When natural resource damages are caused by releases of hazardous materials into the environment, government trustees must conduct Natural Resource Damage Assessments (NRDAs) to support claims to recover the value of lost or damaged resources. This article sets forth theoretical arguments that support efforts to develop unbiased simplified NRDA methods for use by government trustees and proposes a set of criteria that can be used to evaluate the quality of any such simplified method. The authors then describe the simplified methods being used by five states across the country, affording academic economists a rare view of the kinds of methods state agencies use in-house. The article evaluates those methods against the criteria set forth and ...
The United States and other developed countries are faced with restoring and managing degraded ecosy...
The damage schedule framework was applied as an analytical protocol to assess communities' valuatio...
[W]hether law should intervene to prevent or to compensate for harms documented by scientific eviden...
Natural Resource Damage Assessments (NRDAs) are necessary for the purpose of ensuring restoration an...
ABSTRACT. Government trustees conduct natu-ral resource damage assessments (NRDAs) to hold firms lia...
Natural resource damage assessment (NRDA) is a central instrument in an environmental liability regi...
The benefits transfer methodology is often used in regulatory settings. The relatively modest time a...
Natural resource damage assessment (NRDA) is the process of quantifying monetary damages for injurie...
The creation of comprehensive statutory schemes for protection of the environment has required the l...
This paper describes a preliminary effort to validate the Natural Resource Damage Assessment Model f...
In the U.S., the atmosphere, oceans, estuaries, rivers, and plant and animal species are public trus...
Non-use values are frequently underestimated or ignored in natural resource damage assessments, desp...
Environmental restoration activities are currently under way at many U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)...
Retrospective ecological risk assessment, restoration, natural resource damage assessment (NRDA) and...
140 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2005.The empirical study investiga...
The United States and other developed countries are faced with restoring and managing degraded ecosy...
The damage schedule framework was applied as an analytical protocol to assess communities' valuatio...
[W]hether law should intervene to prevent or to compensate for harms documented by scientific eviden...
Natural Resource Damage Assessments (NRDAs) are necessary for the purpose of ensuring restoration an...
ABSTRACT. Government trustees conduct natu-ral resource damage assessments (NRDAs) to hold firms lia...
Natural resource damage assessment (NRDA) is a central instrument in an environmental liability regi...
The benefits transfer methodology is often used in regulatory settings. The relatively modest time a...
Natural resource damage assessment (NRDA) is the process of quantifying monetary damages for injurie...
The creation of comprehensive statutory schemes for protection of the environment has required the l...
This paper describes a preliminary effort to validate the Natural Resource Damage Assessment Model f...
In the U.S., the atmosphere, oceans, estuaries, rivers, and plant and animal species are public trus...
Non-use values are frequently underestimated or ignored in natural resource damage assessments, desp...
Environmental restoration activities are currently under way at many U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)...
Retrospective ecological risk assessment, restoration, natural resource damage assessment (NRDA) and...
140 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2005.The empirical study investiga...
The United States and other developed countries are faced with restoring and managing degraded ecosy...
The damage schedule framework was applied as an analytical protocol to assess communities' valuatio...
[W]hether law should intervene to prevent or to compensate for harms documented by scientific eviden...