Robert Hart
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
33 Papers
217 Citations
Robert Hart is an academic researcher from Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Technological change & Investment (macroeconomics). The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 32 publications. Previous affiliations of Robert Hart include University of Cambridge & Saint Louis University.
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Papers
Improving marine water quality by mussel farming: a profitable solution for Swedish society.
Odd Lindahl,Robert Hart,Bodil Hernroth,Sven Kollberg,Lars-Ove Loo,Lars Olrog,Ann-Sofi Rehnstam-Holm,Jonny Svensson,Susanne Svensson,Ulf Syversen +9 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that rather than paying mussel farmers for their work that nutrient trading systems are introduced to improve coastal waters and that an alternative to nitrogen reduction in the sewage treatment plant in Lysekil community through mussel farming is presented.
Growth, environment and innovation-a model with production vintages and environmentally oriented research
TL;DR: In this paper, an innovative environmental new growth model driven by researchers striving for monopoly profits is developed, where skilled labour is allocated between production vintages and two forms of research, ordinary and environmentally oriented.
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To Everything There Is a Season: Carbon Pricing, Research Subsidies, and the Transition to Fossil-Free Energy
TL;DR: In this article, a climate policy model with directed technological change (DTC) in the energy sector is developed, and the model delivers both analytical and numerical results that give a clear understanding of the effects of DTC on the energy system.
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Dynamic pollution control—time lags and optimal restoration of marine ecosystems
TL;DR: In this article, the authors apply a dynamic model to the problem of eutrophication of coastal waters due to nitrogen pollution, which includes two control measures, one upstream (agricultural abatement) and one downstream (mussel cultivation at the coast).
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Nitrogen in the Baltic Sea--policy implications of stock effects.
Robert Hart,Mark Brady +1 more
TL;DR: An optimal control model for cost-effective management of pollution, including two state variables, pollution stock and ecosystem quality, is developed and applied to Baltic Sea pollution by nitrogen leachates from agriculture, finding that significant abatement is achievable at reasonable cost.
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