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The economics of air pollution, with special reference to the control of sulphur-oxides emissions in CanadaLepore, Giuseppe. January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
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The economics of air pollution, with special reference to the control of sulphur-oxides emissions in CanadaLepore, Giuseppe January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
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Essays on Environment and Economic ProductivityLiu, Ruinan January 2017 (has links)
Heavy air pollution is a global phenomenon that affects both developing and developed countries. While many studies have estimated air pollution’s negative impact on health, no study has shown air pollution to have any impact on countries’ aggregate economic productivity. With a growing body of literature showing that air pollutants may have a significant negative impact on labor productivity, a primary input to a nation’s economic production, I hypothesize and show that ambient air pollution indeed exhibits a significant negative impact on a country’s economic productivity as measured by GDP per capita. In Chapters 1 and 2 of this dissertation, I make identification of the causal relationship between air pollution and GDP per capita using the Huai River Policy and wild res as instruments. Chapter 3 investigates the impact of temperature, another key environmental factor, on labor productivity using a rich data set comprising 4 million baseball pitches. My results provide empirical evidence for modeling economic loss in response to air pollution and climate change.
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Effects of air pollution on residential property values in Toledo, OregonJaksch, John August 08 August 1969 (has links)
Graduation date: 1970
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Outpatient medical costs related to air pollution in the Portland-Vancouver areaJaksch, John August 05 October 1972 (has links)
Graduation date: 1973
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The "small-firm" problem on standard and penalty setting with incomplete enforcementShen, Hung-Wen 05 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Essays in Energy and Environmental EconomicsAtal Chomali, Raimundo January 2021 (has links)
This dissertation represents an effort to advance interdisciplinary research in issues relevant for energy and environmental policy, combining economics with applied engineering and ecology. It includes work that is informed by theoretical and empirical studies, and is conceptually centered in the notion that competitive markets lead to inefficient combinations of risk and yield. In the first two chapters of the dissertation, I study this in the context of wind energy capacity investments, where profit-maximizing developers choose the location and timing of the construction of wind farms. The final chapter of the dissertation is an empirical study on the effects of intensive aquaculture on water pollution.
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The environmental cost of China's growth.January 2006 (has links)
Luo Bei. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2006. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 48-52). / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / Chapter 1. --- Introduction --- p.1 / Chapter 2. --- Backgrounds and Literature Review --- p.5 / Chapter 2.1 --- Backgrounds of China's environment problems --- p.5 / Chapter 2.2 --- Literature review --- p.7 / Chapter 3. --- Econometric Strategy --- p.10 / Chapter 4. --- Data and Variables --- p.11 / Chapter 5. --- Empirical Results --- p.14 / Chapter 5.1 --- City Part --- p.14 / Chapter 5.2 --- Province emission and complaints received --- p.15 / Chapter 5.3 --- Discussion about the results --- p.23 / Chapter 6. --- Conclusion --- p.23 / Tables --- p.25 / Reference --- p.48
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The trading of greenhouse gasLi, Chi-cheong, Markus., 李志昌. January 2000 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Urban Planning / Master / Master of Science in Urban Planning
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Characterization and modeling of mercury speciation in industrially polluted areas due to energy production and mineral processing in south africaMakiese, Julien Gilles Lusilao 27 August 2012 (has links)
Coal combustion is recognized as the primary source of anthropogenic mercury emission
in South Africa followed by gold mining. Coal is also known to contain trace
concentrations of mercury which is released to the environment during coal mining,
beneficiation or combustion. Therefore, determining the mercury speciation in coal is of
importance in order to understand its behavior and fate in the environment.
Mercury was also used, at a large extent, in the Witwatersrand Basin (South Africa) for
gold recoveries until 1915 and is still used in illegal artisanal mining. Consequences of
these activities are the release of mercury to the environment. Nowadays, gold (and
uranium) is also recovered through the reprocessing of old waste dumps increasing the
concern related to mercury pollution.
While much effort has been put in the northern hemisphere to understand and control
problems related to anthropogenic mercury release and its fate to the ecosystem, risk
assessment of mercury pollution in South Africa was based, until very recently, on total
element concentrations only or on non systematic fragmental studies. It is necessary to
evaluate mercury speciation under the country’s semi arid conditions, which are different
to environmental conditions that exist in the northern hemisphere, and characterize
potential sources, pathways, receptors and sinks in order to implement mitigation
strategies and minimize risk.
In this study, analytical methods and procedures have been developed and/or optimized
for the determination of total mercury and the speciation of inorganic and organic forms
of mercury in different sample matrices such as air, coal, sediment, water and biota.
The development of an efficient and cost effective method for total gaseous mercury
(TGM) determination was achieved using nano-gold supported metal oxide (1% wt Au)
sorbents and cold vapor atomic fluorescence spectrometry (CV-AFS). Analytical figures
of merit and TGM concentrations obtained when using Au/TiO2, as a mercury trap, were
similar to those obtained with traditional sorbents.
The combination of isotope dilution with the hyphenated gas chromatography-inductively
coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ID GC-ICP-MS) was also achieved and used
successfully for the speciation analysis of mercury in solid, liquid and biological samples. The developed, or optimized, methodologies were used to estimate the average mercury
content and characterize the speciation of mercury in South African coals, and also to
study the speciation of mercury in selected South African environmental compartments
impacted by gold mining activities.
The obtained average mercury content in coals collected from the Highveld and
Waterberg coalfields (0.20 ± 0.03 mg kg-1) was close to the reported United States
Geological Survey (USGS) average for South African coals. Speciated isotope dilution
analyses and sequential extraction procedures revealed the occurrence of elemental
mercury, inorganic and organo-mercury species, and also the association of mercury
mainly to organic compounds and pyrite.
The environmental pollution assessment was conducted within the Witwatersrand Basin,
at four gold mining sites selected mainly for their mining history and from geophysical
information obtained through satellite images. This study showed a relatively important
pollution in three of the four sites, namely the Vaal River west site near Klerksdorp, the
West Wits site near Carletonville (both in the North-West Province) and the Randfontein
site in the West Rand (Gauteng Province). Only one site, the closed Rietfontein landfill
site in the East Rand (Gauteng Province) was found to be not impacted by mercury
pollution.
The methylation of mercury was characterized in all sites and factors governing the
mercury methylation process at the different study sites were also investigated.
Geochemical models were also used to explain the distribution, transport and fate of
mercury in the study systems.
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