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This paper examines whether CEOs react to personal experience with global warming. Using a difference-in-differences setting, we find that CEOs’ exposure to abnormally hot temperature leads to a decrease in corporate carbon emissions intensity. Our results shed light on the role played by...
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This paper examines whether CEOs react to personal experience with global warming. Using a difference-in-differences setting, we find that CEOs’ exposure to abnormally hot temperature leads to a decrease in corporate carbon emissions intensity. Our results shed light on the role played by...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013322092
I formally relate the consequences of climate change to the time series variation in weather extensively explored by … reduced-form weather regressions. Applying this new method, I find that an additional 2°C of global warming would reduce …
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012480661
Econometric studies for global heating have typically used regional or global temperature averages to study its long memory properties. One typical explanation behind the long memory properties of temperature averages is cross-sectional aggregation. Nonetheless, formal analysis regarding the...
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that up to 60% of the variance in both simulated and observed yields is attributable to weather variation. Majority of the … that show yields to be more weather-sensitive than in the observational record over the predominant range of temperature … uncertainty in historical weather forcings, and is responsible for widely divergent impacts of climate on future crop yields. …
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011714924