M
Mohammad Hassan Tarazkar
Researcher at Agricultural & Applied Economics Association
Publications - 16
Citations - 294
Mohammad Hassan Tarazkar is an academic researcher from Agricultural & Applied Economics Association. The author has contributed to research in topics: Distributed lag & Population. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 13 publications receiving 104 citations. Previous affiliations of Mohammad Hassan Tarazkar include Shiraz University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Spatial modeling, risk mapping, change detection, and outbreak trend analysis of coronavirus (COVID-19) in Iran (days between February 19 and June 14, 2020).
Hamid Reza Pourghasemi,Soheila Pouyan,Bahram Heidari,Zakariya Farajzadeh,Seyed Rashid Fallah Shamsi,Sedigheh Babaei,Rasoul Khosravi,Mohammad Etemadi,Gholamabbas Ghanbarian,Ahmad Farhadi,Roja Safaeian,Zahra Heidari,Mohammad Hassan Tarazkar,John P. Tiefenbacher,Amir Azmi,Faezeh Sadeghian +15 more
TL;DR: The first comprehensive study of COVID-19 in Iran undertakes spatial modeling, risk mapping, change detection, and outbreak trend analysis of the disease spread, indicating that the risk maps provided by this study is the primary, fundamental step for managing and controlling the epidemic.
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Energy input for tomato production what economy says, and what is good for the environment
TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated the energy consumption patterns of tomato production, corresponding GHG emissions, and relationships between inputs and output by a Cobb-Douglass econometric model.
Journal ArticleDOI
Energy intensity, economic growth and environmental quality in populous Middle East countries
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the effect of energy intensity and economic growth on environmental quality in three populous countries in the Middle East region, including Iran, Iraq, and Turkey.
Journal ArticleDOI
The impact of age structure on carbon emission in the Middle East: the panel autoregressive distributed lag approach
Mohammad Hassan Tarazkar,Navid Kargar Dehbidi,Ilhan Ozturk,Ilhan Ozturk,Ilhan Ozturk,Usama Al-mulali +5 more
TL;DR: The empirical results showed that any attempt to decrease carbon dioxide emissions in the Middle East region should consider the population age structure, and the working age population has the greatest explanatory power on the carbon emissions.