Measuring the Long-Term Regional Benefits of Salinity Reduction

Approaches for evaluating salinity management benefits are generalized and extended to incorporate consideration of desalination and long-term changes in salinity concentration and water use patterns. Previous research indicates urban users incur the vast majority of salinity-related damages in affe...

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Main Authors: Gregory W. Characklis, Ronald C. Griffin, Philip B. Bedient
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Western Agricultural Economics Association 2005-04-01
Series:Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/30779
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spelling doaj-64fc2c4b2827422d8b29be19747b444e2020-11-25T02:57:29ZengWestern Agricultural Economics AssociationJournal of Agricultural and Resource Economics1068-55022327-82852005-04-01301699310.22004/ag.econ.3077930779Measuring the Long-Term Regional Benefits of Salinity ReductionGregory W. CharacklisRonald C. GriffinPhilip B. BedientApproaches for evaluating salinity management benefits are generalized and extended to incorporate consideration of desalination and long-term changes in salinity concentration and water use patterns. Previous research indicates urban users incur the vast majority of salinity-related damages in affected regions, suggesting municipalities may benefit by considering mitigating actions independent of agriculture. However, previous studies have included no consideration of desalination. Earlier studies have also considered stepped increases in salinity, assuming a single future concentration when estimating the long-term benefits of salinity reduction, an approach inconsistent with the incremental nature of these increases. Long-term changes in water use patterns (urban vs. agricultural), when considered at all, have often been treated in the same stepwise fashion. for this analysis, a suitable region is selected and the benefits of a hypothetical salinity management program are estimated using the approach described. These results are then compared with those obtained through the use of several previous methods. Findings suggest that consideration of desalination and incremental variations in salinity and water use patterns can substantially lower the estimated benefits of regional salinity management programs.https://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/30779benefitsregional water resource modelingwater quality management
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gregory W. Characklis
Ronald C. Griffin
Philip B. Bedient
spellingShingle Gregory W. Characklis
Ronald C. Griffin
Philip B. Bedient
Measuring the Long-Term Regional Benefits of Salinity Reduction
Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics
benefits
regional water resource modeling
water quality management
author_facet Gregory W. Characklis
Ronald C. Griffin
Philip B. Bedient
author_sort Gregory W. Characklis
title Measuring the Long-Term Regional Benefits of Salinity Reduction
title_short Measuring the Long-Term Regional Benefits of Salinity Reduction
title_full Measuring the Long-Term Regional Benefits of Salinity Reduction
title_fullStr Measuring the Long-Term Regional Benefits of Salinity Reduction
title_full_unstemmed Measuring the Long-Term Regional Benefits of Salinity Reduction
title_sort measuring the long-term regional benefits of salinity reduction
publisher Western Agricultural Economics Association
series Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics
issn 1068-5502
2327-8285
publishDate 2005-04-01
description Approaches for evaluating salinity management benefits are generalized and extended to incorporate consideration of desalination and long-term changes in salinity concentration and water use patterns. Previous research indicates urban users incur the vast majority of salinity-related damages in affected regions, suggesting municipalities may benefit by considering mitigating actions independent of agriculture. However, previous studies have included no consideration of desalination. Earlier studies have also considered stepped increases in salinity, assuming a single future concentration when estimating the long-term benefits of salinity reduction, an approach inconsistent with the incremental nature of these increases. Long-term changes in water use patterns (urban vs. agricultural), when considered at all, have often been treated in the same stepwise fashion. for this analysis, a suitable region is selected and the benefits of a hypothetical salinity management program are estimated using the approach described. These results are then compared with those obtained through the use of several previous methods. Findings suggest that consideration of desalination and incremental variations in salinity and water use patterns can substantially lower the estimated benefits of regional salinity management programs.
topic benefits
regional water resource modeling
water quality management
url https://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/30779
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