Author: Mindy Lyn Baker
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 107
Book Description
Three Essays Concerning Agriculture and Energy
Three Essays on the Economics of Agricultural and Energy Policy
Three Essays on Agricultural Price Volatility and the Linkages Between Agricultural and Energy Markets
Author: Feng Wu
Publisher:
ISBN: 9781267106674
Category : Agricultural prices
Languages : en
Pages : 122
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN: 9781267106674
Category : Agricultural prices
Languages : en
Pages : 122
Book Description
Three Essays on the Links Between Agriculture and Energy Policies in the U.S..
Author: Jarrett Whistance
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Electronic Dissertations
Languages : en
Pages : 126
Book Description
The first essay develops and applies a structural, partial equilibrium model of United States biomass supply and demand. The aim is to examine the biomass price and expenditure effects of domestic biofuel policies. The results indicate that the cellulosic biofuel sub-mandate alone could increase biomass prices by an average of 50% to 100% over the baseline values. Biomass expenditures by sectors competing with biofuel producers increase by an average of 26% relative to the baseline suggesting those sectors cannot fully shift away from biomass energy sources. A sensitivity analysis focusing on supply response indicates that the results are not very sensitive to the supply elasticity. This study contributes to the literature by providing policymakers and other energy policy stakeholders with a forward looking analysis of potential policy effects on the U.S. biomass market. The second essay develops a similar type of model applied toward the domestic and international petroleum and petroleum products markets as well as the domestic biofuel market and the domestic light-duty vehicle sector. The goal is to investigate the impact of CAFE standards and alternative-fuel vehicle production incentives on the biofuel market and RFS compliance, in particular. The results suggest that holding CAFE standards at the 2010 level could significantly reduce the blendwall problem in the U.S. ethanol market. Furthermore, the alternative fuel production incentives appear to have only minimal effects. However, there is much uncertainty surrounding the appropriate level of automaker response to those incentives, and a sensitivity analysis indicates the model is fairly sensitive to the assumed level of response. The third essay highlights a few of the theories put forth regarding the expected price behavior of Renewable Identification Numbers (RINs). The theories are tested both observationally and empirically with a dataset containing daily RIN price observations going back to January 2009. The behavior does not always match expectations, although the exact causes remain uncertain. In addition, the information provided by RIN prices is used to test the implications of a binding renewable fuel standard (RFS) versus a non-binding RFS on the ethanol-gasoline price relationship. Cointegration tests provide some evidence that the relationship between conventional ethanol and gasoline prices at the wholesale level is weaker in the presence of a binding RFS.
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Electronic Dissertations
Languages : en
Pages : 126
Book Description
The first essay develops and applies a structural, partial equilibrium model of United States biomass supply and demand. The aim is to examine the biomass price and expenditure effects of domestic biofuel policies. The results indicate that the cellulosic biofuel sub-mandate alone could increase biomass prices by an average of 50% to 100% over the baseline values. Biomass expenditures by sectors competing with biofuel producers increase by an average of 26% relative to the baseline suggesting those sectors cannot fully shift away from biomass energy sources. A sensitivity analysis focusing on supply response indicates that the results are not very sensitive to the supply elasticity. This study contributes to the literature by providing policymakers and other energy policy stakeholders with a forward looking analysis of potential policy effects on the U.S. biomass market. The second essay develops a similar type of model applied toward the domestic and international petroleum and petroleum products markets as well as the domestic biofuel market and the domestic light-duty vehicle sector. The goal is to investigate the impact of CAFE standards and alternative-fuel vehicle production incentives on the biofuel market and RFS compliance, in particular. The results suggest that holding CAFE standards at the 2010 level could significantly reduce the blendwall problem in the U.S. ethanol market. Furthermore, the alternative fuel production incentives appear to have only minimal effects. However, there is much uncertainty surrounding the appropriate level of automaker response to those incentives, and a sensitivity analysis indicates the model is fairly sensitive to the assumed level of response. The third essay highlights a few of the theories put forth regarding the expected price behavior of Renewable Identification Numbers (RINs). The theories are tested both observationally and empirically with a dataset containing daily RIN price observations going back to January 2009. The behavior does not always match expectations, although the exact causes remain uncertain. In addition, the information provided by RIN prices is used to test the implications of a binding renewable fuel standard (RFS) versus a non-binding RFS on the ethanol-gasoline price relationship. Cointegration tests provide some evidence that the relationship between conventional ethanol and gasoline prices at the wholesale level is weaker in the presence of a binding RFS.
Energy Ecological Efficiency and Agricultural Ecological Service
Three Essays on Resource Use, Sustainability and Agricultural Productivity
Author: Michee Arnold Lachaud
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Electronic dissertations
Languages : en
Pages :
Book Description
This dissertation consists of three essays. The first essay presents a dynamic model that analyzes the simultaneous use of a polluting non-renewable resource (coal) and an alternative technology (solar energy). It contributes to the literature by presenting a conceptual framework to characterize the production, exports and imports of a polluting non-renewable resource in the presence of a high cost substitute renewable technology. Results indicate that by ignoring external costs, inter-temporal social welfare from using both energy sources is overestimated and these market failures can be corrected by imposing a tax equal to the external cost per unit of coal used to induce the first best outcome. Subsidizing the backstop by an amount equal to the tax is a second best solution. The second essay analyzes the extent to which climatic variability affects agricultural productivity across LAC countries. The estimation is based on a stochastic production frontier, which is used to decompose total factor productivity (TFP). The results show that average annual temperature and precipitation have a negative significant impact on production and these adverse effects are getting more pronounced over time. Climatic variability has a more severe impact on Caribbean and Central America countries. Technological progress is found to play a key role in climate adjusted total factor productivity change. South and Central American countries are catching-up to their production frontier. TFP for these countries, except for Nicaragua and El Salvador, is converging to that of Brazil, which defines the frontier. All Caribbean countries are lagging behind and not converging. The third essay adopts a dynamic stochastic production frontier in which technical inefficiency from production is allowed to be auto-correlated over time. Results reveal that there are systematic differences in production and TE across LAC countries. Agricultural RD is a determining factor in inefficiency levels. The mean rate of return on agricultural RD across the 11 LAC countries is estimated to be 16.0%. The results indicate that the El Niño–Southern Oscillation accounts for an average annual loss in agricultural output equal to US $484 million in 2005 values across the LAC countries included in the analysis.
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Electronic dissertations
Languages : en
Pages :
Book Description
This dissertation consists of three essays. The first essay presents a dynamic model that analyzes the simultaneous use of a polluting non-renewable resource (coal) and an alternative technology (solar energy). It contributes to the literature by presenting a conceptual framework to characterize the production, exports and imports of a polluting non-renewable resource in the presence of a high cost substitute renewable technology. Results indicate that by ignoring external costs, inter-temporal social welfare from using both energy sources is overestimated and these market failures can be corrected by imposing a tax equal to the external cost per unit of coal used to induce the first best outcome. Subsidizing the backstop by an amount equal to the tax is a second best solution. The second essay analyzes the extent to which climatic variability affects agricultural productivity across LAC countries. The estimation is based on a stochastic production frontier, which is used to decompose total factor productivity (TFP). The results show that average annual temperature and precipitation have a negative significant impact on production and these adverse effects are getting more pronounced over time. Climatic variability has a more severe impact on Caribbean and Central America countries. Technological progress is found to play a key role in climate adjusted total factor productivity change. South and Central American countries are catching-up to their production frontier. TFP for these countries, except for Nicaragua and El Salvador, is converging to that of Brazil, which defines the frontier. All Caribbean countries are lagging behind and not converging. The third essay adopts a dynamic stochastic production frontier in which technical inefficiency from production is allowed to be auto-correlated over time. Results reveal that there are systematic differences in production and TE across LAC countries. Agricultural RD is a determining factor in inefficiency levels. The mean rate of return on agricultural RD across the 11 LAC countries is estimated to be 16.0%. The results indicate that the El Niño–Southern Oscillation accounts for an average annual loss in agricultural output equal to US $484 million in 2005 values across the LAC countries included in the analysis.
Three Essays on Resource Use, Sustainabilitiy and Agricultural Productivity
Author: Michée Arnold Lachaud
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 396
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 396
Book Description
Three Essays on U.S. Agriculture Under Climate Change
Author: Yuquan Zhang
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages :
Book Description
This dissertation investigates: (1) the implications of including high-yielding energy sorghum under the Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS2) program; (2) the effects of RFS2 with and without projected climate change scenarios on U.S. agriculture; (3) the spatial distribution of cattle breeders in Texas to quantify how climate factors influence cattle breed selection. In the RFS2 energy sorghum work, the ability of the agriculture sector to meet the fuel requirements of RFS2 is examined with and without energy sorghum being a possibility using an agricultural sector model. The results show that energy sorghum would be a valuable contributor that would be used as a feedstock producing over 13 billion gallons per year of cellulosic ethanol. Without the presence of energy sorghum it is found that switchgrass serves as the major cellulosic ethanol feedstock. Findings also indicate that the presence of high-yielding energy sorghum does relax commodity prices and export reductions except for grain sorghum as energy sorghum competes with grain sorghum production. In addition, the results show that the introduction of energy sorghum has minimal effects on GHG mitigation potential in the agricultural sector. In the RFS2 and climate change research, the analysis shows that climate change eases the burden of meeting the RFS2 mandates increasing consumer welfare while decreasing producer welfare. The results also show that climate change encourages a more diversified use of biofuel feedstocks for cellulosic ethanol production, in particular crop residues. In the cattle breed research, summer heat stress is found to be a significant factor for breed selection: positive for Bos indicus and negative for Bos taurus and composite breeds. The estimation results also indicate a price-driven trade-off between Bos taurus and Bos indicus breeds.
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages :
Book Description
This dissertation investigates: (1) the implications of including high-yielding energy sorghum under the Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS2) program; (2) the effects of RFS2 with and without projected climate change scenarios on U.S. agriculture; (3) the spatial distribution of cattle breeders in Texas to quantify how climate factors influence cattle breed selection. In the RFS2 energy sorghum work, the ability of the agriculture sector to meet the fuel requirements of RFS2 is examined with and without energy sorghum being a possibility using an agricultural sector model. The results show that energy sorghum would be a valuable contributor that would be used as a feedstock producing over 13 billion gallons per year of cellulosic ethanol. Without the presence of energy sorghum it is found that switchgrass serves as the major cellulosic ethanol feedstock. Findings also indicate that the presence of high-yielding energy sorghum does relax commodity prices and export reductions except for grain sorghum as energy sorghum competes with grain sorghum production. In addition, the results show that the introduction of energy sorghum has minimal effects on GHG mitigation potential in the agricultural sector. In the RFS2 and climate change research, the analysis shows that climate change eases the burden of meeting the RFS2 mandates increasing consumer welfare while decreasing producer welfare. The results also show that climate change encourages a more diversified use of biofuel feedstocks for cellulosic ethanol production, in particular crop residues. In the cattle breed research, summer heat stress is found to be a significant factor for breed selection: positive for Bos indicus and negative for Bos taurus and composite breeds. The estimation results also indicate a price-driven trade-off between Bos taurus and Bos indicus breeds.
The Three Prize Essays on Agriculture and the Corn Law
Author: National Anti-Corn Law League (England)
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 18
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 18
Book Description
Three essays on the cultivation of the sugar-cane in Trinidad: the prize essay, by L.A.A. De Verteuil; 2nd essay, by A.W. Anderson; 3rd essay, by W. Kernahan and F.J. Swift
Author: sir Louis Antoine A.G. De Verteuil
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 316
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 316
Book Description