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AREC Home |
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| Reduced
Tillage as an Economic Response to Clean Air Regulation Ana M. Kennedy and Paul N. Wilson |
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| [download paper] [research papers listings] | |
| Abstract | |
| Arizona
is the first state in the nation to regulate agricultural practices in
order to reduce dust emissions near urbanizing areas. This BMP program
requires dust mitigation actions in some combination of tillage and harvest,
crop land, and non-crop land activities. Contingent valuation methods
were used to estimate the willingness-to-adopt reduced tillage equipment.
At $10-26 per acre in long-term net benefits associated with the BMP,
adoption generates dust emission reductions on 10-35 percent of the cotton
acreage. Most dust mitigation, however, will occur through the reduction
of the number of conventional tillage operations and the urbanization
of agricultural lands. (JEL Q15, 55) |
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© 2007 Dept. of Agricultural & Resource Economics, The University of Arizona
Send comments or questions to arecweb@ag.arizona.edu
Last updated April 12, 2005
Document located at http://ag.arizona.edu/arec/pubs/researchpapers/abstract2005-04.html