TITLE

The Economics of Climate Change

AUTHOR(S)
Stern, Nicholas
PUB. DATE
July 2007
SOURCE
New England Journal of Public Policy;Summer2007, Vol. 21 Issue 2, p23
SOURCE TYPE
Academic Journal
DOC. TYPE
Excerpt
ABSTRACT
An excerpt from the Stern Review, a report on the economic of climate change, commissioned by Her Majesty's (HM) Treasury in Great Britain, is presented.
ACCESSION #
25528317

Tags: CLIMATIC changes;  GLOBAL temperature changes

 

Related Articles

  • Structural Time Series Models and Trend Detection in Global and Regional Temperature Series. Xiaogu Zheng; Basher, Reid E. // Journal of Climate;8/1/99, Vol. 12 Issue 8, p2347 

    A unified statistical approach to identify suitable structural time series models for annual mean temperature is proposed. This includes a generalized model that can represent all the commonly used structural time series models for trend detection, the use of differenced series (successive...

  • World Review. Russel, Trevor // Greener Management International;Winter98, Issue 24, p10 

    Focuses on the views of several continents and organizations on how to tackle climate changes constructively. United Nations; North America; Asia.

  • Hottest year on record: 1995. Witze, Alexandra // Earth;Apr96, Vol. 5 Issue 2, p18 

    Cites global temperature measurements made by the climatologists from the University of East Anglia and the Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research in England. Average global temperature in 1995 as the hottest one recorded since 1860, when scientists began keeping global temperature...

  • Climate Change: Putting the `Good News' in Context. Dunn, Seth // World Watch;Sep/Oct2000, Vol. 13 Issue 5, p2 

    Focuses on climate change that could have irreversible impacts to sensitive systems such as coral reefs. Farmers' suffering of droughts and other climate disruptions; Examples of climate changes included in the draft of the United States Global Change Research Program.

  • Seabed sediments force climate rethink. Walker, Gabrielle // New Scientist;1/6/96, Vol. 149 Issue 2011, p15 

    Reports on the discovery that the earth experiences climate change every two to three thousand years. Cool and warm climate cycles; Evidence of cycle from the Greenland ice sheet; Detection of same cycle in deep-sea sediments; Changes in amount of sea salt deposited in Greenland's icecap.

  • Foreword.  // OECD Journal: General Papers;2012, Vol. 10 Issue 4, p3 

    A foreword to "OECD Journal General Papers" is presented.

  • GLOBAL WARMING-IT'S COOL TO BE HOT.  // Ecologist;Jul/Aug2002, Vol. 32 Issue 6, p13 

    Reports on climate change awareness campaign of some companies.

  • Digging up the future. Petit-Maire, Nicole // UNESCO Sources;Mar96, Issue 77, p11 

    Discusses how the earth sciences can help in understanding past climates through the archives contained in geological deposits. Reconstruction of past paleo-environments; Sifting through sediments of the ocean floor to find the fragments of foraminifera shells indicating previous surface...

  • A Second Look at the Impacts of Climate Change. Ausubel, Jesse H. // American Scientist;May/Jun91, Vol. 79 Issue 3, p210 

    Analyzes several hypotheses on the impact of climate change. Implications of a rapid change; Effect of delaying policies on the cost of response; Basis of the argument stating the lack of winners in global warming.

Share

Read the Article

Courtesy of VIRGINIA BEACH PUBLIC LIBRARY AND SYSTEM

Sorry, but this item is not currently available from your library.

Try another library?
Sign out of this library

Other Topics