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Mission
The Harvard Environmental Economics Program
(HEEP) develops innovative answers to today’s complex environmental
issues. HEEP provides a forum for policymakers, scholars
and advocates to grapple with such difficult questions as
whether the Environmental Protection Agency should consider
costs as well as benefits when determining regulatory targets;
or what level of carbon reductions are appropriate to limit
global climate change; and whether the United States should
open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil exploration
as dependence on foreign oil pushes prices higher.
Established at the end of 2000 under the direction of Professor
Robert Stavins, HEEP offers a venue to bring together faculty
and graduate students from across the University engaged in
research, teaching, and outreach in environmental and natural
resource economics and related public policy. The program,
supported by the Enel Endowment for Environmental Economics and the Harvard
University Center for the Environment, and housed at the Mossavar-Rahmani Center for
Business and Government, develops curricula,
sponsors research projects, and convenes conferences to further
the understanding of the critical issues in Environmental
Economics in the U.S. and around the world.
For more information
on the Harvard Environmental Economics Program
please email us.
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