The project aims to provide robust guidelines for responding to an Foot-and-Mouth-Disease outbreak.
We use computers to model human behaviour to understand why, how, when and where people adopt new technologies like solar panels or electric cars under a range of different scenarios.
We used the System of Environmental-Economic Accounting (SEEA) framework to investigate the costs and benefits of alternative long-term management strategies for living infrastructure in Canberra, Australia.
AJARE’s Best Paper Prize Winner for 2020 This work stems from a project analysing potential future regional development pathways involving […]
Economics of water management in hyper-arid areas Managing water resources in hyper-arid regions requires proactive management and infrastructure planning. Our […]
Calculating the costs of net zero emissions Check out this CSIRO ECO article by Ruth Dawkins that discusses the costs of net […]
This project used transects across space as analogues for future climate scenarios. Farmers’ decisions, as much as a changing climate, determine how agriculture will be transformed by climate change.