check
Designing an agricultural vegetative waste-management system under uncertain prices of treatment-technology output products | Environmental Economics and Management

Recent Publications By Year

Publications by Authors

Contact Us

The Department of Environmental Economics and Management

The Robert H. Smith Faculty
of Agriculture, Food and Environment
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Herzl 229, Rehovot 7610001
Fax: 08-9466267

Department Head:
Dr. Ohad Raveh, Tel: 08-9489373

Head of the teaching program:
Dr. Ohad Raveh, Tel: 08-9489373

Secretary: 
Miri Arazi, Tel: 08-9489230

Designing an agricultural vegetative waste-management system under uncertain prices of treatment-technology output products

Citation:

Broitman, D. ; Raviv, O. ; Ayalon, O. ; Kan, I. . Designing An Agricultural Vegetative Waste-Management System Under Uncertain Prices Of Treatment-Technology Output Products. Waste Management 2018, 75, 37 - 43.

Date Published:

2018

Abstract:

Setting up a sustainable agricultural vegetative waste-management system is a challenging investment task, particularly when markets for output products of waste-treatment technologies are not well established. We conduct an economic analysis of possible investments in treatment technologies of agricultural vegetative waste, while accounting for fluctuating output prices. Under a risk-neutral approach, we find the range of output-product prices within which each considered technology becomes most profitable, using average final prices as the exclusive factor. Under a risk-averse perspective, we rank the treatment technologies based on their computed certainty-equivalent profits as functions of the coefficient of variation of the technologies’ output prices. We find the ranking of treatment technologies based on average prices to be robust to output-price fluctuations provided that the coefficient of variation of the output prices is below about 0.4, that is, approximately twice as high as that of well-established recycled-material markets such as glass, paper and plastic. We discuss some policy implications that arise from our analysis regarding vegetative waste management and its associated risks.

Publisher's Version

Last updated on 12/19/2019