Replication Data for: European fish producers’ willingness to pay to reduce negative externalities of fish production

The two datasets contain data collected from European fish producers as part of the H2020 project PrimeFish (grant No: 635761). One dataset contains data from Scottish and Norwegian producers of farmed salmon (Salmon). the other dataset contains data from cod fishers from Iceland and Norway (Cod) Ab...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Aanesen, Margrethe
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2019
Subjects:
cod
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:c23c539b972bdf6a6f0c20c55c3e6ab373e411c99465d817dba23952e98bdc34
id dataone:sha256:c23c539b972bdf6a6f0c20c55c3e6ab373e411c99465d817dba23952e98bdc34
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:sha256:c23c539b972bdf6a6f0c20c55c3e6ab373e411c99465d817dba23952e98bdc34 2024-06-03T18:46:57+00:00 Replication Data for: European fish producers’ willingness to pay to reduce negative externalities of fish production Aanesen, Margrethe 2019-02-06T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:c23c539b972bdf6a6f0c20c55c3e6ab373e411c99465d817dba23952e98bdc34 unknown regulations choice experiment fish production Earth and Environmental Sciences cod externalities responsibility Social Sciences acceptance of regulations salmon Dataset 2019 dataone:urn:node:DVNO 2024-06-03T18:12:10Z The two datasets contain data collected from European fish producers as part of the H2020 project PrimeFish (grant No: 635761). One dataset contains data from Scottish and Norwegian producers of farmed salmon (Salmon). the other dataset contains data from cod fishers from Iceland and Norway (Cod) Abstract: The existence of negative externalities is an argument for public intervention in the form of regulations of the production process. The production of fish is a sector with significant negative externalities, and correspondingly many regulations. The preferences of managers of production units are hardly elicited to inform the design of these regulations. This paper reports from an early study among various types of fish producers in various countries on how they assess current regulations of their activities, whether they are willing to accept increased production costs to reduce or mitigate the externalities, and who they think are responsible for securing sustainable fish production across Europe. We show that the respondents are surprisingly consequent in their replies to these questions, and that there is a leeway for fisheries authorities to intervene and regulate fisheries activities. Dataset Iceland Unknown Norway
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:DVNO
language unknown
topic regulations
choice experiment
fish production
Earth and Environmental Sciences
cod
externalities
responsibility
Social Sciences
acceptance of regulations
salmon
spellingShingle regulations
choice experiment
fish production
Earth and Environmental Sciences
cod
externalities
responsibility
Social Sciences
acceptance of regulations
salmon
Aanesen, Margrethe
Replication Data for: European fish producers’ willingness to pay to reduce negative externalities of fish production
topic_facet regulations
choice experiment
fish production
Earth and Environmental Sciences
cod
externalities
responsibility
Social Sciences
acceptance of regulations
salmon
description The two datasets contain data collected from European fish producers as part of the H2020 project PrimeFish (grant No: 635761). One dataset contains data from Scottish and Norwegian producers of farmed salmon (Salmon). the other dataset contains data from cod fishers from Iceland and Norway (Cod) Abstract: The existence of negative externalities is an argument for public intervention in the form of regulations of the production process. The production of fish is a sector with significant negative externalities, and correspondingly many regulations. The preferences of managers of production units are hardly elicited to inform the design of these regulations. This paper reports from an early study among various types of fish producers in various countries on how they assess current regulations of their activities, whether they are willing to accept increased production costs to reduce or mitigate the externalities, and who they think are responsible for securing sustainable fish production across Europe. We show that the respondents are surprisingly consequent in their replies to these questions, and that there is a leeway for fisheries authorities to intervene and regulate fisheries activities.
format Dataset
author Aanesen, Margrethe
author_facet Aanesen, Margrethe
author_sort Aanesen, Margrethe
title Replication Data for: European fish producers’ willingness to pay to reduce negative externalities of fish production
title_short Replication Data for: European fish producers’ willingness to pay to reduce negative externalities of fish production
title_full Replication Data for: European fish producers’ willingness to pay to reduce negative externalities of fish production
title_fullStr Replication Data for: European fish producers’ willingness to pay to reduce negative externalities of fish production
title_full_unstemmed Replication Data for: European fish producers’ willingness to pay to reduce negative externalities of fish production
title_sort replication data for: european fish producers’ willingness to pay to reduce negative externalities of fish production
publishDate 2019
url https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:c23c539b972bdf6a6f0c20c55c3e6ab373e411c99465d817dba23952e98bdc34
geographic Norway
geographic_facet Norway
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
_version_ 1800873672739651584