Conference
Speakers
Anthony C. Janetos,
Vice President, The Heinz Center for Science, Economics and the Environment
Lessons Learned from the Acid Deposition Research Experience
Charles Driscoll,
Professor of Environmental Systems Engineering, Syracuse University
Acid Rain Revisited
Peter Dillon,
Professor of Biogeochemistry, Environmental and Resources Studies and
Chemistry Departments, Trent University, Canada
Acid Deposition - Effects, Responses to Decreases in Sulphur Emissions,
and Prospects for Long-term Recovery
Knute J. Nadelhoffer,
Professor of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan.
Director, University of Michigan Biological Station
Atmospheric Nitrogen Deposition: Implications for Nutrient Cycling,
Acidification and Terrestrial Ecosystem Functioning
Robert Howarth,
Professor of Ecology and Environmental Biology, Cornell University
Nitrogen Pollution From Acid Rain is a Major Driver of Eutrophication
in Coastal Marine Ecosystems
Paul Portney,
President and Senior Fellow, Resources for the Future
Economics and Air Pollution Control
Daniel Sosland,
Executive Director, Environment Northeast
U.S. Energy Policy and the Transmission of Acid-producing Emissions
Across State Boundaries
Don Munton,
Professor of International Studies, University of Northern British Columbia
U.S.- Canadian Conflict and Cooperation on Transboundary Acid Rain
Miranda Schreurs,
Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Maryland
Addressing the Transboundary Acid Rain Issue in Western Europe:
Lessons and Comparison with the U.S. Experience
Barbara Connolly,
Assistant Professor of Political Science, Notre Dame
The Challenge of Eastern European Integration & Compliance with
LRTAP
Liliana Andonova, Assistant Professor of Government and Environmental Studies, Colby College
EU Integration and Acid Rain Policies in Central and Eastern Europe
Richard D.
Morgenstern, Senior Fellow at Resources
for the Future
Choosing Environmental Policy: Comparing Instruments and Outcomes
in the United States and Europe
Ronald Shadbegian,
UMASS-Dartmouth and Visiting Economist at the Environmental Protection
Agency's National Center for Environmental Economics
The 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments: Who Got Cleaner Air - And Who
Paid For It?
Joseph Kruger,
Visiting Scholar at Resources for the Future
From SO2 to Greenhouse Gases: Trends and Events
Shaping Future Emissions Trading Programs
Timothy H. Tear,
Director of Conservation Science, Eastern New York Chapter, The Nature
Conservancy
Atmospheric Deposition and Conservation
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