“…If the compounded interest rate for this maturity is r, the future benefit of the project can be transferred to the present by a loan of exp( ) F rt today to be reimbursed at the termination date t. The portfolio containing the project and the loan has a single payoff which occurs today and is equal to the project's tends asymptotically to the smallest plausible interest rate. This argument for a decreasing term structure of the discount rate was first presented by Weitzman (1998Weitzman ( , 2001, followed by Newell and Pizer (2003), Hepburn and Groom (2007), Groom, Koundouri, Panopoulou and Pantelidis (2007), Gollier, Koundouri and Pantelidis (2008), Freeman (2010), Freeman and Groom (2010), Traeger (2013), Arrow et alii (2013Arrow et alii ( , 2014, and Farmer, Geanakoplos, Masoliver, Montero and Perello (2014) for example. Because Weitzman (2001) used a gamma distribution for r, this approach based on the expected NPV is often referred to as "gamma discounting".…”