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Residential Renewable Energy: By Whom?

President Barack Obama’s 2011 State of the Union speech termed development of clean energy sources our “Sputnik Moment,” and called for 80% of the nation’s electricity to be generated from renewables, clean coal, and nuclear power by 2035. The message is clear: we need research, development and deployment of a new generation of energy technologies.

A Comment on "What Climate Change Can Do About Tort Law"

Professor Douglas Kysar’s article predicted plaintiffs’ difficulties for success in climate change public nuisance tort lawsuits since on every element—duty, proximate cause, breach, and injury—courts would have to stretch or overcome precedent in order to award relief. Undaunted by this sack of doctrinal lemons, Professor Kysar seeks to make lemonade and suggests climate-

A Response to "What Climate Change Can Do About Tort Law"

The tort system was never envisioned as the cure for all of society’s ills, and it was certainly never intended to serve as a shadow version of the modern administrative state. Quite the contrary, tort law has always been understood and designed to address those disputes that are quintessentially private and local in nature, of the type that are most amenable to case-by-case

Comment on Doug Kysar’s "What Climate Change Can Do About Tort Law"

Professor Doug Kysar’s thought-provoking article cogently outlines an array of doctrinal and conceptual hurdles that climate-change plaintiffs face and notes the way in which tort’s focus on short-term solutions—its marginalist bias as Professor Kysar puts it—impairs its ability to address a variety of important issues. He then suggests that while climate change litigation may

What Climate Change Can Do About Tort Law

Climate change is coming to the common law. Plaintiffs in several cases are pressing tort claims against carefully composed groups of greenhouse gas emitting defendants, seeking monetary damages and injunctive relief to lessen the threat and financial burden of climate change’s harmful impacts. Accordingly, the question of whether greenhouse gas emissions constitute an actionable tort, may soon receive judicial airing. But what might climate change suits do for tort law?

Comment on "Uncertainty"

The precautionary principle is often cited to assure the public, in situations where decisions have to be made under great uncertainty, that safety is paramount. However, this blanket assurance comes at the cost of foregoing a potential public benefit associated with an alternative riskier decision. Those basing a decision on the precautionary principle might implicitly or subconsciously

Climate Policy and Uncertainty: α–Precautionary Principle Versus Real Options Analysis

Significant uncertainties exist on the climate side of the analysis. The key issue is how quantitative methods of economic analysis and risk management can help to make the best
possible decision given incomplete information. In other words, how can modern tools for economic analysis help policymakers process available information and make a decision that balances benefits and risks. The integrated assessment framework, described in this paper, provides a convenient analytical tool.

Uncertainty

Our society has sophisticated techniques for analyzing risks that can be modeled and quantified. But other threats—often the most serious ones—do not fit the paradigm. These threats involve what the economist Frank Knight classified as “uncertainty” (where the likelihood of the peril is nonquantifiable) as opposed to “risk” (where the likelihood is quantifiable).

A Response to "Eyes on a Climate Prize: Rewarding Energy Innovation to Achieve Climate Stabilization"

"Eyes on a Climate Prize: Rewarding Energy Innovation to Achieve Climate Stabilization," explores the use of inducement prizes as a means to develop technology to stabilize
green house gas contributions to global climate change. The author, Jonathan H. Adler, presents the current state of the policy debate concerning greenhouse gases (GHG) and
global climate change. The premise of the paper is that the level of technological innovation necessary to make atmospheric stabilization affordable—and therefore a politically

Prizes Versus Patents: A Comment on Jonathan Adler’s "Eyes on a Climate Prize: Rewarding Energy Innovation to Achieve Climate Stabilization"

The economics of innovation typically treats winning a patent as the equivalent of winning a prize, where the reward for getting a patent is the profit the winning innovator1 can extract from the exclusive right to produce a particular item or utilize a particular process. What little there is on this question primarily involves the theoretical benefits and practical problems with having