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Agnieszka Markowska
Researcher at University of Warsaw
Publications - 11
Citations - 410
Agnieszka Markowska is an academic researcher from University of Warsaw. The author has contributed to research in topics: Contingent valuation & Valuation (finance). The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 11 publications receiving 387 citations. Previous affiliations of Agnieszka Markowska include Indian Ministry of Environment and Forests.
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Economic valuation of air pollution mortality: A 9-country contingent valuation survey of value of a life year (VOLY)
Brigitte Desaigues,D. Ami,Anna Bartczak,M. Braun-Kohlová,Susan Chilton,Mikolaj Czajkowski,V. Farreras,Alistair Hunt,M. Hutchison,Claude Jeanrenaud,Péter Kaderják,Vojtěch Máca,Olimpia Markiewicz,Agnieszka Markowska,Hugh Metcalf,Ståle Navrud,Jytte Seested Nielsen,Ramon Arigoni Ortiz,S. Pellegrini,Ari Rabl,R. Riera,Milan Scasny,M.-E. Stoeckel,Richárd Szántó,Jan Urban +24 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a key element for the calculation of the damage costs of air pollution, namely the valuation of mortality, important because premature mortality makes by far the largest contribution.
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Managing nutrient fluxes and pollution in the Baltic: An interdisciplinary simulation study
R. Kerry Turner,Stavros Georgiou,Ing-Marie Gren,Fredric Wulff,Scott Barrett,Tore Söderqvist,Ian J. Bateman,Carl Folke,Carl Folke,Sindre Langaas,Tomasz Żylicz,Karl-Göran Mäler,Agnieszka Markowska +12 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a large multidisciplinary team of natural and social scientists estimated nutrient loadings and pathways within the entire Baltic drainage basin, together with the costs of a range of abatement options and strategies.
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Costing an international public good: the case of the Baltic Sea
TL;DR: In this article, the Chander-Tulkens model of cost sharing is used to determine a hypothetical allocation of abatement costs across the countries around the Baltic Sea, and several recommendations on how to optimize the Baltic-wide programmes conclude the paper.
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Municipal wastewater treatment in Poland - efficiency, costs and returns to scale.
TL;DR: Wastewater treatment costs were increasing with technology efficiency, and decreasing with higher wastewater treatment plant capacity, which provides a valuable input into cost-benefit analyses of nutrient loading reduction achieved by extending or intensifying municipal wastewater treatment.