2012
DOI: 10.1007/s10584-012-0534-1
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Modelling risk adaptation and mitigation behaviour under different climate change scenarios

Abstract: The main objective of this study is to simulate household choice behavior under varying climate change scenarios using choice experiments. Economic welfare measures are derived for society's willingness to pay (WTP) to reduce climate change induced flood risks through private insurance and willingness to accept compensation (WTAC) for controlled flooding under varying future risk exposure levels. Material flood damage and loss of life are covered in the insurance policy experiment, while the WTAC experiment al… Show more

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Cited by 47 publications
(31 citation statements)
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References 40 publications
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“…Higher premiums make flood insurance less attractive, higher flood risks make them more attractive, as expected. This is consistent with results from previous studies (e.g., Kunreuther 1996;Browne and Hoyt 2000;Botzen and van den Bergh 2012;Brouwer and Schaafsma 2013). For each flood risk category (see Table 1), a single dummy variable is included in the model, with the lowest risk -a recurrence interval of at least 200 years -serving as the omitted category.…”
Section: Parameter Estimatessupporting
confidence: 86%
“…Higher premiums make flood insurance less attractive, higher flood risks make them more attractive, as expected. This is consistent with results from previous studies (e.g., Kunreuther 1996;Browne and Hoyt 2000;Botzen and van den Bergh 2012;Brouwer and Schaafsma 2013). For each flood risk category (see Table 1), a single dummy variable is included in the model, with the lowest risk -a recurrence interval of at least 200 years -serving as the omitted category.…”
Section: Parameter Estimatessupporting
confidence: 86%
“…Survey-based research includes Baumann and Sims (1978), Pynn and Ljung (1999), Blanchard-Boehm et al (2001), Kriesel and Landry (2004), Landry and JahanParvar (2011), Petrolia et al (2013Petrolia et al ( , 2015. More recently and most similar to the current study, researchers in the Netherlands have conducted discrete choice and contingent valuation experiments to collect stated preference data since flood insurance is not currently available in that country (Botzen and van den Bergh 2012a, b;Botzen et al 2013, Brouwer andSchaafsma 2013). Experiment-based studies include Slovic et al (1977), McClelland et al (1993), andGanderton et al (2000).…”
Section: Literaturementioning
confidence: 89%
“…For comparison, similar mixed logit flood insurance models with panel data had values of 0.18, 0.28, and 0.46 (Brouwer and Schaafsma 2013;Botzen et al 2013; Botzen and van den Bergh 2012a). According to Louviere et al (2000), ''between 0.2 and 0.4 are considered to be indicative of extremely good model fits.''…”
Section: Overall Model Goodness-of-fitmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Empirical evidence on loss aversion is abundant in general (e.g., Horowitz and McConnell 2002), but for preferences regarding public environmental good provision it is limited (for exceptions, see Bateman et al 2009, andSchaafsma 2013). In this paper we add to the literature by empirically testing the combined effects of loss aversion and changing the value of the reference point on WTA and WTP value functions and the WTA-WTP disparity.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The general expectation underlying WTP for flood control or insurance is that people are risk averse when their decision involves potential losses under low probability-high impact conditions, and the corresponding individual choice behaviour is motivated by a desire for security. A study by Brouwer and Schaafsma (2013) is the only study we know of that examines both WTP and WTA in the context of increasing flood probabilities.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%