1 / 14

Water Economics Prof. David Sunding

Water Economics Prof. David Sunding. Used to Useful: Economics. Prof. David Sunding UC Berkeley November 13, 2009. Water Supply. At present, recycled water is a relatively small part of world’s water supply Global installed capacity: 50 million m 3 /d

leo-sloan
Télécharger la présentation

Water Economics Prof. David Sunding

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Water Economics Prof. David Sunding

  2. Used to Useful: Economics Prof. David Sunding UC Berkeley November 13, 2009

  3. Water Supply • At present, recycled water is a relatively small part of world’s water supply • Global installed capacity: 50 million m3/d • Actual output is around 60% of capacity • Would take three years to fill Hoover Dam • Installed capacity of desal is around 40 million m3/d • What economic fundamentals explain where we are and drive change in this market?

  4. Water Allocation • Most water customers pay for conveyance, treatment, distribution, but nothing for the water itself • How then is water allocated? • Variety of legal allocation schemes around the country • Riparian Doctrine • Prior Appropriation Doctrine

  5. Water Allocation • Allocation rules are problematic • Hard to keep pace with a dynamic economy • Reserve large quantities for relatively inefficient uses • Hard to accommodate environmental needs • Exacerbates scarcity by concentrating shortage on certain users

  6. Environmental Concerns • Traditional surface water diversion projects are increasingly controversial • Unlikely to be much more dam construction around the world • Recycled water and desal can take pressure off riparian ecosystems and replenish local aquifers • Seawater intrusion

  7. Water Pricing • US water customers pay relatively little for water (0.5% of household income)

  8. Water Rates and Finance • 2002 GAO study concluded that 29% of drinking water utilities were not covering full cost of service (40% of wastewater utilities) • One-third deferred maintenance due to insufficient funding, had more than 20 percent of pipelines nearing end of useful life, and lacked basic plans for managing capital assets • Also a lack of adequate financial planning

  9. Rate Trends • True that US customers pay relatively little for water • Yet, prices are rising • In 2007, a 6.1% increase in water and sewer rates • Dramatic increases in certain regions (e.g., Southern California) caused by scarcity

  10. MWD Rates vs. Cost of Desalinated Water

  11. Private Investment • Recycled water development projected to grow rapidly around the world • Current spending on construction: $2.4 billion • In 2016: $8.4 billion • Around 1/3 of all reuse projects are privately financed • Proportion should increase as size and complexity of projects grows

  12. Achieving Sustainability • A sustainable water sector is • Mindful of environmental externalities • Robust to fluctuations in precipitation • Supportive of economic growth • Financially sustainable • Development of recycled water is consistent with a vision of urban water sustainability

More Related