Month: January 2013

The Case Against CEQA “Reform” — San Diego’s Lame Transportation Plan

The movement to “reform” the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), a citizen-enforced law that requires public agencies to analyze environmental impacts of significant proposed projects, is gaining strength in 2013.  Everyone from the Governor to the Senate President to business groups to public agencies are joining forces, singing the same anti-CEQA song. Their evidence that …

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Climate Change in the Second Inaugural

From the prepared text: We, the people, still believe that our obligations as Americans are not just to ourselves, but to all posterity. We will respond to the threat of climate change, knowing that the failure to do so would betray our children and future generations. Some may still deny the overwhelming judgment of science, …

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The Political Path to Federal Climate Legislation

For climate legislation to pass, U.S. politics will have to become more like California.

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An Introduction to Environmental Economics

I’m a quirky teacher.  I don’t use textbooks and I try to focus on real world examples.   Here are 30 short videos about environmental economics.   Here are all of my course materials for my Winter 2013 Environmental Economics undergraduate course at UCLA.  I focus on incentives and empirical hypothesis testing.

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Theda Skocpol on Federal Carbon Policy Design

Harvard’s Theda Skocpol provides a compelling narrative and analysis of why Waxman-Markey didn’t become law.  In terms of my own empirical work,  Kotchen and I document using Google Trends that interest in “global warming”  fell in states with rising unemployment rates.   Gurney, Zhou, Michael Cragg and I document that Conservative Representatives from high carbon and …

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Is CEQA “Greenmail” A Problem?

Via PropertyProf blog, here’s an article on the real estate blog LA Curbed in which they disclose a previously secret settlement agreement between an LA neighborhood group and a local developer.  The agreement resolved potential CEQA litigation by the neighborhood group against a possible condo development proposed by the developer.  In particular, Curbed is outraged …

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The Mystery of Koontz: “Why Are We Here?”

Lyle Denniston of SCOTUSBlog reports that the plaintiff’s argument in the Court’s highest-profile Takings case of the year, Koontz v. St. John’s River Water Management District, did not go well.  Both Rick and I have blogged about the case before, and the more I think about it, it seems to me that the case has been …

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How the EPA Saved America

If you don’t follow political blogs, you may not have noticed Kevin Drum’s outstanding story about how the decrease in crime over the last 20 years can largely be attributed to the sharp drops in lead ingestion.  When I first heard the theory, I thought it was too good to be true, but Kevin’s story …

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Early Warning Signs

Change is (literally) in the air. For the U.S., last year broke heat records. “2012, the year of a surreal March heat wave, a severe drought in the Corn Belt and a huge storm that caused broad devastation in the Middle Atlantic States, turns out to have been the hottest year ever recorded in the …

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Deadly spike in Beijing’s air pollution

This graph shows recent air quality monitoring data (PM 2.5) from the U.S. Embassy in Beijing. As the New York Times noted, this spike—seen as a thick haze in the city—has been described as “postapocalyptic.”  Thanks in no small part to the Clean Air Act, we have thus far avoided the need to walk around …

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