6533b86efe1ef96bd12cbc44
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Farmers' costs of environmental regulation: Reducing the consumption of nitrogen in citrus farming
Ernest Reig-martínezErnest Reig-martínezAndrés J. Picazo-tadeosubject
Consumption (economics)PollutionEconomics and EconometricsNatural resource economicsbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectAgricultural economicsAgricultureEconomicsData envelopment analysisEnvironmental regulationInefficiencybusinessCommon Agricultural PolicyExternalitymedia_commondescription
Abstract Environmental externalities in agriculture, and the choice of suitable instruments to integrate environmental concerns into agricultural policies, are a matter of interest for the Common Agricultural Policy. In this paper, we use Data Envelopment Analysis techniques to assess the impact on farms' performance of two environmentally-friendly regulations aimed at abating consumption of inorganic nitrogen in Spanish citrus farming: levies on purchased nitrogen and nitrogen use permits for farms. By comparing farms' short-run maximum profits under both unregulated and regulated scenarios a regulation cost index is computed. Our results show that nitrogen overuse is mostly a matter of management inefficiency and that pollution could be reduced by promoting best farming techniques. Instead, if environmental regulations are implemented, regulating authorities should be aware that quantitative limits exercise a lower impact on farms' profits than taxes.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2007-03-01 | Economic Modelling |