Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Albuquerque (3)
- California (3)
- Clean Water Act (3)
- Colorado River system (3)
- Conflicts (3)
-
- Coordinated land and water planning (3)
- Critical habitat (3)
- ESA and municipal water use (3)
- FWS (3)
- Fastest growing region (3)
- Habitat modification (3)
- Land use (3)
- Limited water (3)
- Marine species (3)
- NPDES (3)
- National Marine Fisheries Service (3)
- National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (3)
- New Mexico (3)
- Pacific Northwest (3)
- Plants (3)
- Population centers (3)
- Salmon (3)
- San Antonio (3)
- Section 10 incidental permit process (3)
- Section 7 consultation process (3)
- Section 9 (3)
- Take of endangered animals (3)
- U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (3)
- Water quantity and quality (3)
- Water-dependent species (3)
- Publication
Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Natural Resource Economics
Water, Growth And The Endangered Species Act, Holly Doremus
Water, Growth And The Endangered Species Act, Holly Doremus
Water, Growth And The Endangered Species Act, Holly Doremus
Logistic Curves, Extraction Costs And Peak Oil, Robert Brecha
Logistic Curves, Extraction Costs And Peak Oil, Robert Brecha
Robert J. Brecha
Debates about the possibility of a near-term maximum in world oil production have become increasingly prominent over the past decade, with the focus often being on the quantification of geologically available and technologically recoverable amounts of oil in the ground. Economically, the important parameter is not a physical limit to resources in the ground, but whether market price signals and costs of extraction will indicate the efficiency of extracting conventional or nonconventional resources as opposed to making substitutions over time for other fuels and technologies. We present a hybrid approach to the peak-oil question with two models in which the …