Keynote Speech:
Innovative finance for water and natural capital - Jane Pilcher, Group Treasurer, Anglian Water
Parallel Session 1: Facing the Reality of Climate Change Risks
- Managing the coast in a changing climate - Andrew Russell, Committee on Climate Change
- Land use: reducing emissions and preparing for climate change -Brendan Freeman, Committee on Climate Change
- Effectiveness of information and commitment in lowering meat consumption: evidence from a natural field experiment -Sanchayan Banerjee, London School of Economics and Political Science
- Housing: reducing emissions and preparing for climate change -Gemma Holmes, Committee on Climate Change
Parallel Session 2: Economic Valuation I – Decisions and Uncertainty
- Accounting for public preferences and co-benefits when developing new riparian buffer strip policies - Søren Bøye Olsen, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
- Social capital and gain-loss asymmetry in discrete choice experiment - Hangjian Wu, University of Southampton
- Application of wellbeing valuation to the PR19 investment planning in the water sector: impacts of flooding incidents - Helen Dunn and Kieran Keohane, Simetrica
- Willingness-to-pay for urban forest-based ecosystem services under conditions of uncertainty - Helen Davies, University of Southampton
Parallel Session 3: Delivering Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation
- Climate change mitigation policies: distributional and allocative effects - Zeina Hasna, University of Cambridge
- Using choice experiment to value preferences for an increased use of nature based solutions for climate change adaptation in Prague - Tomas Badura, CzechGlobe, Czech Academy of Sciences; CSERGE, University of East Anglia
- Fair and incentive-compatible allocation mechanism for climate finance - Anna Stünzi, CER-ETH Center of Economic Research, Switzerland. Presentation not for publication on UKNEE website.
- Carbon accounting for sustainability measurement - Matthew Agarwala, LSE & Bennett Institute
Parallel Session 4: Economic Valuation II - Preferences, Promises and Fairness
- Politicians and their promises in an uncertain world: evidence from a lab-in-the-field experiment in India - Prasenjit Banerjee, University of Manchester (presentation due to be uploaded w/c 18/1/19)
- Environmental policy and labour demand in China - Yangsiyu Lu, University of Oxford
- Monetary vs non-monetary payment vehicles in stated preference studies: a gender perspective - Camilla Knudsen, University of Manchester
- Preferences for equitable distributions in resource management - Ilda Dreoni, University of Southampton
Parallel Session 5: Capital Management
- Can biodiversity offset markets prove to be a cost-effective conservation mechanism? - Katherine Needham, University of Glasgow
- Forest management and natural capital with an application to Mediterranean silvopastoral systems - Paola Ovando Pol, James Hutton Institute
- Balancing biological sustainability, economic value and social benefits in fisheries with commercial and recreational exploitation: the application of system dynamics modelling to the European sea bass - Angela Muench, Cefas
- Preferences for coastal and marine conservation in Vietnam - Laure Kuhfuss, University of St Andrews and James Hutton Institute
Parallel Session 6: Agriculture Beyond Food
- Biodiversity matters: assessing cultural value in lowland landscapes - Joe Morris, Cranfield University
- Demonstrating the benefits of low intensity upland farming in the Lake District: a natural capital accounting approach - Alison Holt, Natural Capital Solutions Ltd
- Reverse auctions as a tool for securing multiple environmental outcomes - Emma Claydon, Environment Agency
- Collective participation in Payment for Ecosystem Service schemes - Nick Hanley, University of Glasgow
Parallel Session 7: Valuing the Past
- The economic value of heritage in England: a benefit transfer study - Ricky Lawton, Simetrica (presentation due to be uploaded w/c 18/1/19)
- Capturing benefits from the historic environment in natural capital accounting: the current situation - Teresa Fenn, RPA Ltd
- Valuing the fourth dimension: challenges and opportunities for valuing the past - Adala Leeson, Historic England
Parallel Session 8: Transport from A to ?
- Fuelling the rebate debate: a study of low-income consumers in California’s clean vehicle rebate program - Douglas Bryan, London School of Economics and Political Sciences
- Boundary conditions of loss aversion – a natural field experiment - Christin Hoffmann, Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus & Distance University, Switzerland. Presenter was unable to present on the day.
- The use of the ecosystem services approach for appraising the landscape impacts of transport interventions - Ian Dickie, eftec
#envecon2019 was supported by: