Friday, October 24, 2008

The First International Biophysical Economics Meeting

Date: October 17, 2008
Venue: Marshall Hall, State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry

The meeting was attended by leading academics and industry players in the fields of economics, ecology and other social and natural sciences. The event was also graced by a number of participants who flew in from Europe and Canada.

Jing Chen presenting on the Biophysical Approach to Production Theory

Students at SUNY-ESF participating in a lively debate













Charlie Hall wrapping up the presentations and moderating the discussions.


A trip to Skaneateles the day after the meeting

5 comments:

baloghblog said...

great pictures! Excellent work, Marvin.

Charlie Hall said...

Great work getting this started Marvin!

We welcome new users, browsers, critics (as long as you do not focus on what we are not, i.e. conventional economists) brilliant and not so brilliant ideas, papers that you think should be included and so on. We especially would like to make materials available for those who would like to teach or at least introduce to students biophysical economics, and will include resources over time.

Carles Ibáñez said...

Hello Charlie and everybody from Europe. I am happy to see the new BPE web page !

Carles

謝明博馬陰人放購ˇ屁ㄉ人不董識貨ㄉ人精打細算ㄉ人霖宏百里緒恩駛溟含凾信攔醬油邱科信彰柏宏與簽纏t06單耳耽溺娟謝政道QKPb戲曲學院部大汐布袋戲model mode台北不婚獨子女 臺獨 said...

向量张量纯量喜欢加乘不喜欢减除


功能原理.移項法則->W(力場作正功)=deltaEk(動能之增加)=-ΔU(位能之減少)
機械能守衡.加減法原理->deltaEk+deltaUs.deltaUg=0彈.重力場





悉怛多缽怛囉阿門

Steve From Virginia said...

http://economic-undertow.blogspot.com/2009/08/profitable-conservation.html

"""""
The gas business is in a difficult situation of having to ration demand particularly when it comes from what could be its best short- term customer, but the longer term requires just this. Until there is a way to manage the gas use along with its production, it may as well not exist. Unless the gas is used properly, environmental issues that are now lodged behind credit and peak oil concerns will elbow the way to the forefront, systematically removing our ability to transition from fossil fuels. Gas reserves will be gobbled by recreational auto use and consumption would then revert to (depleted) oil/coal sources that the gas would otherwise replace.
"""""