Determining the Economic Value of Water: Concepts and Methods

Determining the Economic Value of Water: Concepts and Methods

Determining the Economic Value of Water: Concepts and Methods

Determining the Economic Value of Water: Concepts and Methods

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Overview

Water provides benefits as a commodity for agriculture, industry, and households, and as a public good such as fisheries habitat, water quality and recreational use. To aid in cost-benefit analysis under conditions where market determined price signals are usually unavailable, economists have developed a range of alternative valuation methods for measuring economic benefits.

This volume provides the most comprehensive exposition to-date of the application of economic valuation methods to proposed water resources investments and policies. It provides a conceptual framework for valuation of both commodity and public good uses of water, addressing non-market valuation techniques appropriate to measuring public benefits - including water quality improvement, recreation, and fish habitat enhancement. The book describes the various measurement methods, illustrates how they are applied in practice, and discusses their strengths, limitations, and appropriate roles.

In this second edition, all chapters have been thoroughly updated, and in particular the coverage of water markets and valuation of ecosystem services from water has been expanded. Robert Young, author of the 2005 edition, has been joined for this new edition by John Loomis, who brings additional expertise on ecosystem services and the environmental economics of water for recreational and other public good uses of water.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781135040512
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 07/23/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 358
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Robert A. Young was a faculty member at University of Arizona before joining the faculty at Colorado State University in 1970. He was a faculty member in the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics for 21 years, and then was Professor Emeritus until his death in 2013. He had worked as a water policy consultant for the World Bank and the United Nations. Young’s research interests were in water supply and quality, particularly in the case of offstream water uses, in agriculture, municipalities and industry. Young’s research has received awards from the American Agricultural Economics Association, the Western Agricultural Economics Association, the American Water Resources Association, and Warren A. Hall Medal for Distinguished Contributions to Water Resources.

John B. Loomis joined the faculty at Colorado State University in 1993, after being an Associate Professor at University of California-Davis. Previously he worked as an economist for two agencies in the U.S. Department of Interior. Loomis’ primary research interests are in non market valuation of water resources such as recreation, instream flow, endangered species and public lands. Loomis’ research has received several awards including from the Agricultural and Applied Economics Association. He was elected Vice-President of the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists, and was selected as a Fellow of that Association in 2013. He was also selected as a Distinguished Scholar of the Western Agricultural Economics Association in 2006.

Table of Contents

Part 1: Economic Value of Water: Theory and Concepts 1. Water, Economics, and the Nature of Water Policy Issues 2. Conceptual Framework and Special Problems in Valuing Water Part 2: Methods for Valuing Producers' and Consumers' Values of Water 3. Methods for Valuing Producers’ Uses of Water 4. Applied Methods of Valuation of Water Related Ecosystem Services Part 3: Applications of Valuation Methods 5. Valuation of Water Used in Irrigated Crop Production 6. Valuing Water Used by Industry 7. Valuing Water in Municipal Uses 8. Measuring Benefits of Flood Risk and Damage Reduction 9. Valuation of Selected Water-Related Ecosystem Services 10. Conclusions

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