Welfare Estimates of Avoided Ocean Acidification in the U.S. Mollusk Market

Ocean acidification has the potential to adversely affect a number of valuable marine ecosystem services by making it more difficult, and eventually impossible, for many marine organisms to form shells and skeletons. Reef-forming corals, commercially valuable shellfish, and primary producers that fo...

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Main Author: Moore, Chris
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/197376/files/JARE_Jan2015__4_Moore_pp50-62.pdf
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:ags:jlaare:197376 2024-04-14T08:17:34+00:00 Welfare Estimates of Avoided Ocean Acidification in the U.S. Mollusk Market Moore, Chris https://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/197376/files/JARE_Jan2015__4_Moore_pp50-62.pdf unknown https://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/197376/files/JARE_Jan2015__4_Moore_pp50-62.pdf article ftrepec 2024-03-19T10:38:42Z Ocean acidification has the potential to adversely affect a number of valuable marine ecosystem services by making it more difficult, and eventually impossible, for many marine organisms to form shells and skeletons. Reef-forming corals, commercially valuable shellfish, and primary producers that form the base of the marine food web are among the affected organisms. Despite the range and magnitude of likely impacts, very few economic analyses of ocean acidification’s consequences have been conducted. This paper adds to the emerging body of literature by taking a distance function approach to estimating the benefits of avoided ocean acidification in the U.S. mollusk market. A nonlinear inverse almost ideal demand system estimates the utility parameters needed to calculate the exact consumer welfare measures compensating and equivalent surplus for two hypothetical policies that would reduce global greenhouse gas emissions relative to a business-as-usual scenario. Agribusiness, Crop Production/Industries, Marketing Article in Journal/Newspaper Ocean acidification RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
institution Open Polar
collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
op_collection_id ftrepec
language unknown
description Ocean acidification has the potential to adversely affect a number of valuable marine ecosystem services by making it more difficult, and eventually impossible, for many marine organisms to form shells and skeletons. Reef-forming corals, commercially valuable shellfish, and primary producers that form the base of the marine food web are among the affected organisms. Despite the range and magnitude of likely impacts, very few economic analyses of ocean acidification’s consequences have been conducted. This paper adds to the emerging body of literature by taking a distance function approach to estimating the benefits of avoided ocean acidification in the U.S. mollusk market. A nonlinear inverse almost ideal demand system estimates the utility parameters needed to calculate the exact consumer welfare measures compensating and equivalent surplus for two hypothetical policies that would reduce global greenhouse gas emissions relative to a business-as-usual scenario. Agribusiness, Crop Production/Industries, Marketing
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Moore, Chris
spellingShingle Moore, Chris
Welfare Estimates of Avoided Ocean Acidification in the U.S. Mollusk Market
author_facet Moore, Chris
author_sort Moore, Chris
title Welfare Estimates of Avoided Ocean Acidification in the U.S. Mollusk Market
title_short Welfare Estimates of Avoided Ocean Acidification in the U.S. Mollusk Market
title_full Welfare Estimates of Avoided Ocean Acidification in the U.S. Mollusk Market
title_fullStr Welfare Estimates of Avoided Ocean Acidification in the U.S. Mollusk Market
title_full_unstemmed Welfare Estimates of Avoided Ocean Acidification in the U.S. Mollusk Market
title_sort welfare estimates of avoided ocean acidification in the u.s. mollusk market
url https://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/197376/files/JARE_Jan2015__4_Moore_pp50-62.pdf
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation https://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/197376/files/JARE_Jan2015__4_Moore_pp50-62.pdf
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