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A Market Mechanism for the Optimal Control of Groundwater and Surface Water Pollution from Nitrates

Nitrate discharges from diffuse agricultural sources have long term effects on groundwater and surface water quality. Market-based instruments have been proposed as a means of balancing the demand for nitrate intensive farming and the capacity of the natural water bodies to dilute nitrates. Trading is complicated by the dispersed, delayed, and protracted effects of diffuse sources. Market mechanisms proposed to date have failed to incorporate these physical characteristics of nitrate pollution correctly.

We propose a new market mechanism for allocating and pricing nitrate discharge permits, based on the design of modern electricity markets which use LP models to find optimal prices and dispatch schedules. The system operates as a centralized auction. The sources submit bids to the auction indicating the benefits gained from each unit of nitrate discharge. The auction operator runs an LP which maximises the benefits from trade, subject to a set of environmental and operational constraints. The LP solution produces the optimal prices and allocations relative to the economic values indicated in the bids.

Our contributions include alternative LP models to suit different hydro-geological and socio-economic conditions. We present a generalized LP model which can include constraints that describe nitrate residence and transport in groundwater and surface water, the ability of water bodies to accept nitrates, and the operational limitations of the commercial sources. We show how to adapt available methods to incorporate the complex physical systems into an optimisation model. We present a double-sided market model which allows the polluters to buy permits, and environmental agents to lease out the ability of the natural water resources to accept nitrates. The model allows the providers of environmental services to participate in the market as sellers.

We build up and prove the concepts by explaining the prices and allocations produced by the LP models. Based on the theory of nodal pricing applied in electricity markets, we discuss the price structures and relationships and show how the prices would reflect the spatial and temporal effects of diffuse nitrate discharges. We interpret the information generated from the outcomes of trading and discuss how the available tools and information can be used by the market participants to optimize their bids. We expand the proposed market model to include point sources, and identify the factors that determine the extent to which the point and nonpoint sources can trade with each other. In addition, we develop measures of the extent to which the diffuse sources themselves can trade with each other. We demonstrate the models and the resulting prices and allocations, using a catchment nitrate transport model.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:canterbury.ac.nz/oai:ir.canterbury.ac.nz:10092/5144
Date January 2010
CreatorsRanathunga Arachchige, Ranga Prabodanie
PublisherUniversity of Canterbury. Management
Source SetsUniversity of Canterbury
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic thesis or dissertation, Text
RightsCopyright Ranga Prabodanie Ranathunga Arachchige, http://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
RelationNZCU

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