Introduction -- Origins of CBA of Water Use Conflicts -- A Simple Cost-Benefit Rule -- The Main Items in the Cost-Benefit Analysis -- Towards Empirical Measurement of Externalities -- Blueprint for a CBA -- Concluding Remarks
Summary
This book presents research on a kind of water use conflicts that is becoming more and more common and important: How to best manage moving water in times of increasing demand for electricity as well as environmental services. How should decisions be made between water use for electricity generation or for environmental and recreational benefits? The authors develop a simple general equilibrium model of a small open economy which is used to derive a cost-benefit rule that can be used to assess projects that divert water from electricity generation to recreational and other uses (or vice versa). The cost-benefit rule is then applied to the specific case of a proposed change at a Swedish hydropower plant. The book provides a manual for the evaluation of river regulations which can easily be replicated in other studies
Analysis
Economics
Renewable energy sources
Environmental pollution
Environmental economics
Economics/Management Science
Renewable and Green Energy
Waste Water Technology / Water Pollution Control / Water Management / Aquatic Pollution