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1.
Sci Total Environ ; 951: 175786, 2024 Nov 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39197774

RESUMEN

Environmental offsetting has been developed as a mechanism to facilitate the benefits from economic development while avoiding or minimizing environmental harm. This is achieved by compensating for environmental impacts at one location by generating equivalent environmental improvements elsewhere. However, experience with biodiversity and carbon offsetting indicates it can be difficult to ensure the integrity of offsets. Under recent legislation in the catchments of the Great Barrier Reef (GBR), Australia, it is mandatory for water quality emissions from new or expanded point source development to be offset by reducing pollution elsewhere, frequently through reducing non-point source pollution (NPSP). Therefore, informed by experience with biodiversity and carbon offsetting, we summarised sources of uncertainty in NPSP reduction that would influence water quality offset integrity; estimated the maximum potential demand for water quality offsets from sewage treatment plants, the largest point source emitter of total nitrogen (TN) in the GBR catchments, between 2018 and 2050; and discussed the implications of both on the ability of offsetting to counterbalance the impact of economic development in catchments where nitrogen loads have a large influence on the health of important GBR ecosystems. The catchments surrounding the population centres of Cairns and Mackay had both a potentially high future demand for nitrogen water quality offsets and nitrogen loads with a strong influence on the health of the GBR. Consequently, any low integrity water quality offsets in these catchments could jeopardise progress toward the water quality improvements needed to ensure the continued health of the GBR. Water quality offsetting has numerous strengths as a policy instrument however substantial uncertainties remain related to environmental outcomes. Until further research can reduce these uncertainties, water quality offsets that are implemented near increased point source emissions and have a high certainty of effectiveness may provide a balance between scientific rigour and policy workability.


Asunto(s)
Biodiversidad , Arrecifes de Coral , Calidad del Agua , Monitoreo del Ambiente , Australia , Carbono/análisis , Conservación de los Recursos Naturales/métodos , Contaminación del Agua/prevención & control , Nitrógeno/análisis
2.
J Environ Qual ; 47(6): 1412-1425, 2018 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30512071

RESUMEN

Agriculture in the United States must respond to escalating demands for productivity and efficiency, as well as pressures to improve its stewardship of natural resources. Growing global population and changing diets, combined with a greater societal awareness of agriculture's role in delivering ecosystem services beyond food, feed, fiber, and energy production, require a comprehensive perspective on where and how US agriculture can be sustainably intensified, that is, made more productive without exacerbating local and off-site environmental concerns. The USDA's Long-Term Agroecosystem Research (LTAR) network is composed of 18 locations distributed across the contiguous United States working together to integrate national and local agricultural priorities and advance the sustainable intensification of US agriculture. We explore here the concept of sustainable intensification as a framework for defining strategies to enhance production, environmental, and rural prosperity outcomes from agricultural systems. We also elucidate the diversity of factors that have shaped the past and present conditions of cropland, rangeland, and pastureland agroecosystems represented by the LTAR network and identify priorities for research in the areas of production, resource conservation and environmental quality, and rural prosperity. Ultimately, integrated long-term research on sustainable intensification at the national scale is critical to developing practices and programs that can anticipate and address challenges before they become crises.


Asunto(s)
Agricultura/métodos , Conservación de los Recursos Naturales/métodos , Ecosistema , Abastecimiento de Alimentos , Investigación , Estados Unidos
3.
Econ Model ; 15(4): 477-99, 1998 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12294361

RESUMEN

PIP: The introduction to this report of a study that examines the potential environmental impacts of labor force growth (LFG) in Costa Rica under LFG scenarios notes that LFG is an economically critical aspect of population growth that can affect the environment by expanding the economy's production possibilities frontier and/or by increasing consumption. The introduction also explains why Costa Rica is ideal for this study and identifies the study as unique because it constructs a computable general equilibrium (CGE) model using 10 environmental indicators and because it models uncertainty regarding the values of the economic parameters. The report continues by reviewing the literature linking population and environmental issues; detailing the CGE model; discussing the 10 environmental indicators (deforestation, erosion, pesticide use, overfishing, hazardous wastes, inorganic wastes, organic wastes, greenhouse gas emissions, air pollution, and water/sewer usage) used in the model; and explaining the method used to simulate the impacts of LFG. The major conclusions that emerged from the results of this study are that 1) the economy-wide impacts of LFG (and, thus, population growth) on the environment are important and vary significantly according to the amounts of physical and human capital present in the labor force and 2) the impacts of LFG vary substantially among environmental indicators.^ieng


Asunto(s)
Economía , Empleo , Ambiente , Fuerza Laboral en Salud , Modelos Teóricos , Crecimiento Demográfico , Américas , América Central , Costa Rica , Demografía , Países en Desarrollo , América Latina , América del Norte , Población , Dinámica Poblacional , Investigación
4.
Environ Pollut ; 53(1-4): 377-85, 1988.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15092563

RESUMEN

Biological research has established that air pollution can affect the yield and quality of agricultural crops. Economic assessments of crop exposure to air pollution have focused on the yield effect. This study illustrates the implications of considering crop quality effects in addition to crop yield changes for the case of O3 impacts on soybeans. An economic model of US soybean, soybean oil, and soybean meal markets is used to simulate the impacts of increased soybean yields due to reduced O3 concentrations with and without changes in soybean quality. The simulations with quality effects are richer in their distributional implications and show larger increases in economic surplus than the simulations with yield effects only.

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