Chair in Environmental and Resource Economics
- About
-
- Email Address
- frans.devries@abdn.ac.uk
- Office Address
- School/Department
- Business School
Biography
Frans P. de Vries is a professor at the University of Aberdeen Business School and the Department of Economics where he holds the Chair in Environmental and Resource Economics. He is a member of the Scottish Experimental Economics Laboratory (SEEL), the Aberdeen Centre for Research in Energy Economics and Finance (ACREEF), and an affiliate of the North Atlantic Microplastic Centre (NAMC) in Norway.
Professor De Vries’s research is centred around the design and functioning of environmental markets and incentive-based policy mechanisms for pollution control and biodiversity conservation. Another focal point of his research relates to the interplay between environmental regulation, market structure and technological change. Across these domains, his research has been published in the European Economic Review and leading field journals, including the Journal of the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists, the Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, the American Journal of Agricultural Economics, and Energy Economics.
Professor De Vries received an MSc from Wageningen University in 1996 and a PhD from the University of Groningen in 2003. He joined the University of Aberdeen in 2021 and previously has held academic positions at the University of Stirling in Scotland (2007-2021), and the Universities of Groningen (2004-2007) and Tilburg (2002-2004) in the Netherlands. He has been a visiting scholar at Purdue University, Indiana University, Syracuse University, the Australian National University, the University of Victoria, and a visiting professor at the University of Waikato (New Zealand) and Luleå University of Technology (Sweden). He has also consulted for the OECD (Environment Directorate), the UK and Irish Environment Agencies, the Scottish Environment Protection Agency, and the European Patent Office.
Qualifications
- PhD Environmental Economics2003 - University of Groningen
- MSc Economics of Agriculture and Environment1996 - Wageningen University
Memberships and Affiliations
Latest Publications
Consequences of omitting non-lethal wildlife impacts from stated preference scenarios
Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, vol. 126, 103011Contributions to Journals: ArticlesInsights from international environmental legislation and protocols for the global plastic treaty
Scientific Reports, vol. 14, 2750Contributions to Journals: ArticlesEquity preferences and abatement cost sharing in international environmental agreements
American Journal of Agricultural Economics, vol. 106, no. 1, pp. 416-441Contributions to Journals: ArticlesSignificant benefits from international cooperation over marine plastic pollution
Working Papers: Preprint Papers- [ONLINE] DOI: https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3328986/v1
Improving the ecological and economic performance of agri-environment schemes: Payment by modelled results versus payment for actions
Land Use Policy, vol. 130, 106688Contributions to Journals: Articles
- Research
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Research Overview
Environmental Economics
Environmental Policy and Technological Change
Industrial Organisation
Applied Game TheoryResearch Areas
Accepting PhDs
I am currently accepting PhDs in Economics.
Please get in touch if you would like to discuss your research ideas further.
Economics
Accepting PhDsCurrent Research
Clear Skies: Multi-Pollutant Climate Policy in the Presence of Global Dimming
with Matthew McGinty
Abstract: Multi-pollutant interactions can have crucial implications for the design and performance of environmental policy targeting single pollutants. This paper presents a two-region model where a global pollutant (CO2) and local pollutant (SO2) are produced jointly. The interaction between SO2 and CO2 gives rise to the global dimming effect, which relates SO2 emissions to the environmental damage caused by CO2 emissions. We analyze climate policy by comparing abatement of these pollutants in the presence and absence of the dimming effect. We then draw implications for the design of international climate agreements, which should reflect the interactive nature between pollutants. The paper also illustrates how a market-based policy in the form of emissions taxes can be embedded into climate agreements to facilitate an efficient coordination of multi-pollutant abatement across regions. Our model predicts that this involves a uniform tax on the global pollutant but differentiated (region-specific) taxes on the local pollutant.
Past Research
Selected Publications
R.J. Johnston, T. Börger, N. Hanley, K. Meginnis, T. Ndebele, G.E.A. Siyal & F.P. de Vries (2024), Consequences of Emitting Non-Lethal Wildlife Impacts from Stated Preference Scenarios, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 126, 103011.
Börger, T., N. Hanley, R.J. Johnston, K. Meginnis, T. Ndebele, G.E.A. Siyal & F.P. de Vries (2024), Equity Preferences and Abatement Cost Sharing in International Environmental Agreements, American Journal of Agricultural Economics 106, pp. 416-441.
Cason, T.N., J.K. Stranlund & F.P. de Vries (2023), Investment Incentives in Tradable Emissions Markets with Price Floors, Journal of the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists 10, pp. 283-314.
Banerjee, S., T.N. Cason, F.P. de Vries & N. Hanley (2021), Spatial Coordination and Joint Bidding in Conservation Auctions, Journal of the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists 8, pp. 1013-1049.
Banerjee, S., T.N. Cason, F.P. de Vries & N. Hanley (2017), Transaction Costs, Communication and Spatial Coordination in Payment for Ecosystem Services Schemes, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 83, pp. 68-89.
Banerjee, S., F.P. de Vries, N. Hanley & D.P. van Soest (2014), The Impact of Information Provision on Agglomeration Bonus Performance: An Experimental Study on Local Networks, American Journal of Agricultural Economics 96, pp. 1009-1029.
Dekker, T., H.R.J. Vollebergh, F.P. de Vries & C.A. Withagen (2012), Inciting Protocols, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 64, pp. 45-67.
Dijkstra, B.R. & F.P de Vries (2006), Location Choice by Households and Polluting Firms: An Evolutionary Approach, European Economic Review 50, pp. 425-446.
Supervision
Current Ph.D. student: Jessica Hood
Funding and Grants
Current Grants
- The Economics of Marine Plastic Pollution: What are the Benefits of International Cooperation? - Principal Investigator, ESRC-funded project (June 2019 - April 2023)
- Teaching
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Courses
- Environmental and Natural Resource Economics
Scottish Graduate Programme in Economics (co-taught with Nick Hanley, University of Glasgow)
- Publications
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Page 1 of 1 Results 1 to 10 of 10
Consequences of omitting non-lethal wildlife impacts from stated preference scenarios
Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, vol. 126, 103011Contributions to Journals: ArticlesInsights from international environmental legislation and protocols for the global plastic treaty
Scientific Reports, vol. 14, 2750Contributions to Journals: ArticlesEquity preferences and abatement cost sharing in international environmental agreements
American Journal of Agricultural Economics, vol. 106, no. 1, pp. 416-441Contributions to Journals: ArticlesSignificant benefits from international cooperation over marine plastic pollution
Working Papers: Preprint Papers- [ONLINE] DOI: https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3328986/v1
Improving the ecological and economic performance of agri-environment schemes: Payment by modelled results versus payment for actions
Land Use Policy, vol. 130, 106688Contributions to Journals: ArticlesInvestment Incentives in Tradable Emissions Markets with Price Floors
Journal of the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists, vol. 10, no. 2Contributions to Journals: ArticlesClear Skies: Multi-Pollutant Climate Policy in the Presence of Global Dimming
Working Papers: Discussion PapersEcological and Economic Implications of Alternative Metrics in Biodiversity Offset Markets
Conservation Biology, vol. 36, no. 5, e13906Contributions to Journals: ArticlesEnhancing Spatial Coordination in Payment for Ecosystem Services Schemes with Non-Pecuniary Preferences
Ecological Economics, vol. 192, 107271Contributions to Journals: Articles- [ONLINE] DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolecon.2021.107271
Understanding the Performance of Biodiversity Offset Markets: Evidence from An Integrated Ecological-Economic Model
Land Economics, vol. 97, no. 4, pp. 836-857Contributions to Journals: Articles