Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'Environmental aspects of Capital investments'
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Rathnam, Sharad. "Designing an environmentally conscious decision support tool for capital investments in small and medium enterprises." Thesis, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/18922.
Full textWood, Dorothy, University of Western Sydney, College of Law and Business, and School of Accounting. "The influence of environmental social controls on the capital investment decision-making of the firm : Australian evidence." THESIS_CLAB_ACC_Wood_D.xml, 2002. http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/228.
Full textDoctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Dzenga, Bruce. "Public policy and clean energy venture capital private equity investments in South Africa." Thesis, Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/97395.
Full textENGLISH ABSTRACT: In 2007, Bürer and Wüstenhagen (2009) conducted a survey amongst European and United States venture capital and private equity investors (VC/PE) to ascertain their public clean energy policy preference and concluded that VC/PE investors view the feed-in tariff (FIT) scheme to be the most preferred policy option. In this research study, the author re-conducted part of the Bürer and Wüstenhagen (2009) survey with thirty South African VC/PE investors to determine their perceptions on clean energy public policy preference. It is evident from the survey, that opinions are varied and at times even contradictory. This in itself demonstrates an important feature of the South African VC/PE and clean energy industry: it is young, dynamic, changing rapidly and can look very different, depending on the vantage point. The investors surveyed were mainly optimistic about the long-term development of the South African renewable energy industry led by private investors. VC/PE investors in South Africa have mixed views on various investment options, and are concerned about both the regulatory and macro-economic trends. The interviews and survey results show a number of recurring issues. Altogether, the survey results indicate that VC/PE investors consider FITs to be the best public clean energy policy instrument in leveraging private investment and finance for renewable energy in South Africa. This study serves to illustrate and confirm, in line with empirical studies, that VC/PE investors in South Africa believe that clean energy market-pull policies provide an impetus and indeed spur private investor participation in clean energy in developing countries. While it is true that most VC/PE investors would prefer the price certainty associated with a FIT regime, this is almost an irrelevant question in South Africa since constitutionally the state is bound to procure through competitive tendering. This study also serves to highlight the need for more active research and attention in this field.
Jacobs, Phillip A. H. "The identification and evaluation of key sustainable development indicators and the development of a conceptual decision-making model for capital investment within Gold Fields Limited (GFL)." Thesis, Rhodes University, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1008304.
Full textAl, Wahaibi Mahmood Ali Khalfan. "Investigating three aspects of corporate finance within the context of GCC markets." Thesis, Brunel University, 2017. http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/14479.
Full textRapera, Corazon L. "Potential impacts of various capital gains tax structures on forest investments." Diss., This resource online, 1990. http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07282008-135205/.
Full textBoccia, Alfred M. "An empirical analysis of environmental uncertainty, real options decision patterns and firm performance." Amherst, Mass. : University of Massachusetts Amherst, 2009. http://scholarworks.umass.edu/open_access_dissertations/93/.
Full textSrivastava, Rohini. "Integrating Financial, Environmental and Human Capital -the Triple Bottom Line- For High Performance Investments in the Build Environment." Research Showcase @ CMU, 2018. http://repository.cmu.edu/dissertations/1157.
Full textKent, Avidan. "International trade, investment, and climate change : a tale of legal and institutional fragmentation." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2014. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.648583.
Full textRegnier, Eva Dorothy. "Discounted cash flow methods and environmental decisions." Diss., Georgia Institute of Technology, 2001. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/24544.
Full textSmolarski, Jan M. (Jan Mietek). "Environmental Determinants and Choice of Project Evaluation Techniques in US and UK Firms." Thesis, University of North Texas, 1996. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc277767/.
Full textWood, Dorothy. "The influence of environmental social controls on the capital investment decision-making of the firm : Australian evidence /." View thesis, 2002. http://library.uws.edu.au/adt-NUWS/public/adt-NUWS20030801.131105/index.html.
Full textWong, Chung-kin, and 黃仲健. "The role of the Community Investment and Inclusion Fund (CIIF) in building social capital in Hong Kong." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2006. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B36427159.
Full text朱紫瓊 and Chi-king Chu. "The penetration of Japanese capital in the commercial property market in Hong Kong and its possible impact on urban design." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 1990. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31979701.
Full textDutch, Wiliam Grant. "The capital cost aspects of the environmental impact of new highways in association with the new design technique the Commercial Route Methodology (CRM)." Thesis, Loughborough University, 1989. https://dspace.lboro.ac.uk/2134/33241.
Full textMa, Kuen Keith, and 馬權. "Project financing for infrastructures." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 1996. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31267592.
Full textÖtsch, Rainald. "Stromerzeugung in Deutschland unter den Rahmenbedingungen von Klimapolitik und liberalisiertem Strommarkt : Bewertung von Kraftwerksinvestitionen mit Bayes’schen Einflussdiagrammen." Phd thesis, Universität Potsdam, 2012. http://opus.kobv.de/ubp/volltexte/2014/6905/.
Full textPower plant investors face large uncertainties due to ongoing liberalization, climate policy, and long investment horizons. This study provides a probabilistic appraisal of power plant investments within the framework of Bayesian decision theory. A Bayesian influence diagram is used for setting up a discounted cash flow model and analysing the profitability of power plants. As the study explicitly models merit order pricing, the pass-through of random fuel and carbon costs may be analysed. The study derives probabilistic statements about net present values of single investments and company portfolios and explores the sensitivity of profits to variations of select input variables. In the majority of cases, an increase in the price of emission allowances also increases the net present value of existing power plant portfolios. A substantially increased carbon prices also is the prerequisite to diversify power plant portfolios by gas and CCS plants. For the currently prevailing German electricity market, we argue that investors may lack incentives for new investments in fossil generation, a finding that holds true also with implementation of CCS. Our estimates are conservative, as profitability will further deteriorate with the build-up of renewables.
Ju, Jing. "How does FDI affect the environment in China : evidence from provincial panel data." Thesis, University of Macau, 2010. http://umaclib3.umac.mo/record=b2161848.
Full textBatata, Adriane Gomes Rodrigues 1970. "Identidade ambiental metropolitana como instrumento à governabilidade." [s.n.], 2011. http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/280508.
Full textTese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Filosofia e Ciências Humanas
Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-19T13:27:21Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Batata_AdrianeGomesRodrigues_D.pdf: 2882397 bytes, checksum: 7f8ac090d609411355459d45721f63fc (MD5) Previous issue date: 2011
Resumo: Os conflitos de âmbito ambiental-urbano têm sido apontados como um dos grandes desafios à governabilidade metropolitana devido, principalmente, a ausência de canais que possibilitem legitimar estratégias e instrumentos que ajudem a superar as desigualdades intrametropolitanas e a obter acordos, principalmente em países federalistas como o Brasil. Contudo, algumas instituições têm implementado novos arranjos entre atores políticos, econômicos e sociais que possibilitam a obtenção de acordos de caráter ambiental entre os municípios que constituem espacialidades intermediárias - entre o estado e o município - como as regiões metropolitanas. Esses arranjos buscam promover o desenvolvimento e/ou a qualidade de vida de determinada região e são estruturados a partir de interesses comuns específicos aos municípios que constituem essa mesma região podendo, em alguns casos, estimular a formação de uma identidade ambiental. Enfim, a partir da hipótese de que as instituições responsáveis por criar/ampliar os canais de governabilidade em questões ambientais podem identificar ou construir identidades ambientais metropolitanas, e que a existência de uma identidade ambiental específica a cada região resulta em diversificados modelos de governabilidade para uma mesma questão ambiental entre diferentes regiões, o trabalho investiga a existência de identidade ambiental em regiões metropolitanas e sua influência na governabilidade de questões urbano-ambientais e na qualidade ambiental dessas regiões. Para buscar evidências que possibilitam responder aos questionamentos propostos foi aplicada junto a duas regiões metropolitanas paulistas e instituições correspondentes uma metodologia elaborada a partir de conceitos como Urbanização, Metropolização, Sociedade de Risco/ Vulnerabilidade Sócio-Ambiental, Capital Social. Os resultados obtidos possibilitam responder parcialmente aos questionamentos, mas apontam novas perspectivas ao estudo da governabilidade metropolitana em questões ambientais através da percepção/identificação/construção de identidades
Abstract: Conflicts within the urban environment have been hailed as a major challenge to the metropolitan governance, mainly due to the absence of channels enabling the legitimation of strategies and tools to help overcome the intra-metropolitan inequalities and reach agreements, especially in federalist countries like Brazil. However, some institutions have implemented new arrangements among political economic and social actors, which enable the achievement of an environmental nature of agreements between the municipalities that are intermediary spatialities - between the state and municipality - as the metropolitan areas. These arrangements seek to promote the development and/or quality of life of a given region and are structured around common interests that are specific to municipalities which constitute this same region, and may in some cases stimulate the creation of an environmental identity. Finally, based on the assumption that the institutions responsible for creating/expanding the channels of governance on environmental issues can identify or build environmental metropolitan identities, and that the existence of a specific environmental identity for each region results in diverse models of governance for a same environmental issue between different regions, the paper investigates the existence of environmental identity in metropolitan regions and their influence on the governance of urban environmental issues and on the environmental quality of these regions. To search for evidence to answer the questions proposed, a methodology developed from concepts such as urbanization, metropolization, society of risk/socio-environmental vulnerability, social capital, was applied to two metropolitan regions of São Paulo and corresponding institutions. The results allowed to partially answer questions, however, they point out new perspectives to the study of metropolitan governance in environmental issues through awareness/identification/construction of identities
Doutorado
Ambiente e Sociedade
Doutor em Ambiente e Sociedade
Brown, Sarah. "Imagining 'environment' in Australian suburbia : an environmental history of the suburban landscapes of Canberra and Perth, 1946-1996." University of Western Australia. School of Humanities, 2009. http://theses.library.uwa.edu.au/adt-WU2009.0094.
Full textFarahzadi, Nicki. "CSR inom banksektorn : En studie om konsumenternas uppfattning kring bankernas CSR-arbete." Thesis, Södertörns högskola, Företagsekonomi, 2019. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:sh:diva-38473.
Full textO'Brien, Patricia Ann, and patricia o'brien@rmit edu au. "COncepts and costs for the maintenance of productive capacity: a study of the measurement and reporting of soil quality." RMIT University. Accounting and Law, 1999. http://adt.lib.rmit.edu.au/adt/public/adt-VIT20040930.170346.
Full textBrites, Alice Dantas. "Monitoramento dos efeitos ecológicos e socioeconômicos da comercialização de produtos florestais não madereiros." Universidade de São Paulo, 2010. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/90/90131/tde-24032011-215203/.
Full textAmazon, non-timber forest products, ecological effects, socioeconomic effects, monitoring.
Brown, James Bradley. "Three essays on environmental economics." Thesis, 2003. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/utexas/fullcit?p3110734.
Full textKeys, Vernon C. "Capital investment appraisal in a process environment." Thesis, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10210/6215.
Full textAs the manufacturing environment evolved over the past century, the nature of investments in manufacturing capabilities changed dramatically. Automation can be seen as the single biggest driver of this evolution; enabling the manufacturing fraternity to develop smarter technology in order to exploit the opportunities that were created by the volatility that exist in most markets. This lead to the development of flexible manufacturing technology. Constructing a definition of manufacturing flexibility is difficult mainly due to the various views and perspectives that exist of flexibility. In short, flexibility can be defined as the ability to react ( to any change ) with little penalty in time, effort, cost or performance. These technologies that enable a manufacturing system to be flexible in a certain manner are generally difficult to justify in terms of traditional financial yardsticks. This can be contributed to the diverse benefits to be gained from these investments; and often these benefits are of a nonfinancial nature. Furthermore, when reviewing investments in flexible manufacturing technology within a process environment there appears to be an even bigger problem. The relatively fixed nature of the design output of process equipment, and the enormous quantities of capital outlay initially required to erect and commission process plants, often makes it near impossible to justify any investment that does not deliver good financial returns within the short term. Thus it becomes clear that the traditional methods of investment appraisal within the process environment have become generally unsuitable; and this call for a re-evaluation of the processes applied to guide value adding investments. This study set out to deliver a logical approach to appraising investments in manufacturing flexibility by defining a framework to be applied. The proposed framework consists of the following 4 primary steps. Firstly the strategic direction followed by the business is defined; then an analysing of the manufacturing flexibility required is performed. The third step is to evaluate the manufacturing technology available and furthermore a suitable performance measured criteria is defined to evaluate the proposed investment. This model is set within the strategic context of the manufacturing strategy of a business and thus should ensure the development of manufacturing capabilities that will ensure business growth over the medium to long term.
Onishi, Tamaki. "Institutional influence on the manifestation of entrepreneurial orientation: A case of social investment funders." Thesis, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/1805/4656.
Full textLinking the new institutionalism to entrepreneurial orientation (EO), my dissertation investigates institutional forces and entrepreneurial forces—two contradicting types of forces—as main effects and moderating effects upon practices and performance of organizations embedded in the institutional duality. The case chosen observes unique hybrid funders that this study collectively calls social investment funders (SIF), which integrate philanthropy and venture capital investment to create and implement a venture philanthropy model for a pursuit of their mission. A theoretical framework is developed to propose regulative and normative pressures from two dominant institutions governing SIFs. Original data collected from 146 organizations are scrutinized by moderated multiple regressions for two empirical studies: Study 1 for effects on SIFs’ venture philanthropy practices, and Study 2 for effects on SIFs’ social and financial performance. Multiple imputations, diagnostic analyses, and several post hoc analyses are also conducted for robustness of data and results from multiple regression analyses. Results from these analyses find that EO and venture capital institutional forces both enhance SIFs’ venture philanthropy practices. A hypothesis postulated for a negative relationship between the nonprofit status and venture philanthropy practices is also supported. Results from moderated regression analyses, along with a subgroup and EO subdimension analyses, confirm a moderating effect between EO and the nonprofit status, i.e., a regulative institutional pressure. A positive relationship is found in EO- financial performance, but not in EO-social performance. While support is lent to hypotheses posited for a social/financial performance relationship with donors’/investors’ demand for social outcomes, and with the management team’s training in business, the overall results remain mixed for Study 2. Nonetheless, this dissertation appears to be the first study to theorize and test EO as a micro-level condition enabling organizations to strategically shape and resist institutional pressures, and it reinforces that organizations’ behavior is not merely a product of their passive conformity to environmental forces, but of the agency, also. As such, this study aims to contribute to scholarly efforts by the “agency camp” of the new institutionalism and EO, answering a call from the leading scholars of both EO (Miller) and the new institutionalism (Oliver).
Matundu, Diamena. "Strategic aspects in investment decision-making." Diss., 1997. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/18177.
Full textBusiness Management
M. Comm. (Business Management)
Zeka, Sandile. "Land restitution and conservation : social capital in the Mkambati community." Thesis, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10413/10833.
Full textThesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2013.
Musavengane, Regis. "An assessment of the role of social capital in collaborative environmental governance in tribal communities: the study of Gumbi and Zondi communities in KwaZulu Natal Province, South Africa." Thesis, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10539/22726.
Full textPolitical transformations in most developing nations have been accompanied by vast land claims by indigenous communities who were forcibly detached from their traditional land during colonisation and apartheid-like dispensations. In the context of sub-Saharan African countries (including South Africa), the need for land reform has been aggravated by the great scarcity of farmland. However, most of the reclaimed land is in areas pursuing conservation activities. Now, caught between owning the land and pursuing conservation as a land use option to improve livelihood; local communities have tended to form partnerships and collaborations with external stakeholders in managing communally owned natural resources. Collaborative management is perceived as a sustainable route in governing common pool natural resources in re-claimed areas. It is in this regard, that this research aims at establishing the role to which social capital can be instrumental in promoting sustainable governance in co-managed community game reserves in Kwa-Zulu Natal. This study follows a case study approach, with Zondi and Gumbi communities in Umvoti and uPhongolo Districts of KwaZulu Natal, South Africa respectively being used to obtain empirical evidence. Two basic criteria were taken into consideration in selecting appropriate case study areas to attain the aim of the study. Firstly, whether the area had successfully claimed the land and secondly, if there were collaborative efforts from different stakeholders in managing available common resources. To ensure equal representation, research participants were drawn from households, community leaders, conservation organisations and policy makers from the government. This study’s methodological positionality is interpretive in nature, and its operational framework base is qualitative research. It therefore uses a number of qualitative techniques in an attempt to establish the role of social capital in governing Somkhanda (in Gumbi) and Ngome (in Zondi) Community Game Reserves. For instance, systemic-resilience thinking and socio-ecological learning approaches were used to analyse the participatory relationship and effects in managing community natural resources in Gumbi and Zondi communities. It has been revealed in this study that the key to successful collaborative environmental management projects revolves around issues of participation, transparency, reciprocity and effective communication. These elements are important ingredients in building strong social capital. Community social cohesion builds trust between internal and external actors, especially in communities that were once subjected to various forms of segregation and corrupt systems of governance. The presence of trust in managing common pool resources ensures effective stakeholder participation as well as involvement in decision making processes. Furthermore, the evidence from this study suggests that the frequent exclusion of rural populations from participation in processes with a direct influence on their lives, undermines efforts to pursue Community-Based Ecotourism. More profoundly, the study found that, as an analytical tool, social capital seems to provide a dynamic and holistic explanatory approach to the pursuance of Community-Based Ecotourism in land-claimed communities, compared with the dominant evaluative techniques in the tourism field. Another important practical implication is that social capital can be used to promote the analysis of communities as heterogeneous and evolving, as opposed to the assumptions of their homogeneity and static state. There is a strong possibility that social capital can also address power-relations, social exclusion and inequality, through consideration of both structural and cognitive indicators. The findings from this study make several contributions to the body of knowledge. Firstly, they provide a better understanding of social capital variables influencing community participation in conservation activities. This is of use when designing or developing future Collaborative Community-Based Natural Resources Management (CCBNRM) projects. Secondly, from a broader perspective, the study advises policy makers not to ignore related community policies which might impact community participation in CCBNRMs. This is essential in considering the direction of future conservation and rural development policy. Thirdly, they provide a framework for empowering local people and their communities to enhance participation in CCBNRM. In view of this, a binding conclusion can be made that social capital can be a vehicle through which the accumulation of different forms of capital can be achieved and contribute towards sustainable environmental management.
MT2017
Abebe, Tesfaye Abate. "Laws of investment and environmental protection : the case of Ethiopian largescale agriculture." Thesis, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/24738.
Full textPublic, Constitutional and International Law
LL. D.
Deysel, Valencia. "The social sustainability of the Table Mountain cableway." Diss., 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/13384.
Full textEnvironmental Sciences
M. Sc. (Environmental Science)