13,951 research outputs found
Water rights: a comparison of the impacts of urban and irrigation reforms in Australia
Although there has been a policy thrust towards making all Australians more cognisant of the relative scarcity of water resources, the approach adopted for urban dwellers differs markedly from that applied to irrigators. These differences are examined from a property-rights perspective focussing primarily on the institutional hierarchies in the Victorian water sector. The analysis reveals significant attenuation of urban dwellers’ rights, presumably on the basis of the information deficiencies that circumscribe urban water use. Alternative policy options are then proposed, which might alleviate some of these information deficiencies and simultaneously address the efficiency losses that attend the present arrangements.consumer demand, institutional economics, water management and policy, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Regulation versus pricing in urban water policy: the case of the Australian National Water Initiative
The Australian National Water Initiative (NWI) builds on the foundations of earlier water reforms, attempts to correct earlier errors in both policy and its implementation, and seeks to better define some of the policy aims with the benefit of hindsight. However, despite the deliberate effort to improve on earlier reforms, the NWI still embodies a significant economic paradox. Although policymakers have shown their faith in the market insofar as allocating water between competing agricultural interests is concerned, they have not shown the same degree of faith in the ability of urban users to respond to price signals. This paper attempts to shed at least some light on this question by examining the responses of a number of State governments across Australia to the NWI. The paper specifically explores the rationale for non-price regulation in the urban context but challenges the long-term viability of this approach.water reform, urban water, water market, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Water Buy-Back in Australia: Political, Technical and Allocative Challenges
State and Federal governments are increasingly reliant on the re-purchase of water access rights as a vehicle for bringing ‘over-allocation’ in the Murray- Darling Basin into check. Not surprisingly, this has attracted criticism from several quarters, usually on the basis that such mechanisms produce unnecessary hardship for rural communities. Set against this are the views of many economists who have bemoaned the modest endeavours of governments to actively use water markets and the ongoing proclivity of agencies to instead embark on public projects under the guise of water use efficiency (see, for example Watson 2008). This paper focuses specifically on water buyback and traces recent policy episodes in this context. The paper also offers details of alternative market instruments which have the potential to improve on the current, relatively fragmented arrangements. We use contemporary examples to test the efficacy of alternative buyback instruments in the hope of informing policy formulation.Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Water markets as a vehicle for water reform: the case of New South Wales
Water reform in NSW is being undertaken using an adaptive approach in recognition of the uncertainty and imperfect knowledge embodied in the riverine environment. However, the reform process also relies, in part, on the ability of markets for tradable water entitlements to develop and thereby assist in allocating scarce water resources to their highest value use. This article explores impediments to the formation of efficient markets in permanent tradable water entitlements in NSW. The article concludes that more attention should be paid to market failures and related problems which manifest themselves in thin markets for permanent water entitlements.Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
The valuation of market information from livestock selling complexes
The efficient operation of livestock markets is contingent upon producers accessing relevant market information which assists adjustment to production and distribution. This article provides an analysis of the value of market information gleaned by producers attending public livestock auctions. The article uses the Travel Cost Method to quantify the value of this information and notes the limitations of applying the Travel Cost Method in this context.Agribusiness, Livestock Production/Industries,
Impulsive Noise Mitigation in Powerline Communications Using Sparse Bayesian Learning
Additive asynchronous and cyclostationary impulsive noise limits
communication performance in OFDM powerline communication (PLC) systems.
Conventional OFDM receivers assume additive white Gaussian noise and hence
experience degradation in communication performance in impulsive noise.
Alternate designs assume a parametric statistical model of impulsive noise and
use the model parameters in mitigating impulsive noise. These receivers require
overhead in training and parameter estimation, and degrade due to model and
parameter mismatch, especially in highly dynamic environments. In this paper,
we model impulsive noise as a sparse vector in the time domain without any
other assumptions, and apply sparse Bayesian learning methods for estimation
and mitigation without training. We propose three iterative algorithms with
different complexity vs. performance trade-offs: (1) we utilize the noise
projection onto null and pilot tones to estimate and subtract the noise
impulses; (2) we add the information in the data tones to perform joint noise
estimation and OFDM detection; (3) we embed our algorithm into a decision
feedback structure to further enhance the performance of coded systems. When
compared to conventional OFDM PLC receivers, the proposed receivers achieve SNR
gains of up to 9 dB in coded and 10 dB in uncoded systems in the presence of
impulsive noise.Comment: To appear in IEEE Journal on Selected Areas of Communication
Flavored Dark Matter and R-Parity Violation
Minimal Flavor Violation offers an alternative symmetry rationale to R-parity
conservation for the suppression of proton decay in supersymmetric extensions
of the Standard Model. The naturalness of such theories is generically under
less tension from LHC searches than R-parity conserving models. The flavor
symmetry can also guarantee the stability of dark matter if it carries flavor
quantum numbers. We outline general features of supersymmetric flavored dark
matter (SFDM) models within the framework of MFV SUSY. A simple model of top
flavored dark matter is presented. If the dark matter is a thermal relic, then
nearly the entire parameter space of the model is testable by upcoming direct
detection and LHC searches.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Joint Object and Part Segmentation using Deep Learned Potentials
Segmenting semantic objects from images and parsing them into their
respective semantic parts are fundamental steps towards detailed object
understanding in computer vision. In this paper, we propose a joint solution
that tackles semantic object and part segmentation simultaneously, in which
higher object-level context is provided to guide part segmentation, and more
detailed part-level localization is utilized to refine object segmentation.
Specifically, we first introduce the concept of semantic compositional parts
(SCP) in which similar semantic parts are grouped and shared among different
objects. A two-channel fully convolutional network (FCN) is then trained to
provide the SCP and object potentials at each pixel. At the same time, a
compact set of segments can also be obtained from the SCP predictions of the
network. Given the potentials and the generated segments, in order to explore
long-range context, we finally construct an efficient fully connected
conditional random field (FCRF) to jointly predict the final object and part
labels. Extensive evaluation on three different datasets shows that our
approach can mutually enhance the performance of object and part segmentation,
and outperforms the current state-of-the-art on both tasks
The Draft Genome of the Invasive Walking Stick, Medauroidea extradendata, Reveals Extensive Lineage-Specific Gene Family Expansions of Cell Wall Degrading Enzymes in Phasmatodea.
Plant cell wall components are the most abundant macromolecules on Earth. The study of the breakdown of these molecules is thus a central question in biology. Surprisingly, plant cell wall breakdown by herbivores is relatively poorly understood, as nearly all early work focused on the mechanisms used by symbiotic microbes to breakdown plant cell walls in insects such as termites. Recently, however, it has been shown that many organisms make endogenous cellulases. Insects, and other arthropods, in particular have been shown to express a variety of plant cell wall degrading enzymes in many gene families with the ability to break down all the major components of the plant cell wall. Here we report the genome of a walking stick, Medauroidea extradentata, an obligate herbivore that makes uses of endogenously produced plant cell wall degrading enzymes. We present a draft of the 3.3Gbp genome along with an official gene set that contains a diversity of plant cell wall degrading enzymes. We show that at least one of the major families of plant cell wall degrading enzymes, the pectinases, have undergone a striking lineage-specific gene family expansion in the Phasmatodea. This genome will be a useful resource for comparative evolutionary studies with herbivores in many other clades and will help elucidate the mechanisms by which metazoans breakdown plant cell wall components
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