Microeconomic Principles for Environmental Management



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Environmental Markets (ESM 285)

Bren School of Environmental Science & Management

University of California, Santa Barbara

Winter 2015

February 19, 2015
Professor: Gary Libecap

Office: 4412 Bren Hall

Phone: 805-893-8611

Email: glibecap@bren.ucsb.edu

Class meetings: TTh 10-11:15 1510 Bren Hall

Office hours: M 9-10 or by appointment


Course Objective

This course presents the roles of property rights and markets in addressing environmental and natural resource losses associated with the “Tragedy of the Commons.” Topics include:



  • The open access problem

  • Traditional Pigouvian tax and regulatory solutions

  • Ronald Coase, Nobel Prize 1991, and Coasean trading

  • Environmental markets in fisheries

  • Environmental markets in water

  • Environmental markets in conservation credits and tradable development rights

  • Environmental markets in cap and trade emission permits



Other areas, such as environmental benefits in energy markets are not covered due to limited time. Students will learn when rights-based systems are valuable solutions to open access losses and study the range of environmental markets. They will research and describe environmental markets.
Course Materials

Course readings include journal articles, book chapters, cases, and reports. There will be guest lectures. All materials will be posted on Gauchospace. Class text book is Terry L. Anderson and Gary D. Libecap, 2014, Environmental Markets: A Property Rights Approach, New York: Cambridge University Press.


Course Requirements

Students are expected to complete all of the assigned reading before class. Course materials will be discussed in a seminar-style framework.


1. Students are required to turn in a one-two page written synopsis of the key points in each required reading prior to class via Gauchospace and be ready to lead discussion.
2. We will a groundwater project that student will research throughout the term. We will have periodic class discussions on the application of water markets to groundwater management within this legislation. A final paper will be written.
Course Grades

Course grades will be based on daily class summary papers, (40%); discussion leadership (30%); and final class paper (30%).




Course-wide Project: Applying Markets to Groundwater Management

 


  • http://www.water.ca.gov/groundwater/Sustainable_GW_Management/SGM_BasinPriority.cfm 

The Sustainable Groundwater Management Act revised the Water Code to direct the Department of Water Resources (DWR) to develop the initial groundwater basin priority by January 31, 2015. DWR has concluded that the basin prioritization finalized in June 2014 under the California Statewide Groundwater Elevation Monitoring (CASGEM) program will be the initial prioritization when the SGM Act goes into effect on January 1, 2015. The basin prioritization results are posted on the CASGEM website at http://www.water.ca.gov/groundwater/casgem/basin_prioritization.cfm.  The SGM Act applies to the 127 High and Medium priority groundwater basins, which account for approximately 96 percent of groundwater use in California.


Final Basin Prioritization findings indicate that 127 of California's 515 groundwater basins and subbasins are High and Medium priority. These basins account for 96% of California's annual groundwater pumping and supply 88% of the population which resides over groundwater basins. The remaining 388 basins are Low and Very Low priority and comprise 75% of the groundwater basins in the State.

 


  • CWF  http://www.californiawaterfoundation.org/index.php 

  • http://www.waterboards.ca.gov/water_issues/programs/groundwater/workplan.shtml

  • Russell M. McGlothlin 
    Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, LLP


1/06 Course Overview and Bargaining Over Environmental Quality

  • Syllabus overview, class project discussion.

  • Discussion of this case: “Trees Block Solar Panels and A Feud Ends In Court,” New York Times, April 7, 2008. The opportunity and challenges of bargaining to reach environmental solutions.


1/08 The Problem of Open Access. This is the fundamental problem that leads to environmental degradation or loss and too rapid and wasteful natural resource extraction. All students will understand this problem and the reciprocal nature of environmental and resource problems.

Readings:

  • Terry L. Anderson and Gary D. Libecap, 2014 Environmental Markets, Preface Chapter 1, “Who Owns the Environment?”

  • H. Scott Gordon, 1954, “The Economic Theory of a Common Property Resource: The Fishery,” Journal of Political Economy 62(2): 128-35 only.



1/13 The Problem of Open Access Continued

  • Garrett Hardin, 1968, “The Tragedy of the Commons,” Science 162: 1243-8.

  • T.R. Halliday, 1980, “The Extinction of the Passenger Pigeon Ectopistes Migratorius and Its Relevance to Contemporary Conservation,” Biological Conservation 17: 157-62.


1/15 The Problem of Open Access Continued

  • Garrett Hardin, 1968, “The Tragedy of the Commons,” Science 162: 1243-8.

  • T.R. Halliday, 1980, “The Extinction of the Passenger Pigeon Ectopistes Migratorius and Its Relevance to Contemporary Conservation,” Biological Conservation 17: 157-62.


1/20 The Problem of Open Access Continued

  • Garrett Hardin, 1968, “The Tragedy of the Commons,” Science 162: 1243-8.

  • T.R. Halliday, 1980, “The Extinction of the Passenger Pigeon Ectopistes Migratorius and Its Relevance to Contemporary Conservation,” Biological Conservation 17: 157-62.


1/22 Groundwater Management Act and Potential for Environmental Markets

  • Russ McGlothlin, California Groundwater Management Act


1/27 Traditional Pigouvian Tax and Regulatory Solutions. We briefly review command and control regulation and tax options.

  • Anderson and Libecap, 2014. Chapter 2, “Is Government Regulation the Solution?”


1/29 Property Rights and the Potential for Markets. Environmental markets require some type of property right, formal or informal and there is then a potential for trading.

  • Anderson and Libecap, 2014, Chapter 3 Property Rights for the Common Pool.


2/03 The Potential for Markets: Coasean Bargaining. Markets reallocate resources to higher valued uses and provide price information about alternatives. Coase addresses bargaining regarding environmental problems with different assumptions about transaction costs.

  • Ronald Coase, 1960, “The Problem of Social Cost,” Journal of Law and Economics 3: 1-44 only.


2/05 Local Common Property Resource Management

  • Anderson and Libecap. 2014. Chapter 4 “Local Property Rights to the Commons”

  • ”Elinor Ostrom, 2000, “Collective Action and the Evolution of Social Norms,” Journal of Economic Perspectives, 14(3): 137-58.



2/10: Local Common Property Management

  • James M. Acheson and Roy Gardner, 2005, “Spatial Strategies and Territoriality in the Maine Lobster Industry,” Rationality and Society 17(3): 309-41.

  • Michael Cox, Gwen Arnold, and Sergio Villamayor Tomás. 2010. A Review of Design Principles for Community-Based Natural Resource Management. Ecology and Society 15(4): 38-52, http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol15/iss4/art38.


2/12: Discussion of California Groundwater Management Act and the options to use Environmental Markets to Achieve its objectives in the Fox Canyon Groundwater Management District.
2/17 The Politics of Property Rights: Why Market Solutions are Often Difficult

  • Anderson and Libecap. 2014. Chapter 5 “The Politics of Property Rights”


2/19: The Politics of Property Rights: Why Market Solutions are Often Difficult continued

  • Ronald N. Johnson and Gary D. Libecap, 1982, “Contracting Problems and Regulation: The Case of the Fishery” American Economic Review 72 (5): 1005-22.

  • Robert T. Deacon, Christopher Costello, and Dominic Parker. 2013. “Reforming Fisheries: Lessons from a Self-Elected Cooperative.” Journal of Law and Economics 56(1): 83-125


2/24 From Property Rights to Markets: Examples of Successful Environmental Markets and Ones that are Less Successful.

  • Anderson and Libecap. 2014. Chapter 6: “From Property Rights to Markets”


2/26 Environmental Markets:

  • Virginia McConnell and Margaret Walls, 2009, “Policy Monitor: U.S. Experience with Transferable Development Rights,” Review of Environmental Economics and Policy, Summer: 288-303.

  • Margaret Walls and Virginia McConnell, 2007, Transfer of Development Rights in U.S. Communities: Evaluating Program Design, Implementation, and Outcomes, Resources for the Future, September: 8-27, skim 28-131.

  • Jessica Fox and Anamaria Nino-Murcia, 2005, “ Status of Species Conservation Banking in the United States,” Conservation Biology, 19(4): 996-1007.

  • Dominic P. Parker and Wally N. Thurman Parker 2013 “Conservation Easements: Tools for Conserving and Enhancing Ecosystem Services”. In: Shogren, J.F., (ed.) Encyclopedia of Energy, Natural Resource and Environmental Economics, 2: 133-143.

  • Conservation Easements: http://nced.conservationregistry.org/browse/map

  • Conservation Easements: http://www.nature.org/about-us/private-lands-conservation/conservation-easements/

  • Conservation Credit Exchanges: At least 13 states have conservation credits exchanges. South Carolina: http://www.conservesc.com/; Virginia and New Mexico: http://conservationcreditexchange.com/; http://www.vcce.net/; http://dcr.virginia.gov/land_conservation/lpc.shtml; Colorado: http://www.coloradocredits.com/; Georgia: http://glcp.georgia.gov/00/channel_title/0,2094,82613131_114687036,00.html; More generally in Ecosystem Marketplace: http://www.ecosystemmarketplace.com/pages/dynamic/article.page.php?page_id=7546§ion=news_articles&eod=1


3/3 Air Emission Permits

General

  • Graphs of price patterns for various Cap and Trade Emissions Markets.

  • A. Denny Ellerman, 2007, “Are Cap-and-Trade Programs More Environmentally Effective than Conventional Regulation” in Jody Freeman and Charles D. Kolstad, eds. Moving to Markets in Environmental Regulation: Lessons from Twenty Years of Experience. New York Oxford University Press, 48-62.

SO2 Markets

  • Richard Schmalensee and Robert N. Stavins (2013), “The SO2 Allowance Trading System: The Ironic History of a Grand Policy Experiment,” Journal of Economic Perspectives 27(1): 103–122, 104–105

RECLAIM

  • US EPA. 2006. “An Overview of the Regional Clean Air Incentives Market.” RGGI

  • Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative webpage: http://rggi.org/

  • Skim just the overviews—introduction and conclusions: Paul M. Bernstein, W. David Montgomery, and Sugandha Tuladhar.2004, “Economic Consequences of Northeastern State Proposals to Limit Greenhouse Gas Emissions from the Electricity Sector (RGGI).” Charles River Associates Incorporated.

AB32

  • Overview via CARB: http://www.arb.ca.gov/cc/cc.htm

EU ETS

  • Skim just the overviews—introduction and conclusions: Anna Creti, Pierre-André Jouvet, Valérie Mignon. 2012 “Carbon Price Drivers: Phase I versus Phase II Equilibrium” Energy Economics 34: 327–334

3/5 No Class
3/10 Fisheries. Fisheries are the classic common pool resource and a resource where rights-based management has grown dramatically.

  • Jennifer Devine, Krista Baker and Richard Haedrich, 2006, “Fisheries: Deep-Sea Fishes Qualify as Endangered,” Nature 439 January 5, 29.

  • Christopher Costello, Steven Gaines, and John Lynham, 2008, “Can Catch Shares Prevent Fisheries Collapse?” Science 321., September 19: 1677-78.

  • R. Quentin Grafton, Dale Squires, and Kevin Fox. “Private Property and Economic Efficiency: A Study of a Common-Pool Resource,” 2000 Journal of Law and Economics. 43(2): 679-713.


3/12 Final Report on California Groundwater Management Act and Fox Canyon Groundwater Management District










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