The long-term economics of climate change [electronic resource] : beyond a doubling of greenhouse gas concentrations / edited by Darwin C. Hall, Richard B. Howarth.
Material type:
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Mysore University Main Library | Not for loan | EBEP77 |
Beyond a doubling : issues in the long-term economics of climate change / Richard B. Howarth, Darwin C. Hall -- Integrated assessment models of climate change : beyond a doubling of CO / Stephen H. Schneider, Kristin Kuntz-Duriseti -- Ocean thermal lag and comparative dynamics of damage to agriculture from global warming / Darwin C. Hall -- Complexity in organizations : consequences for climate policy analysis / Stephen J. DeCanio, William E. Watkins, Glenn Mitchell, Keyvan Amir-Atefi, Catherine Dibble -- Technology and greenhouse gas emissions : an integrated scenario analysis using the LBNL-NEMS model / Jonathan G. Koomey, R. Cooper Richey, Skip Laitner, Robert J. Markel, Chris Marnay -- Prices versus policy : which path to clean technology? / Eban Goodstein -- Energy efficiency and petroleum depletion in climate change policy / Neha Khanna, Duane Chapman -- The clean development mechanism and its controversies / Larry Karp, Xuemei Liu -- Overlapping generations versus infinitely-lived agent : the case of global warming / R. Gerlagh, B.C.C. van der Zwaan -- Climate rights and economic modeling / Richard B. Howarth -- Evaluating regional adaptation to climate change : the case of California water / Brent M. Haddad, Kimberly Merritt -- Climate variability and climate change : implications for agriculture / Richard M. Adams, C.C. Chen, Bruce A. McCarl, David E. Schimmelpfennig.
This volume will include scenarios of geophysical and economic impacts from global warming beyond a doubling of greenhouse gases. Analyses will examine geophysical, ecological, and economic impacts, physical and institutional lags, alternative scenarios with and without policy intervention, institutional change, political-economic barriers to effective policy, and prescriptions for change. Perspectives will include those from physical and biological sciences, as well as economics.
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