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37 records from EconBiz based on author Name
1. Trade-offs between indigenous forest and exotic production forest in New Zealand
Walsh, Patrick J.; Soliman, Tarek; Daigneault, Adam J.;2023
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability:

2. Climate and Socioeconomic Impacts on Maine's Forests Under Alternative Future Pathways
abstractThis study investigates the combined effects of climate and socioeconomic change on fiber supply and forest carbon in Maine, USA, for broad alternative futures. We conduct an econometric analysis to project forest resource use over the next 80 years under a range of shared socioeconomic pathways (SSPs) and representative concentration pathways (RCPs). Results show that continued forest successional dynamics contributes the most to Maine’s aboveground carbon (AGC) accumulation, with 2100 AGC potentially increasing by 140% compared to 2020. On this basis, climate change could result in 2.44-2.64 times greater AGC in 2100 compared to today. Harvest activities are major drivers of forest C dynamics, resulting in 2100 AGC being only 16% greater than 2020. Socioeconomic factors (SSPs) had much larger effects on total harvest and carbon stocks than climate change (RCPs). Harvest volume were projected to increase by 9-29% by 2100 for favorable socioeconomic development scenarios (SSP1/SSP2/SSP5) and decrease by 3-29% for unfavorable socioeconomic development scenarios (SSP3/SSP4). Overall, Maine’s forest C pools were projected to increase by end-century for RCPs x SSP1/SSP2. This study offers valuable insight on possible methods for region-specific socioeconomic and climate change assessments, particularly in areas with extensive and diverse working forests with mixed ownership
Zhao, Jianheng; Daigneault, Adam J.; Weiskittel, Aaron R.; Wei, Xinyuan;2023
Availability: Link Link
3. Temperature and energy security : will forest biomass help in the future?
Favero, Alice; Yoo, Jonghyun; Daigneault, Adam J.; Baker, Justin;2023
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: Link Link
4. Climate and socioeconomic impacts on Maine's forests under alternative future pathways
Zhao, Jianheng; Daigneault, Adam J.; Weiskittel, Aaron; Wei, Xinyuan;2023
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: Link
Citations: 1 (based on OpenCitations)
5. Carbon and market effects of US forest taxation policy
Daigneault, Adam J.; Sohngen, Brent; Sedjo, Roger A.;2020
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: Link
Citations: 13 (based on OpenCitations)
6. Natural Disasters, Social Protection, and Risk Perceptions
abstractNatural disasters give rise to loss and damage and may affect subjective expectations about the prevalence and severity of future disasters. These expectations might then in turn shape individuals’ investment behaviors, potentially affecting their incomes in subsequent years. As part of an emerging literature on endogenous preferences, economists have begun studying the consequences that exposure to natural disasters have on risk attitudes, perceptions, and behavior. We add to this field by studying the impact of being struck by the December 2012 Cyclone Evan on Fijian households’ risk attitudes and subjective expectations about the likelihood and severity of natural disasters over the next 20 years. The randomness of the cyclone’s path allows us to estimate the causal effects of exposure on both risk attitudes and risk perceptions. Our results show that being struck by an extreme event substantially changes individuals’ risk perceptions as well as their beliefs about the frequency and magnitude of future shocks. However, we find sharply distinct results for the two ethnicities in our sample, indigenous Fijians and Indo-Fijians, the former of whom are noted for their “collectivist” social organization and the latter of whom are largely self-reliant: the impact of the natural disaster aligns with previous results in the literature on risk attitudes and risk perceptions for Indo-Fijians, whereas they have little to no impact on those same measures for indigenous Fijians. Anchored in the institutional context of Fiji, this result is sensible and has implications for how social protection can mitigate some of the negative impacts of natural shocks on households’ expectations. To provide welfare implications for our results, we compare households’ risk perceptions to climate and hydrological models of future disaster risk, and find that both ethnic groups over-infer the risk of future disasters relative to the model predictions. If such distorted beliefs encourage over-investment in preventative measures at the cost of other productive investments, these biases could have negative welfare impacts. Understanding belief biases and how they vary across social contexts may thus help decision makers design policy instruments to reduce such inefficiencies, particularly in the face of climate change
Stahlmann-Brown, Philip; Daigneault, Adam J.; Tjernström, Emilia; Zou, Wenbo;2018
Availability: Link Link
7. Natural disasters, social protection, and risk perceptions
Stahlmann-Brown, Philip; Daigneault, Adam J.; Tjernström, Emilia; Zou, Wenbo;2018
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: Link
Citations: 93 (based on OpenCitations)
8. Money does grow on trees : impacts of the Paris Agreement on the New Zealand economy
Fernandez, Mario A.; Daigneault, Adam J.;2018
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: Link
9. Modelling the potential impact of New Zealand's freshwater reforms on land-based greenhous gas emissions
Daigneault, Adam J.; Elliott, Sandy; Greenhalgh, Suzie; Kerr, Suzi; Lou, Edmund; Murphy, Leah; Timar, Levente; Wadhwa, Sanjay;2017
Type: Arbeitspapier; Working Paper; Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature;
Availability: Link

10. Climate change costs more than we think because people adapt less than we assume
Gawith, David; Hodge, Ian D.; Morgan, Fraser; Daigneault, Adam J.;2020
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: Link
Citations: 16 (based on OpenCitations)