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Professor Ian MacKenzie
Professor

Ian MacKenzie

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 336 56619

Overview

Background

Professor MacKenzie works in the fields of environmental economics, environmental policy design, and political economics. He joined the University of Queensland in September 2012, after more than five years at ETH Zurich, Switzerland. He has published research articles on the economics of pollution markets, environmental auctions, and contests in outlets such as the Journal of Public Economics, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, Scandinavian Journal of Economics, Oxford Economic Papers, International Journal of Industrial Organization, Public Choice, Environmental and Resource Economics. His work has won the European Association of Environmental and Resource Economists Award for outstanding publication in the journal Environmental and Resource Economics. He is a Co-editor of Resource and Energy Economics and his current research focuses on environmental offsets, resource conflict, and the political economy of environmental regulation.

His passion is understanding how environmental markets operate. He has led numerous interdisciplinary teams in investigating environmental markets in collaboration with policymakers at the council, state, and federal level. His funding has been supported by the ARC (Discovery Project), Agrifutures, Rural Economies Centre of Excellence, Department of Environment and Science, Queensland Government, and the Australian Federal Government’s $5bn Future Drought Fund (Regional Drought Resilience Plan).

His teaching has connected students’ learned knowledge with real-world (and interdisciplinary) policy outcomes, with impact recognised by an Australian Awards for University Teaching (2021), UQ Citation (2020) and Commendation (2019) for Outstanding Contributions to Student Learning, BEL Excellence in Education Award, and 10 School of Economics Teaching Awards. He has been recognised because of his creative leadership in pedagogy: in the way he teaches and supports learning. He leads a transformation in how students engage in class and are inspired to learn by using novel learning techniques that include: storytelling and unusual contextualisation; adopting multiple strategies to expand students’ deep learning capabilities; and creating scenarios where learning is applied authentically. In doing so his students become critical and deep thinkers capable of transferring their knowledge beyond the classroom to help address society’s problems. He is the Director of Teaching and Learning within the School of Economics.

He was appointed to the Multisector Reference Group Committee, Queensland Government, (2021-) to advise the Queensland Government on revisions to the Biodiversity Offset Framework and has co-authored on the Australia Academy of Science response to the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water (DCCEEW) on the Independent Review of Australian Carbon Credit Units (ACCUs). He often speaks at industry-government-academic events regarding environmental markets and has a strong media presence of his own research and expert advice on environmental markets.

Availability

Professor Ian MacKenzie is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Qualifications

  • Doctor of Philosophy, University of Stirling

Research interests

  • Pollution market design

  • Environmental offsets

  • Rent seeking and environmental regulation

Works

Search Professor Ian MacKenzie’s works on UQ eSpace

53 works between 2008 and 2025

41 - 53 of 53 works

2013

Other Outputs

Caps on Coasean Transfers

MacKenzie, Ian A. and Ohndorf, Markus (2013). Caps on Coasean Transfers. 485. School of Economics, University of Queensland.

Caps on Coasean Transfers

2013

Journal Article

Restricted Coasean bargaining

MacKenzie, Ian A. and Ohndorf, Markus (2013). Restricted Coasean bargaining. Journal of Public Economics, 97 (1), 296-307. doi: 10.1016/j.jpubeco.2012.11.002

Restricted Coasean bargaining

2012

Journal Article

Enforcement-proof contracts with moral hazard and precaution: ensuring 'permanence' in carbon sequestration

MacKenzie, Ian A., Ohndorf, Markus and Palmer, Charles (2012). Enforcement-proof contracts with moral hazard and precaution: ensuring 'permanence' in carbon sequestration. Oxford Economic Papers, 64 (2) gpr057, 350-374. doi: 10.1093/oep/gpr057

Enforcement-proof contracts with moral hazard and precaution: ensuring 'permanence' in carbon sequestration

2012

Journal Article

Optimal monitoring for project-based emissions trading systems under asymmetric information

MacKenzie, Ian A. and Ohndorf, M. (2012). Optimal monitoring for project-based emissions trading systems under asymmetric information. Journal of Regulatory Economics, 42 (2), 180-203. doi: 10.1007/s11149-012-9196-1

Optimal monitoring for project-based emissions trading systems under asymmetric information

2012

Journal Article

Cap-and-trade, taxes, and distributional conflict

MacKenzie, Ian A. and Ohndorf, Markus (2012). Cap-and-trade, taxes, and distributional conflict. Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 63 (1), 51-65. doi: 10.1016/j.jeem.2011.05.002

Cap-and-trade, taxes, and distributional conflict

2012

Journal Article

Prices versus quantities versus bankable quantities

Fell, Harrison, MacKenzie, Ian A. and Pizer, William A. (2012). Prices versus quantities versus bankable quantities. Resource and Energy Economics, 34 (4), 607-623. doi: 10.1016/j.reseneeco.2012.05.004

Prices versus quantities versus bankable quantities

2011

Book Chapter

Reassessing the importance of initial allocation methods in emission permit markets

Hintermann, Beat and MacKenzie, Ian A. (2011). Reassessing the importance of initial allocation methods in emission permit markets. Advances in environmental research. (pp. 207-238) edited by Justin A. Daniels. New York: Nova Publishing.

Reassessing the importance of initial allocation methods in emission permit markets

2011

Journal Article

Tradable permit allocations and sequential choice

MacKenzie, Ian A. (2011). Tradable permit allocations and sequential choice. Resource and Energy Economics, 33 (1), 268-278. doi: 10.1016/j.reseneeco.2010.06.004

Tradable permit allocations and sequential choice

2010

Journal Article

The effects of rent seeking over tradable pollution permits

Hanley, Nick and MacKenzie, Ian A. (2010). The effects of rent seeking over tradable pollution permits. BE Journal of Economic Analysis and Policy, 10 (1) 56, 56.1-56.26. doi: 10.2202/1935-1682.2497

The effects of rent seeking over tradable pollution permits

2009

Journal Article

Using contests to allocate pollution permits

MacKenzie, Ian A., Hanley, Nick and Kornienko, Tatiana (2009). Using contests to allocate pollution permits. Energy Policy, 37 (7), 2798-2806. doi: 10.1016/j.enpol.2009.03.030

Using contests to allocate pollution permits

2009

Other Outputs

Life’s a Breach! Ensuring 'Permanence' in Forest Carbon Sinks under Incomplete Contract Enforcement

Palmer, Charles, Ohndorf, Markus and MacKenzie, Ian A. (2009). Life’s a Breach! Ensuring 'Permanence' in Forest Carbon Sinks under Incomplete Contract Enforcement. doi: 10.2139/ssrn.1434373

Life’s a Breach! Ensuring 'Permanence' in Forest Carbon Sinks under Incomplete Contract Enforcement

2008

Journal Article

The optimal initial allocation of pollution permits: a relative performance approach

MacKenzie, Ian A., Hanley, Nick and Kornienko, Tatiana (2008). The optimal initial allocation of pollution permits: a relative performance approach. Environmental and Resource Economics, 39 (3), 265-282. doi: 10.1007/s10640-007-9125-4

The optimal initial allocation of pollution permits: a relative performance approach

2008

Other Outputs

Prices versus Quantities versus Bankable Quantities

Fell, Harrison G., MacKenzie, Ian A. and Pizer, William A. (2008). Prices versus Quantities versus Bankable Quantities. doi: 10.2139/ssrn.1272661

Prices versus Quantities versus Bankable Quantities

Funding

Current funding

  • 2024 - 2027
    Towards Zero Waste Mining: The OreSand Knowledge Hub
    Queensland Department of Resources
    Open grant
  • 2024 - 2027
    Optimising future copper production in the NW Mineral Province -Stage 1 scoping
    Queensland Department of Resources
    Open grant
  • 2018 - 2025
    Rural Economies Centre of Excellence (QLD Department of Agriculture and Fisheries grant administered by the University of Southern Queensland)
    University of Southern Queensland
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2022 - 2025
    Managing Carbon Offsets to Improve Australian Climate Policy Effectiveness
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2021 - 2023
    Environmental indicators for tracking environmental condition and trend in Queensland
    Queensland Government Department of Environment and Science
    Open grant
  • 2021 - 2022
    Evaluation of Cooperative Models Under a Carbon Market as a Method of Increased Engagement and Uptake by Producers, Including Exploring New or Augmented Approaches (Agrifutures grant led by SQL)
    Southern Queensland Landscapes
    Open grant
  • 2012 - 2013
    Institutions and the environment
    UQ New Staff Research Start-Up Fund
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Professor Ian MacKenzie is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    RENEWABLE ENERGY STRATEGY IN CARBON TRADING FOR SUSTAINABLE ECONOMICS DEVELOPMENT IN INDONESIA

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Associate Professor Ali Intezari

Media

Enquiries

Contact Professor Ian MacKenzie directly for media enquiries about:

  • economics of climate change
  • environmental policy - economics
  • mining - economics
  • pollution regulation - economics
  • recycling - economics

Need help?

For help with finding experts, story ideas and media enquiries, contact our Media team:

communications@uq.edu.au