 Homework #10 due Dec. 2 nd  Exam #4 on Dec. 2 nd  Next week – Group Presentations Group Papers – Dec. 9 th Tuesday – Groups 1,2,3 Thursday – Groups.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
EconomyCulture Competition Law Technology Product Price Promotion Consumer Needs Place.
Advertisements

RECYCLING A Rough Guide.
1 Chapter 14 Practice Quiz Environmental Economics.
Economic Solutions to Environmental Problems The Market Approach
Chapter 24 Solid and Hazardous Wastes
CONSUMPTION & VOLUNTARY SIMPLICITY Source: elephantjournal.com.
Waste Audit & Consultancy Servicespart of the DoloMatrix Group delivering sustainable solutions Jones Lang LaSalle Building Management Committee Meeting.
1. 2 Family/Community Involvement Health Education Health Promotion for Staff Healthy School Environment Health Services Physical Education Counseling,
Environmental Impacts of Single Use Plastic Bags  Consumed in extremely high volumes (>23 million per year in SM)  Produced from non-renewable resources.
GHG emissions and waste and recycling policy Kaylee Acuff Camp Resources XVIII.
7 Benefits of Recycling What is Recycling?
Ch. 9 Recyclable Resources: Minerals, Paper, Glass, Etc.
Recyclable Resources: Minerals, Paper, Glass & More
The Impacts of Packaging on the Environment Birgitte Kjær, Ph.D. Household Waste Division.
Economic Solutions to Environmental Problems: The Market Approach
 Homework #10 due Dec. 2 nd  Exam #4 on Dec. 2 nd  Next week – Group Presentations Group Papers – Dec. 9 th Tuesday – Groups 1,2,3 Thursday – Groups.
 Exam #2 on Oct. 11  HW #4 due same day FINAL EXAM – Monday Dec. 12  Section am  Section 2 - 3:10pm.
 Quiz #3 Oct. 27th  Writing Assignment Due Oct. 27 th  Homework 7 due Nov. 3rd  Exam #3 Thursday Nov. 3rd.
Introduction to Agricultural and Natural Resources
Chapter 17 Externalities and the Environment © 2009 South-Western/ Cengage Learning.
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
Discuss the reduction of resource consumption by conservation, waste reduction recycling & substitution.
 Homework #9 due  Quiz #4  After Break Homework #10 due Dec. 2 nd Exam #4 on Dec. 2 nd Last week of class – Group Presentations Group Papers – Dec.
The Life Cycle of Plastic Bottles
Managing Municipal Solid Waste (MSW)
Presentation By Toby ( 22 ) And Pinky ( 29 ). Environmental Protect a)Pollution control measure b)Recycling c)Environmental education and legislation.
BIOLOGY 157: LIFE SCIENCE: AN ENVIRONMENTAL APPROACH (Resources, Solid Wastes and Recycling)
Life Cycle Analysis. What is a Life Cycle Analysis? A method in which the energy and raw material consumption, different types of emissions and other.
AGEC/FNR 406 LECTURE 28 Municipal Waste in Indiana.
Lesson Objectives: By the end of this lesson you will be able to: *Explain how factors such as input costs create changes in supply. *Identify three ways.
© Valpak All Rights Reserved Recycling markets & their impact on the waste management sector Andrew Burridge – Materials Sales Manager.
Presentation to the Sustainable Prosperity Conference
Recycling Energy and waste management. Types of recycling  Closed loop recycling: plastic bottles becoming new plastic bottles; when the material collected.
APES Lesson 7 - Demogrphy
Renewable & Nonrenewable Resources Lesson 2.4: “Solid Waste Management”
7 Benefits of Recycling What is Recycling?
MONDAY 1/5/15 IN A PARAGRAPH- THAT MEANS COMPLETE SENTENCES ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS. What did you do over break? Did you go anywhere or do.
Waste and Recycling Overview. Inefficiency Lost resources/opportunities Environmental impact - greenhouse gases & other pollution Why focus on waste?
Types of Economies. The government of China tells factory managers to increase their use of computers in manufacturing. What economic question is most.
Part II: Business Environment Introduction to Business 3e 4 Copyright © 2004 South-Western. All rights reserved. Assessing Economic Conditions.
Managing Municipal Solid Waste Chapter 18 © 2004 Thomson Learning/South-Western.
ECONOMICS Chapter 5 Section 3. Key Terms  subsidy: a government payment that supports a business or market  excise tax: a tax on the production or sale.
 Waste prevention, also know as "source reduction," is the practice of designing, manufacturing, purchasing, or using materials (such as products and.
Solid and Hazardous Waste. Solid waste : any unwanted or discarded material we produce that is not a liquid or gas. Municipal solid waste (MSW): produced.
for Environmental Health
Compiled by: 1. Mouyelele Haufiku 2. Julia Josua.
What happens to the rubbish we throw away? Landfilled Recycled CombustedComposed.
Chapter 18.2 Solutions to the Solid Waste Problem source reduction defined by EPA as “the practice of designing, manufacturing, purchasing, or using materials.
Chapter 5.3: Changes in Supply. Slide 2 Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc.Chapter 5, Section 3 Objectives 1.Explain how factors such as input costs create.
© Krzysztof KlincewiczFaculty of Management, University of Warsaw© Krzysztof Klincewicz Economics of natural resources (exercise - summary) prof. UW dr.
1 Economics of Pollution Control CH. 14 Part II. 2 Market Allocation of Pollution When firms create products, rarely does the process of converting raw.
We are learning to: understand the principles of minimizing waste production know how to apply the 4Rs know about the use of renewable energy sources.
Market Failures Chapter 7 Sections 2 and 3 Economic Solutions to Global Warming.
Product life cycle and the three R’s. The manufacturer wants the toy to be as environmentally friendly as possible. Describe how the manufacturer can.
Understand the Basics of Commodities and Their Markets
#OSURLR RECYCLE ME! #OSURLR.
What is a Product Life Cycle?
Output and the Exchange Rate in the Short Run
Container Recycling Institute
Protecting your environment
What is a Product Life Cycle?
Post Consumer Carpet Kathryn Czuchra.
Disposal or Recycling:
Chapter 5: Supply Section 3
Environmental and Natural Resource Economics 3rd ed. Jonathan M
Chapter 5 Section 1 Supply.
TALLER 6: Sostenibilidad de los sistemas de reciclaje con inclusión
Environmental and Natural Resource Economics
Minerals and the Environment
Site Factors Situation Factors Involve transporting materials to and
Presentation transcript:

 Homework #10 due Dec. 2 nd  Exam #4 on Dec. 2 nd  Next week – Group Presentations Group Papers – Dec. 9 th Tuesday – Groups 1,2,3 Thursday – Groups 4,5,6 FINAL EXAM – Thursday Dec. 16  Section am  Section 2 - 3:10pm

 A = represents the stock of a resource  a = represents the recovery rate  Amount used over 4 years is A+ A*a + A*a 2 +A*a 3 A/(1-a) for infinity

 The Disposal Decision Recyclable waste comes from either new scrap or old scrap. New scrap is residual material from a production process while old scrap is recovered from used products. When the private marginal cost of disposal is lower than the marginal social cost, the market level of recycling is inefficient.

Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison- Wesley. All rights reserved. 9-7 Disposal Costs and Scrap Market  If consumers bear the true marginal disposal cost, more materials could be integrated into production process; price falls, and total consumption of inputs would increase as well as the use of recycled materials. Correct inclusion of disposal cost would increase the amount of recycling and extend the economic life for depletable and recyclable resources.

 U.S. has achieved higher recycling rates 32.5% 52% of paper 31% of plastic and soft drink bottles 45% of aluminum cans 63% of steel packaging 67% of large appliances  Transport, labor and processing costs are usually significant and play a large role in overall recycling rates.  As recycling becomes more cost competitive, however, manufacturers rely more heavily on recycled inputs as well as product design.

Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison- Wesley. All rights reserved  Subsidies on raw materials are another source of inefficiencies.  One example is the Mining Law of Raw materials are artificially cheap. Undermine the market for recycled inputs.

 Noninternalized environmental damages from the use of virgin materials will also bias the market away from recycled materials. These might be damages from extraction or from processing.  Host fees are being used to address the issue of siting of landfills. Host fees compensate the community that agrees to house the landfill.

 Public polices include volume pricing, refundable deposits and taxes. Volume pricing are disposal charges that reflect the true social cost of disposal. A refundable deposit system is typically designed to be an initial charge that reflects the cost of disposal and to provide a refund that encourages recycling and helps conserve virgin materials. Taxing virgin materials and subsidizing recycling activities can also promote recycling.

 Homework #10 due Dec. 2 nd  Exam #4 on Dec. 2 nd  Next week – Group Presentations Group Papers – Dec. 9 th Tuesday – Groups 1,2,3 Thursday – Groups 4,5,6