The Social Cost of Sub-Soil Resource Use

This paper presents a market-price-based method to value sub-soil resources in environmental Cost-Benefit Analysis and Life Cycle Assessment. The market price incorporates the privileged information of the market agents, explicitly or implicitly anticipating future applications of the resource, futu...

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Main Authors: Tom Huppertz, Bo P. Weidema, Simon Standaert, Bernard De Caevel, Elisabeth van Overbeke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-01-01
Series:Resources
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2079-9276/8/1/19
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spelling doaj-69bef421432c446183d91470496f36bd2020-11-24T22:02:05ZengMDPI AGResources2079-92762019-01-01811910.3390/resources8010019resources8010019The Social Cost of Sub-Soil Resource UseTom Huppertz0Bo P. Weidema1Simon Standaert2Bernard De Caevel3Elisabeth van Overbeke4RDC Environment, 57 Avenue Gustave Demey, 1160 Brussels, BelgiumDanish Centre for Environmental Assessment, Aalborg University, Rendsburggade 14, 9000 Aalborg, DenmarkRDC Environment, 57 Avenue Gustave Demey, 1160 Brussels, BelgiumRDC Environment, 57 Avenue Gustave Demey, 1160 Brussels, BelgiumRDC Environment, 57 Avenue Gustave Demey, 1160 Brussels, BelgiumThis paper presents a market-price-based method to value sub-soil resources in environmental Cost-Benefit Analysis and Life Cycle Assessment. The market price incorporates the privileged information of the market agents, explicitly or implicitly anticipating future applications of the resource, future backstop technologies, recycling potentials, the evolution of reserves and extraction costs. The market price is therefore considered as the best available integrated information reflecting the actual values of these parameters. Our method is based on the Hotelling rule and the fact that private agents discount future costs and benefits at a higher rate than society as a whole. In practice, the price of the last resource unit sold is calculated with the Hotelling rule using a market discount rate. Then, the price at depletion is retropolated with a social discount rate smaller than the market discount rate. The resulting corrected “socially optimal” price is higher than the market price. The method allows to calculate the social cost of resource exhaustion, which is applicable in Cost-Benefit Analysis and Life Cycle Assessment. The method is applied to mineral and fossil resources and the results are compared with other recent methods that seek to place a monetary value on resource depletion.http://www.mdpi.com/2079-9276/8/1/19Hotellingresource depletionprice correctionextraction costsocial discount rateexternal cost valuation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tom Huppertz
Bo P. Weidema
Simon Standaert
Bernard De Caevel
Elisabeth van Overbeke
spellingShingle Tom Huppertz
Bo P. Weidema
Simon Standaert
Bernard De Caevel
Elisabeth van Overbeke
The Social Cost of Sub-Soil Resource Use
Resources
Hotelling
resource depletion
price correction
extraction cost
social discount rate
external cost valuation
author_facet Tom Huppertz
Bo P. Weidema
Simon Standaert
Bernard De Caevel
Elisabeth van Overbeke
author_sort Tom Huppertz
title The Social Cost of Sub-Soil Resource Use
title_short The Social Cost of Sub-Soil Resource Use
title_full The Social Cost of Sub-Soil Resource Use
title_fullStr The Social Cost of Sub-Soil Resource Use
title_full_unstemmed The Social Cost of Sub-Soil Resource Use
title_sort social cost of sub-soil resource use
publisher MDPI AG
series Resources
issn 2079-9276
publishDate 2019-01-01
description This paper presents a market-price-based method to value sub-soil resources in environmental Cost-Benefit Analysis and Life Cycle Assessment. The market price incorporates the privileged information of the market agents, explicitly or implicitly anticipating future applications of the resource, future backstop technologies, recycling potentials, the evolution of reserves and extraction costs. The market price is therefore considered as the best available integrated information reflecting the actual values of these parameters. Our method is based on the Hotelling rule and the fact that private agents discount future costs and benefits at a higher rate than society as a whole. In practice, the price of the last resource unit sold is calculated with the Hotelling rule using a market discount rate. Then, the price at depletion is retropolated with a social discount rate smaller than the market discount rate. The resulting corrected “socially optimal” price is higher than the market price. The method allows to calculate the social cost of resource exhaustion, which is applicable in Cost-Benefit Analysis and Life Cycle Assessment. The method is applied to mineral and fossil resources and the results are compared with other recent methods that seek to place a monetary value on resource depletion.
topic Hotelling
resource depletion
price correction
extraction cost
social discount rate
external cost valuation
url http://www.mdpi.com/2079-9276/8/1/19
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