Issues in Environmental Economics: Sustainability and Eco-efficiency
Abstract
This thesis deals empirically with various research questions in environmental
economics. In particular the issues of sustainability and eco-efficiency are approached on
three different data-sets. The first paper deals with the analysis of eco-efficiency for 103
provincial (NUTS 3 - Nomenclature of Units for Territorial Statistics 3) capitals of Italy
throughout 2000-2008. It focuses on the link among economic growth, energy consumption
and air pollution, modeling cities as territorial units that ought to promote growth, while at
the same time minimising its environmental impact. Subsequently, the eco-efficiency of this
panel of provincial capitals is measured through panel estimates of an input-distance
function. Within this procedure, considering some environmental control variables, the
paper evaluates if environmental best practices correspond either to those municipalities that
adopt environment-friendly policies or to cities characterised by a particular urban context.
The evidence points to the existence of a significant link between economic development,
energy consumption and air pollution at the provincial capital level. The most ecoefficient
provincial capitals are also among the wealthier, which is consistent with an Environmental
Kuznets Curve.
The second paper investigates the Ecological Footprint indicator by focusing on the
notion of sustainable development and then of carrying capacity of land. The impact of man
on nature is explored through an empirical analysis of the growth rate of population, and the
percentage of urban and rural population, in Europe. The level of CO2 emissions per
inhabitant in the EU is compared with that of developing countries. Through a sectoral
approach, the total CO2 emissions per capita from fuel combustion, electricity and heat
production, manufacturing industries and construction, transport and other sources are
separately appraised.
The third paper studies the relationship between rice production and methane
emissions. Rice farming is believed to be a major anthropogenic source of methane
emissions, which are measured emissions at both country and world levels of aggregation. It
presents a quantitative estimation of the statistical relationship between rice production
dynamics and methane emissions with regression estimates computed (country-wise and
globally) over a large set of countries. The evidence only partly validates the expectation of
a positive statistical influence of rice production on methane emissions. In fact a Kuznetstype
evidence shows up: increasing rice production is correlated with fewer emissions. This
negative relationship holds for a measure of countries sufficient to emerge significantly also
at the world level. [edited by Author]