the past decade to understand the interactions between the environment and the economy in the context of climate change. Although it has also long been recognized that adaptation is a powerful and necessary tool to combat the adverse effects of climate change, most IAMs have not explicitly included the option of adaptation in combating climate change. This paper adds to the IAM and climate change literature by explicitly including adaptation in an IAM, thereby making the trade-offs between adaptation and mitigation visible. Specifically, a theoretical framework is created and used to implement adaptation as a decision variable into the DICE model. We use our new AD-DICE model to derive the adaptation cost functions implicit in the DICE model. In our set-up, adaptation and mitigation decisions are separable and AD-DICE can mimic DICE when adaptation is optimal. We find that our specification of the adaptation costs is robust with respect to the mitigation policy scenarios. Our numerical results show that adaptation is a powerful option to combat climate change, as it reduces most of the potential costs of climate change in earlier periods, while mitigation does so in later periods.
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- 2007
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15. Technology Spillovers and Stability of International Climate Coalitions
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Nagashima, Miyuki and Dellink, Rob B.
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Climate Change Modelling ,International Environmental Agreements ,Non-cooperative Game Theory ,Environmental Economics and Policy ,Technology Spillovers - Abstract
Cooperation in international environmental agreements appears difficult to attain because of strong free-riding incentives. This paper explores how different technology spillover mechanisms among regions can influence the incentive structures to join and stabilise an international agreement. We use an applied modelling framework (STACO) that enables us to investigate stability of partial climate coalitions. Technology spillovers to coalition members increase their incentives to stay in the coalition and reduce abatement costs, which leads to larger global payoffs and a lower global CO2 stock. Several theories on the impact of technology spillovers are evaluated by simulating a range of alternative specifications. We find that while spillovers are a good instrument to improve stability of bilateral agreements, they cannot overcome the strong free rider incentives that are present in larger coalitions. This conclusion is robust against the specification of technology spillovers.
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- 2007
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16. Impact of climate policy on the Basque country
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Gonzalez, Mikel and Dellink, Rob B.
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Tradable pollution permits ,Applied General Equilibrium ,Basque Country ,Climate change ,Environmental Economics and Policy - Abstract
In this paper analyze the economic effects of CO2 emission reductions in the Basque Country (Spain) using an applied general equilibrium (AGE) model with specific attention to environment-energy-economy interactions. Environmental policy is implemented through a system of tradable pollution permits that the government auctions. The costs of different levels of CO2 abatement are discussed, focusing on the variations of macroeconomic, sectoral and environment-energy variables. Results show that the costs for achieving the Kyoto targets can remain limited if the appropriate combination of changes in fuel-mix and restructuring of the economy is induced. Impacto económico del control del cambio climático en el País Vasco Resumen En este trabajo analizamos el impacto económico de una reducción de las emisiones de CO2 en el País Vasco. Para ello utilizamos un modelo de equilibrio general aplicado (MEGA), que presta especial atención a las interacciones entre economía, medio ambiente y energía y que implementa la política ambiental mediante un mercado de permisos de emisión regulado por el gobierno. El artículo discute el coste de reducción de diferentes niveles en las emisiones, mostrando las variaciones en las principales variables macroeconómicas, sectoriales y energéticas. Los resultados muestran que los costes de cumplir los objetivos de Kyoto pueden ser moderados, si se consiguen inducir los cambios apropiados en el mix energético y en las estructuras de producción y consumo. Palabras clave: Modelos de Equilibrio General Aplicado; Cambio Climático; Mercados de Permisos de Emisión, País Vasco
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- 2006
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17. The Timing of National Greenhouse Gas Emission Reductions in the Presence of Other Environmental Policies
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Dellink, Rob B. and Hofkes, Marjan W.
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Applied general equilibrium model ,Wirtschaftswachstum ,H23 ,O41 ,Q28 ,Luftreinhaltung ,Allgemeines Gleichgewicht ,Environmental policy ,ddc:330 ,Klimaschutz ,Climate change ,Umweltpolitik ,D58 ,Niederlande ,Economic growth - Abstract
This paper shows in an empirical context that substantial cost reductions can be achieved in the implementation of Dutch national climate policy by (i) targeting the policy at the stock of greenhouse gases, thus allowing polluters flexibility in their timing of emission reductions; and (ii) integrating climate policy with other policies, thereby optimising the restructuring of the economy needed to achieve environmental policy targets. A dynamic applied general equilibrium model with bottom-up information on abatement techniques is used to show that the optimal timing of GHG emission reductions tends to follow the timing for the other environmental themes with an additional emphasis on emission reductions in the later periods. The optimal mix of technical measures and economic restructuring as source of emission reductions is affected by the strictness of environmental policy targets for all themes and hence can only be derived from an integrated analysis of these policies.
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- 2006
18. Energy Biased Technical Change : A CGE Analysis
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Löschel, Andreas, Otto, Vincent M., and Dellink, Rob B.
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O32 ,O33 ,Energy ,Energiesubstitution ,H23 ,Emissionsrechte ,330 Wirtschaft ,Environment ,Allgemeines Gleichgewicht ,O38 ,Computable general-equilibrium models ,ddc:330 ,Umweltpolitik ,Technischer Fortschritt ,D58 ,Endogener technischer Fortschritt ,Endogenous technical change ,Simulation ,Theorie - Abstract
This paper studies energy bias in technical change. For this purpose, we develop a computable general equilibrium model that builds on endogenous growth models. The model explicitly captures links between energy, the rate and direction of technical change, and the economy. We derive the equilibrium determinants of biased technical change and show the importance of feedback in technical change, substitution possibilities between final goods, and general-equilibrium effects for the equilibrium bias. If the feedback effect is strong, or the substitution elasticity large, or both, our model tends to a corner solution in which only technologies are developed that are appropriate for production of non-energy intensive goods.
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- 2005
19. Impact of Climate Policy on the Basque Economy
- Author
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Gonzalez, Mikel and Dellink, Rob B.
- Subjects
Resource /Energy Economics and Policy - Abstract
In this paper we analyze the economic effects of CO2 emission reductions in the Basque Country (Spain) using an applied general equilibrium (AGE) model with specific attention to environment-energy-economy interactions. Environmental policy is implemented through a system of tradable pollution permits that the government auctions. The costs of different levels of CO2 abatement are discussed, focusing on the variations of macroeconomic, sectoral and environment-energy variables. Results show that the costs for achieving the Kyoto targets can remain limited if the appropriate combination of changes in fuel-mix and restructuring of the economy is induced.
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- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Multi-Product Crops for Agricultural and Energy Production - an AGE Analysis for Poland
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Ignaciuk, Adriana M. and Dellink, Rob B.
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Resource /Energy Economics and Policy - Abstract
By-products from agriculture and forestry can contribute to production of clean and cheap (bio)electricity. To assess the role of such multi-product crops in the response to climate policies, we present an applied general equilibrium model with special attention to biomass and multi-product crops for Poland. The potential to boost production of bioelectricity through the use of multi-product crops turns out to be limited to only 2-3% of total electricity production. Further expansion of the bioelectricity sector will have to be based on biomass crops explicitly grown for energy purposes. The competition between agriculture and biomass for scarce land remains limited, given the availability of relatively poor land types and substitution possibilities. The importance of indirect effects illustrates that the AGE framework is appropriate.
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- 2005
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21. Multi-Product Crops for Agricultural and Energy Production an AGE Analysis for Poland
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Ignaciuk, Adriana and Dellink, Rob B.
- Subjects
Renewable energy ,Q42 ,Bioenergie ,H23 ,Polen ,Q28 ,Allgemeines Gleichgewicht ,Pflanzenbauprodukt ,Applied general equilibrium (AGE) ,Förderung regenerativer Energien ,ddc:330 ,D58 ,Biomass ,Energy policy - Abstract
By-products from agriculture and forestry can contribute to production of clean and cheap (bio)electricity. To assess the role of such multi-product crops in the response to climate policies, we present an applied general equilibrium model with special attention to biomass and multi-product crops for Poland. The potential to boost production of bioelectricity through the use of multi-product crops turns out to be limited to only 2-3% of total electricity production. Further expansion of the bioelectricity sector will have to be based on biomass crops explicitly grown for energy purposes. The competition between agriculture and biomass for scarce land remains limited, given the availability of relatively poor land types and substitution possibilities. The importance of indirect effects illustrates that the AGE framework is appropriate.
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- 2005
22. A Proposal for the Attribution of Market Leakage to CDM Projects
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Kuosmanen, Timo, Vöhringer, Frank, and Dellink, Rob B.
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jel:F18 ,Climate policy,Clean Development Mechanism,market leakage,leakage accounting,sharing rules ,jel:D62 ,jel:Q41 ,jel:Q25 - Abstract
Economic models suggest that in many cases, market leakage rates of greenhouse gas abatement reach the two-digit percentage range. Consequently, the Marrakesh Accords require Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) projects to account for leakage. Despite this, most project proponents neglect market leakage for their project, because the influence of an individual project on market prices seems to be negligible. Insufficient leakage accounting is facilitated by a lack of theories and applicable proposals regarding the quantification and attribution of leakage effects. The aim of this paper is to develop a proposal for the attribution of market leakage effects to CDM projects. To this purpose, we identify the transmission mechanisms for CDM project leakage, investigate the current practice of leakage accounting, and analyse alternative attribution methods for leakage effects that are transmitted through price changes. We find that project-specific approaches must fail to take account of such leakage effects. Consequently, we propose to estimate aggregate market leakage effects and attribute them proportionally to individual projects. Our proposal is based on commodity-specific leakage factors which can be applied by project developers to any emission reductions that are associated with a project?s leakage-relevant demand or supply changes. The proposal is conservative, equitable, incentive compatible and applicable at manageable costs.
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- 2004
23. Economic Effects of Materials Policies: Combining an Applied General Equilibrium Model with Materials Flows
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Kandelaars, Patricia P.A.A.H. and Dellink, Rob B.
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empirical modelling ,ddc:330 ,Rohstoffpolitik ,Allgemeines Gleichgewicht ,applied general equilibrium (AGE) ,Niederlande ,Materials policies ,materials flow analysis ,Metall - Abstract
This study aims at integrating a materials flow model into an economic model, such that theeconomic effects of policies on the use materials and products can be analysed. Methods for studyingmaterials and product flows do not properly take into account economic, behavioural or policy aspects.But most economic models do not consider material flows explicitly.To analyse the economic effects an applied general equilibrium (AGE) model is used. The mainadvantage is that full direct and indirect effects of policies can be analysed. A disaggregated model isused to examine the effects of materials and product policies on various production sectors, householdsgroups, employment and the use of materials.The model is applied to metal flows in the Netherlands. The results show that the effects of aregulating levy on materials may be large for some production sectors, depending on where in theproduction process the levy is imposed. The basic metal industry and large metal using productionsectors may be negatively affected by metal levies. Positive effects of the levies occur for otherproduction sectors, for example the basic chemical industries and the petroleum refineries. In mostscenarios, the labour income households can improve their real income, whilst the households oftransfer recipients observe a fall in real income. However, for most production sectors and householdgroups the effects are small. No ‘double dividend’ is found in the various scenarios.
- Published
- 1997
24. Lessons learnt from a participatory integrated assessment of greenhouse gas emission reduction options in firms
- Author
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Stalpers, Serge I. P., primary, van Amstel, André R., additional, Dellink, Rob B., additional, Mulder, Ivo, additional, Werners, Saskia E., additional, and Kroeze, Carolien, additional
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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25. A Bargaining Model Of Migration.
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Bogers, R.J., Dellink, Rob B., Ruijs, Arjan, Mensah-Bonsu, Akwasi, and Burger, Kees
- Abstract
This chapter models migration decisions as joint individual and family decisions and develops a model in which family members can migrate on the condition that they remit more than they would have contributed as resident household member. The upper bound on remittances is set by their own net benefits after migration. The paper uses cross-sectional data collected in 2000 from northeast Ghana to investigate the effect of farm household population, family landholding and the perceived soil quality on migration and remittance decisions of members of the farm household in Northeast Ghana. Nested logit and Tobit models estimation techniques are employed. The empirical results confirm the negative effect that per-capita farmland size has on the probability of migration. More livestock sales coincide with fewer remittances. The core factors of the theoretical model could not be confirmed, however. Land quality appears to have no effect on migration or remittances. Local employment conditions help mitigate migration, however [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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26. Farmers Investing In Sustainable Land Use At A Tropical Forest Fringe, The Philippines.
- Author
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Bogers, R.J., Dellink, Rob B., Ruijs, Arjan, Romero, Marino R., and Groot, Wouter T.
- Abstract
A transition from slash-and-burn farming to sustainable land use is essential for the prevention of poverty and the conservation of the rainforest in the Philippine uplands. The key of this transition is that farmers invest in the quality of their land, e.g., through terracing, contour bunding, irrigation facilities, agroforestry or tree plantation. In their turn, these investments depend on a variety of factors, such as the households' socioeconomic and agro-ecological conditions. This chapter presents an econometric analysis of the determinants of households' investments in land quality in the Philippines. A logit model of investments is formulated using the information generated from an in-depth household survey of 104 households randomly selected in four upland villages located in Luzon, Philippines at varying distance to the major markets of metropolis Manila. The findings show that older household heads have a higher probability of investing in land quality improvement. This is due to ‘lifecycle effects' on the part of the farmers since they accumulate capital and knowledge as they grow older. Household heads with more knowledge of soil and water conservation techniques, and households with additional, non-farming income are also more likely to invest in land improvements. Significant influence is also observed of village-level characteristics. Contrary to (neo-) Boserupian theory, population density did not appear to have an influence. Traditional upland policies tend to see farmers as destructive agents that must be forced towards sustainable agriculture - usually without much success. As suggested by the research results, many opportunities exist for policies that rather aim to reinforce and spread the positive actions that farmers are already carrying out spontaneously. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Traditional Institutions And Sustainable Livelihood.
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Bogers, R.J., Dellink, Rob B., Ruijs, Arjan, and Omura, Makiko
- Abstract
This paper investigates the effects of traditional informal institutions on the sustainable management of upland agricultural fields in indigenous communities of the northern Philippines. The estimated results from the case study suggest significant positive effects of a traditional reciprocal exchange-labour system and customary property rights restrictions on field maintenance activities, although the existence of traditional authority is not found to be significant. The results imply a continuing positive role for embedded customs in these communities, despite some evidences of decaying traditional institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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28. Willingness To Pay For Systematic Management Of Community Forests For Conservation Of Non-Timber Forest Products In Nigeria's Rainforest Region.
- Author
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Bogers, R.J., Dellink, Rob B., Ruijs, Arjan, Chukwuone, Nnaemeka A., and Okorji, Chukwuemeka E.
- Abstract
Despite the importance of non-timber forest products (NTFP) in sustaining livelihood and poverty smoothening in rural communities, they are highly depleted and poorly conserved. Besides, conservation initiatives in Nigeria to date are rarely participatory. Even community forests, the main source of NTFP, are poorly conserved. Therefore, to enhance participatory conservation initiatives, this study determines the willingness of households in forest communities in the rainforest region of Nigeria to pay for systematic management of community forests using the contingent-valuation method. A multistage random-sampling technique was used in selecting 180 respondent households used for the study. The value-elicitation format used was discrete choice with open-ended follow-up questions. A Tobit model with sample selection was used in estimating the bid function. The findings show that some variables such as wealth category, occupation, number of years of schooling and number of females in a household positively and significantly influence willingness to pay. Gender (male-headed households), start price of the valuation, number of males in a household and distance from home to forests negatively and significantly influence willingness to pay. Incorporating these findings in initiatives to organize the local community in systematic management of community forests for NTFP conservation will enhance participation and hence poverty alleviation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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29. Effects Of Poverty On Deforestation.
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Bogers, R.J., Dellink, Rob B., Ruijs, Arjan, Pfaff, Alexander, Kerr, Suzi, Cavatassi, Romina, Davis, Benjamin, Lipper, Leslie, Sanchez, Arturo, and Timmins, Jason
- Abstract
We review many theoretical predictions that link poverty to deforestation and then examine poverty's net impact empirically using multiple observations of all of Costa Rica after 1960. Countrywide disaggregate (district-level) data facilitate analysis of both poverty's location and its impact on forest. If the characteristics of the places the poor live are not controlled for, then poverty's impact is confounded with differences between poorer and less poor areas and we find no significant effect of poverty. Using our data over space and time to control for effects of locations' differing characteristics, we find that the poorer are on land whose relative quality discourages forest clearing, such that with these controls the poorer areas are cleared more. The latter result suggests that poverty reduction aids the forest. For the poorest areas, this result is weaker but another effect is found: deforestation responds less to productivity, i.e., the poorest have less ability to expand or to reduce given land quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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30. Can Ecotourism Be An Alternative To Traditional Fishing?
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Bogers, R.J., Dellink, Rob B., Ruijs, Arjan, Sarr, Omar, Boncoeur, Jean, Travers, Muriel, and Cormier-Salem, Marie-Christine
- Abstract
This paper analyses the possible economic consequences of the development of ecotourism on fishing communities of poor countries from two complementary points of view: an empirical survey of a case study, and a bioeconomic model. It is divided into three parts. The first part of the paper is dedicated to the case of the Saloum delta, Senegal, an area where demographic pressure and an agriculture crisis have led to a sharp increase in fishing effort resulting in overfishing, and where attempts have been made to provide alternative income to the local population through ecotourism. The second part of the paper presents a two-sector bioeconomic model, where the link between artisanal fishing and ecotourism relies on their common use of the same natural resource. According to this model, developing ecotourism may help to overcome the dilemma between the need for long-term resource conservation and the immediate necessity to provide jobs and income to the local population. However, due to the negative externality exerted by fishing on ecotourism, the model suggests that this development is likely to be non-optimal if it is left to the initiative of market forces. The last section of the paper discusses the practical significance of these conclusions, with reference to the Saloum delta case. It underlines the major limits of the model, including the assumed non-extractive character of ecotourism, and its lack of spatial dimension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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31. The Role Of Measurement Problems And Monitoring In Pes Schemes.
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Bogers, R.J., Dellink, Rob B., Ruijs, Arjan, and Meijerink, Gerdien
- Abstract
Payment for environmental services (PES) is seen as a mechanism that can achieve two goals, providing poor resource managers with an additional source of income and maintaining environmental services. Although some reservations have been made on the effectiveness of PES of reaching the poor, similar reservations can be made about achieving the second goal. Because many environmental services are intangible, developing simple and straightforward indicators to measure and monitor the environmental service provided and linking these to the efforts supplied by the resource managers is difficult and costly. But establishing this link is crucial to those who are paying and ultimately for the success of the PES concept. By reviewing the literature on this topic and analysing in a systematic way what types of measurement problems there are, we will show that the type of monitoring that is required within a PES has consequences for the institutional arrangement needed for a successful PES. We find that the institutional arrangements for monitoring vary according to (i) the type of environmental service and its underlying production process; (ii) the extent to which the environmental service can be freely observed or measured; (iii) the extent to which activities of the resource managers who provide the environmental service can be freely observed; and finally (iv) the deterministic or stochastic nature of production processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Water Resource Management And The Poor.
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Bogers, R.J., Dellink, Rob B., Ruijs, Arjan, Hellegers, Petra, Schoengold, Karina, and Zilberman, David
- Abstract
Water allocations as well as water quality and health concerns are often due to inadequate policies and institutions, which pose major challenges for policy reform. The necessary ingredients of such reform include four elements: rules to improve the decision-making process about water projects, principles to improve water allocation, incentives for water conservation, and incentives to improve water quality. The paper shows that improved policies and incentives can address many of the global water problems and lead to environmental sustainability while addressing distributional issues. Some of the reforms may hurt the poor in the short run through higher water prices, but may provide them better access to water and reduce the toll of unsustainable water use in the long run. The direct and indirect implications of increasing prices of energy for water reforms are also discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
- Full Text
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33. Poverty Traps And Resource Dynamics In Smallholder Agrarian Systems.
- Author
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Bogers, R.J., Dellink, Rob B., Ruijs, Arjan, and Barrett, Christopher B.
- Abstract
Poverty traps and resource degradation in the rural tropics appear to have multiple and complex, but similar, causes. Market imperfections, imperfect learning, bounded rationality, spillovers, coordination failures and economically dysfunctional institutions all play a role, to varying degrees in different places and times. Pinning down these mechanisms empirically remains a challenge, however, but one essential to the design of appropriate interventions for reducing poverty and environmental degradation in areas where livelihoods depend heavily on natural resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Economics Of Poverty, Environment And Natural-Resource Use.
- Author
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Bogers, R.J., Ruijs, Arjan, Dellink, Rob B., and Bromley, Daniel W.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Towards global carbon pricing: Direct and indirect linking of carbon markets.
- Author
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Dellink, Rob B., Jamet, Stéphanie, Chateau, Jean, and Duval, Romain
- Abstract
Emissions trading systems (ETS) can play a major role in a cost-effective climate policy framework. Both direct linking of ETSs and indirect linking through a common crediting mechanism can reduce costs of action. We use a global recursive-dynamic computable general equilibrium model to assess the effects of direct and indirect linking of ETS systems across world regions. Linking of domestic Annex I ETSs leads to moderate aggregate cost savings, as differences in domestic permit prices are limited. Countries benefit directly from linking by either buying permits and avoiding investing in high-cost mitigation options, or by exploiting relatively cheap mitigation options and selling permits at a higher price. Although the economy of the main permit sellers, such as Russia, is negatively affected by the real exchange rate appreciation that is induced by the large export of permits, on balance they also still benefit from linking. The cost-saving potential for developed countries of well-functioning crediting mechanisms appears to be very large. Even limited use of credits would nearly halve mitigation costs; cost savings would be largest for carbon-intensive economies. However, one open issue is whether these gains can be fully reaped in reality, given that direct linking and the use of crediting mechanisms both raise complex system design and implementation issues. The analysis in this paper shows, however, that the potential gains to be reaped are so large, that substantial efforts in this domain are warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Alternative calculations of a sustainable national income for the Netherlands according to Hueting
- Author
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Verbruggen, Harmen, primary, Dellink, Rob B., additional, Gerlagh, Reyer, additional, and Jansen, Huib M.A., additional
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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