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A publicação pode ser exportada nos seguintes formatos: referência da APA (American Psychological Association), referência do IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers), BibTeX e RIS.

Exportar Referência (APA)
Meireles, M., Fátima Lima, Edimar Ramalho, Madaleno, M., Marta Ferreira Dias & Alves, M. R. (2024). Wind and solar power: An overview of non-market externalities and metrics. ICOPEV 2024 – The 6th International Conference on Production Economics and Project Evaluation.
Exportar Referência (IEEE)
M. A. Meireles et al.,  "Wind and solar power: An overview of non-market externalities and metrics", in ICOPEV 2024 – The 6th Int. Conf. on Production Economics and Project Evaluation, Guimarães, 2024
Exportar BibTeX
@misc{meireles2024_1742351290019,
	author = "Meireles, M. and Fátima Lima and Edimar Ramalho and Madaleno, M. and Marta Ferreira Dias and Alves, M. R.",
	title = "Wind and solar power: An overview of non-market externalities and metrics",
	year = "2024",
	howpublished = "Digital"
}
Exportar RIS
TY  - CPAPER
TI  - Wind and solar power: An overview of non-market externalities and metrics
T2  - ICOPEV 2024 – The 6th International Conference on Production Economics and Project Evaluation
AU  - Meireles, M.
AU  - Fátima Lima
AU  - Edimar Ramalho
AU  - Madaleno, M.
AU  - Marta Ferreira Dias
AU  - Alves, M. R.
PY  - 2024
CY  - Guimarães
AB  - Wind and solar power projects are relevant alternatives to fossil fuels and constitute a focal point for achieving greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reduction in national strategies (e.g. Portugal). Yet, despite the relevant contribution to electricity generation, renewable energy projects also entail externalities, i.e. impacts that inadvertently affect ecosystems and communities at different levels, and that are not accounted for by the agents that produce them. For instance, health benefits provided by avoided emissions of wind and solar power deployment as positive externalities, or biodiversity loss that affects flora and fauna as negative externalities.
Valuation of externalities may resort to a myriad of methods, among which contingent valuation, travel cost valuation, or market price-based methods. This paper intends to summarize the main externalities ascribed to wind and solar power projects and the methods of their economic valuation. To promote a better understanding between impacts and possible valuation alternatives a specific research string was adopted and applied to the research database; followed by an exclusion/inclusion criteria that allowed to establish a restricted sample of articles to assess. This overview may contribute to discerning different types of economic valuation for each socioeconomic and environmental category, contributing to the economic and energy engineering scope. Finally, policy implications for energy transition based on wind and solar power projects are provided.
ER  -