600 likes | 742 Views
Lecture 10. The efficient and optimal use of renewable resources. What are renewable resources?. Examples: Renewable stock resources : fishery, forestry, water, wildlife, arable land, grazing land, soil, anti-biotic and pesticide resistance
E N D
Lecture 10 The efficient and optimal use of renewable resources
What are renewable resources? • Examples: • Renewable stock resources: fishery, forestry, water, wildlife, arable land, grazing land, soil, anti-biotic and pesticide resistance • Renewable flow resources: solar, wave, wind, and geothermal energy • We consider only renewable stock resources
Biological growth processes for renewable resources • Change of population over time: • Stock level at any point in time:
Logistic biological growth function G(S) S S 0 S MSY MAX
Logistic biological growth function with critical depensation
Figure 17.2 Steady-state harvests (Perman et al.: page 560) G = H MSY MSY G = H 1 1 0 S S 1L 1U MAX MSY S S
Open-access steady-state equilibrium bio-economic equilibrium
HMSY = eEMSYS H1 = eE1S H2 = eE2S H2 H1 S1 SMSY =SMAX/2 S2 S Steady-state equilibrium fish harvests and stocks at various effort levels
HPP H=(w/P)E HOA EOA E Steady-state equilibrium yield-effort relationship zero economic profit equilibrium
Steady-state harvesting: private property in steady state dp/dt = 0 difference between market price and marginal costs of an incremental unit of harvested fish reduction in total harvesting costs, by having one more unit of resource, additional fish grows by dG/dS value at the net-price profit foregone not harvesting) marginal cost of investment marginal benefit of investment
Steady-state harvesting: private property the value of the reduction in harvesting costs that arises from a marginal increase in the resource stock natural rate of growth in the stock from a marginal change in stock size opportunity costs fundamental equation of renewable resources
Renewable Resource Policies • 1. Command and Control • reducing fishing effort • restriction on fishing gear • spatial restrictions • fleet size reduction • quantity restrictions on catch
A single rotation forest model • Stand of timber of uniform type and age • All trees are planted at the same time • All trees are to be cut at the same time • Once felled the forest will not be replanted • The land has no alternative uses: • All costs and prices are constant • The forest generates only timber as a value, other possible values are ignored • Felling of the forest has no external effects
Figure 18.1 (a) The volume of timber in a single stand over time (Perman et al., page 603)
Figure 18.2 Present values of net benefits at i = 0.00 (NB1) and i = 0.03 (NB2)(Perman et al.: page 606)
Figure 18.3Variation of the optimal felling age with the interest rate, for a single-rotation forest (Perman et al.: page 607)