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nachhaltige entwicklungsustainable developmentenvironmental economicsenvironmental policyquality of lifesozialer indikatorsocial indicatorrobert costanzaeconomic growthecological economiceconomic systemsenvironmental protectionsustainable development goalssustainable desirabledesirable futureecosystem serviceslife satisfactiongenuine progressintroduction ecologicalmeasuring achievingsustainability ecologicalfrontiers ecologicaleconomics sciencescience managementmanagement sustainabilityida kubiszewskilindsay barbierisocial capitalnational incomenatürliche ressourcennatural resourcescreating sustainableprogress indicatorinfluential publicationspublications ecologicalsocio ecologicalglobal governancegovernance ecologicaleconomics reviewsevolution preferencespreferences sovereignsovereign preferencespreferences leadlead sustainablesustainable policies
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Years of publications: 1980 - 2024

34 records from EconBiz based on author Name Information logo


1. Does Mandatory Labeling of Genetically Modified Food Grant Consumers the Right to Know? Evidence from an Economic Experiment

abstract

Opponents of the voluntary labeling scheme for genetically modified (GM) food products often argue that consumers have the right to know and therefore advocate mandatory labeling. In this paper we argue against this line of reasoning. Using experimental auctions conducted with a sample of the resident population of Mannheim, Germany, we show that the quality of the informational signal generated by a mandatory labeling scheme is affected by the number of labels in the market. If there are two labels, one for GM products and one for non-GM products, mandatory and voluntary labeling schemes generate a similar degree of uncertainty about the quality of products that do not carry a label

Dannenberg, Astrid; Scatasta, Sara; Sturm, Bodo;
2018
Availability: Link Link
Citations: 5 (based on OpenCitations)

2. Comparing feed-in-tariffs and renewable obligation certificates : a real option approach

Mennel, Tim; Scatasta, Sara;
2010
Availability: Link

3. Comparing Feed‐In Tariffs and Renewable Obligation Certificates ‐ The Case of Repowering Wind Farms

abstract

This paper compares support mechanisms for renewable energy with respect to their ex-ante effectiveness in promoting the adoption of innovative technologies. We analyse two stylized policy instruments in the context of the example of wind repowering: renewable quotas and feed-in tariffs. Quota systems, such as the British Renewable Obligation Certificates (ROCs), are based on mandatory renewable quotas. Feed-in tariffs (FITs), such as the German EEG tariffs, guarantee a certain, fixed price for 'green' electricity over the economic lifetime of the investment. This paper focuses on one aspect of the difference between the two instruments: the allocation of uncertainty. While under ROCs both electricity price and capital cost risks are borne by the owner of the wind farm, under FITs only capital cost risks remain with the owner. The model is calibrated on data for German wind power plants. Our general result is that the owner is more likely to adopt a new technology under price certainty as provided by FITs. Another finding is that electricity price and capital cost volatility have different impacts on the propensity to invest under ROCs. While, even a small positive variation in electricity price volatility increases the propensity to invest, an increase in capital cost volatility does not affect the likelihood to repower wind farms. The last result also applies under FITs

Mennel, Tim; Romano, Teresa; Scatasta, Sara;
2015
Availability: Link Link
Citations: 1 (based on OpenCitations)

4. Does mandatory labeling of genetically modified food grant consumers the right to know? : evidence from an economic experiment

abstract

Opponents of the voluntary labeling scheme for genetically modified (GM) food products often argue that consumers have the right to knowʺ and therefore advocate mandatory labeling. In this paper we argue against this line of reasoning. Using experimental auctions conducted with a sample of the resident population of Mannheim, Germany, we show that the quality of the informational signal generated by a mandatory labeling scheme is affected by the number of labels in the market. If there are two labels, one for GM products and one for non-GM products, mandatory and voluntary labeling schemes generate a similar degree of uncertainty about the quality of products that do not carry a label.

Dannenberg, Astrid; Scatasta, Sara; Sturm, Bodo;
2008
Type: Arbeitspapier; Working Paper; Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature;
Availability: The PDF logo The PDF logo

5. Comparing Feed-In Tariffs and Renewable Obligation Certificates - The Case of Repowering Wind Farms

Mennel, Tim; Romano, Teresa; Scatasta, Sara;
2013
Availability: The PDF logo

6. Mandatory versus voluntary labelling of genetically modified food : evidence from an economic experiment

Dannenberg, Astrid; Scatasta, Sara; Sturm, Bodo;
2011
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;

7. The environmental benefits and costs of genetically modified (GM) crops

Wesseler, Justus; Scatasta, Sara; Fall, El Hadji;
2011
Type: Aufsatz im Buch; Book section;

8. Comparing Feed-In-Tariffs and Renewable Obligation Certificates - a Real Option Approach

Mennel, Tim; Scatasta, Sara;
2010
Type: Conference Paper;
Availability: The PDF logo

9. Overview of special issue from the 2009 ICABR Conference

Wesseler, Justus; Smyth, Stuart J.; Scatasta, Sara;
2010
Availability: The PDF logo

10. Policy recommendations from the 13th ICABR conference on the emerging bioeconomy

Smyth, Stuart J.; Falck-Zepeda, José B.; Gray, Richard S.; Nassem, Anwar; Paarlberg, Robert; Phillips, Peter W. B.; Pray, Carl E.; Savastano, Sara; Scandizzo, Pasquale L.; Scatasta, Sara; Wesseler, Justus H. H.; Zilberman, David;
2010
Availability: The PDF logo

The information on the author is retrieved from: Entity Facts (by DNB = German National Library data service), DBPedia and Wikidata

Robert Costanza


Prof.

Alternative spellings:
R. Costanza

B: 1950 Pittsburgh, Pa.
Biblio: Prof. of Ecological Economics
The image of the author or topic
Source: Wikimedia Commons

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Robert Costanza (born September 14, 1950) is an American/Australian ecological economist and Professor at the Institute for Global Prosperity, University College London. He is a Fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia and a Full Member of the Club of Rome. (Source: DBPedia)

Profession

  • Economist
  • Affiliations

  • University College London
  • Australian National University
  • Crawford School of Public Policy
  • Crawford School of Economics and Government
  • Portland State University. Institute for Sustainable Solutions
  • University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
  • Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge, La.)
  • University of Vermont. Rubenstein School of Environment, Gund Institute of Ecological Economics
  • External links

  • Gemeinsame Normdatei (GND) im Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek
  • Open Researcher and Contributor ID (ORCID)
  • Bibliothèque nationale de France
  • Wikipedia (Deutsch)
  • Wikipedia (English)
  • Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek
  • NACO Authority File
  • Virtual International Authority File (VIAF)
  • Wikidata
  • International Standard Name Identifier (ISNI)

  • Official Website logo Official Website

    Google Scholar logo Google Scholar
    ORCID logo ORCID
    Scopus logo Scopus Preview

    Publishing years

    1
      2024
    2
      2023
    2
      2022
    2
      2021
    2
      2020
    1
      2019
    1
      2018
    2
      2017
    4
      2016
    3
      2015
    2
      2014
    2
      2013
    2
      2011
    6
      2010
    1
      2009
    2
      2007
    1
      2006
    1
      2005
    1
      2004
    1
      2002
    5
      2001
    3
      2000
    3
      1999
    1
      1998
    6
      1997
    1
      1996
    2
      1994
    4
      1992
    2
      1991
    1
      1990
    2
      1989
    2
      1986

    Series

    1. Ecological economics : the transdisciplinary journal of the International Society for Ecological Economics (3)
    2. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences (2)
    3. Ecological economics series (2)
    4. Routledge explorations in environmental studies (1)
    5. Our environmental decision making (EDM) working paper series / CSERGE (1)
    6. UTB (1)
    7. UTB für Wissenschaft / Wirtschaftswissenschaften, Politik, Ökologie (1)
    8. Advances in ecological economics (1)
    9. Economics, ethics and environment (1)
    10. The international library of critical writings in economics (1)
    11. International Society for Ecological Economics series (1)
    12. Complexity in ecological systems series (1)