Four Essays of Environmental Risk-Mitigation

Expected damages of environmental risks depend both on their intensities and probabilities. There is very little control over probabilities of climate related disasters such as hurricanes. Therefore, researchers of social science are interested identifying preparation and mitigation measures that bu...

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Main Author: Chatterjee, Chiradip
Format: Others
Published: FIU Digital Commons 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/945
http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2013&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-fiu.edu-oai-digitalcommons.fiu.edu-etd-20132018-01-05T15:28:19Z Four Essays of Environmental Risk-Mitigation Chatterjee, Chiradip Expected damages of environmental risks depend both on their intensities and probabilities. There is very little control over probabilities of climate related disasters such as hurricanes. Therefore, researchers of social science are interested identifying preparation and mitigation measures that build human resilience to disasters and avoid serious loss. Conversely, environmental degradation, which is a process through which the natural environment is compromised in some way, has been accelerated by human activities. As scientists are finding effective ways on how to prevent and reduce pollution, the society often fails to adopt these effective preventive methods. Researchers of psychological and contextual characterization offer specific lessons for policy interventions that encourage human efforts to reduce pollution. This dissertation addresses four discussions of effective policy regimes encouraging pro-environmental preference in consumption and production, and promoting risk mitigation behavior in the face of natural hazards. The first essay describes how the speed of adoption of environment friendly technologies is driven largely by consumers’ preferences and their learning dynamics rather than producers’ choice. The second essay is an empirical analysis of a choice experiment to understand preferences for energy efficient investments. The empirical analysis suggests that subjects tend to increase energy efficient investment when they pay a pollution tax proportional to the total expenditure on energy consumption. However, investments in energy efficiency seem to be crowded out when subjects have the option to buy health insurance to cover pollution related health risks. In context of hurricane risk mitigation and in evidence of recently adopted My Safe Florida Home (MSFH) program by the State of Florida, the third essay shows that households with home insurance, prior experience with damages, and with a higher sense of vulnerability to be affected by hurricanes are more likely to allow home inspection to seek mitigation information. The fourth essay evaluates the impact of utility disruption on household well being based on the responses of a household-level phone survey in the wake of hurricane Wilma. Findings highlight the need for significant investment to enhance the capacity of rapid utility restoration after a hurricane event in the context of South Florida. 2013-05-20T07:00:00Z text application/pdf http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/945 http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2013&context=etd FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations FIU Digital Commons Adoption Green Technology Energy Conservation Hurricane Mitigation Behavioral Economics Other Economics Public Economics
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Adoption
Green Technology
Energy
Conservation
Hurricane
Mitigation
Behavioral Economics
Other Economics
Public Economics
spellingShingle Adoption
Green Technology
Energy
Conservation
Hurricane
Mitigation
Behavioral Economics
Other Economics
Public Economics
Chatterjee, Chiradip
Four Essays of Environmental Risk-Mitigation
description Expected damages of environmental risks depend both on their intensities and probabilities. There is very little control over probabilities of climate related disasters such as hurricanes. Therefore, researchers of social science are interested identifying preparation and mitigation measures that build human resilience to disasters and avoid serious loss. Conversely, environmental degradation, which is a process through which the natural environment is compromised in some way, has been accelerated by human activities. As scientists are finding effective ways on how to prevent and reduce pollution, the society often fails to adopt these effective preventive methods. Researchers of psychological and contextual characterization offer specific lessons for policy interventions that encourage human efforts to reduce pollution. This dissertation addresses four discussions of effective policy regimes encouraging pro-environmental preference in consumption and production, and promoting risk mitigation behavior in the face of natural hazards. The first essay describes how the speed of adoption of environment friendly technologies is driven largely by consumers’ preferences and their learning dynamics rather than producers’ choice. The second essay is an empirical analysis of a choice experiment to understand preferences for energy efficient investments. The empirical analysis suggests that subjects tend to increase energy efficient investment when they pay a pollution tax proportional to the total expenditure on energy consumption. However, investments in energy efficiency seem to be crowded out when subjects have the option to buy health insurance to cover pollution related health risks. In context of hurricane risk mitigation and in evidence of recently adopted My Safe Florida Home (MSFH) program by the State of Florida, the third essay shows that households with home insurance, prior experience with damages, and with a higher sense of vulnerability to be affected by hurricanes are more likely to allow home inspection to seek mitigation information. The fourth essay evaluates the impact of utility disruption on household well being based on the responses of a household-level phone survey in the wake of hurricane Wilma. Findings highlight the need for significant investment to enhance the capacity of rapid utility restoration after a hurricane event in the context of South Florida.
author Chatterjee, Chiradip
author_facet Chatterjee, Chiradip
author_sort Chatterjee, Chiradip
title Four Essays of Environmental Risk-Mitigation
title_short Four Essays of Environmental Risk-Mitigation
title_full Four Essays of Environmental Risk-Mitigation
title_fullStr Four Essays of Environmental Risk-Mitigation
title_full_unstemmed Four Essays of Environmental Risk-Mitigation
title_sort four essays of environmental risk-mitigation
publisher FIU Digital Commons
publishDate 2013
url http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/945
http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2013&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT chatterjeechiradip fouressaysofenvironmentalriskmitigation
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