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Seminar: Environmental Accounting for Pollution: Methods with an Application to the United States Economy

Date(s): January 28, 2010

Location: TBD

Presenter(s): Muller, Nicholas Z., Robert Mendelsohn, and William Nordhaus

Description: This study presents a framework to include environmental externalities into a system of national accounts. The paper estimates the air pollution damages for each industry in the United States. An integrated-assessment model quantifies the marginal damages of air pollution emissions for the US which are multiplied times the quantity of emissions by industry to compute gross damages. Solid waste combustion, sewage treatment, stone quarrying, marinas, and oil and coal-fired power plants have air pollution damages larger than their value added. The largest industrial contributor to external costs is coal-fired electric generation, whose damages range from 0.8 to 5.6 times value added.

The paper on which the presentation is based is available from the American Economic Review Exit

Seminar Category: Environmental Economics