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Application of water economic instruments to IWRM to improve efficiency, equity and environmental sustainability

Application of water economic instruments to IWRM to improve efficiency, equity and environmental sustainability . Economics is the study of the allocation of scarce resources One of economics' prime advantages is addressing trade – offs among various factors

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Application of water economic instruments to IWRM to improve efficiency, equity and environmental sustainability

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  1. Application of water economic instruments to IWRM to improve efficiency, equity and environmental sustainability

  2. Economics is the study of the allocation of scarce resources • One of economics' prime advantages is addressing trade – offs among various factors • The role of economics will be to do optimal allocation among competing parties • Water is an economic good • Supply and demand concepts apply

  3. Issues to be considered • Supply can not meet demand • Population growth will increase demand • Economic advance and development will also cause more pressure on water • Environmentally oriented demand for water have risen • Water supply is not rising due to pollution and ground water depletion

  4. Issues to be considered • Global warming can increase demand for water due to shifts in locations • The best dam sites are already occupied • Water infrastructure is depreciating • Health concerns can boost costs • Demand for hydro power will rise as a result of increasing energy prices

  5. Key Water Challenges • Water resources management is highly political • Solutions have to be tailored to specific, widely – varying circumstances • Overall economic reform is important and has to be taken into account • Financing Needs are huge, particularly in developing countries

  6. Supply Enhancement Strategies • Build / enlarge dams • Drill / improve wells • Build interbasin water transfer facilities • Repair leaky infrastructure • Build desalinization plants • Reprogram reservoir operations (e.g. more storage with less flood protection)

  7. Demand Management Strategies • Establish water-conserving plumbing codes requiring certain fixture types (such as low-flow toilets and showerheads) • Establish drought contingency plans • Ration water or constrain water use (e.g., alternate-day watering schedules) • Buy / lease / sell water rights • Raise water rates • Educate water users about conservation options

  8. Economic Instruments • The implementation of any of these strategies involve projects • Evaluation of any project involves the application of some kind of cost-benefit analysis and an instrument to conclude • The best instrument for project evaluation is the Net Present Value (NPV)

  9. The NPV concept • The concept is simple, input required are: • The Initial Investment • The annual cash flow • A discount Rate • Timing & life time of the project • The economic values have to be used not the financial values

  10. Issues in Determining the Economic Values • Costs and value are two different concepts • The full value of water consists of its intrinsic value and economic value • Value & costs will differ from one case to another

  11. Conclusion • Full cost of water must be considered including the opportunity cost • Value of water should reflect societal objectives, food security, benefits from irrigation …etc • Value & cost of water should be taken into account when setting water tariffs

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