Water value, resource rent recorvery and economic welfare cost of environmental protection : A water-sector model for the Steelpoort sub-basin in South Africa

This study developed an analytical framework and an empirical water sector model to evaluate current and alternative water allocation regimes in the Steelpoort sub-basin (SPSB) in terms of the key objectives of the national water act of South Africa. The analyses showed that bulk water is currently not only oversupplied to offstream uses in the SPSB at the expense of the ecological Reserve (instream benefits) but also underpriced. The water research levy, the only mechanism used for rent capture, recovers a negligible proportion of the water resource rent (RR) (less than 2% at best) implying that almost all RR dissipates to various offstream users in the form of indirect subsidies of about R0).42/m3 with the more realistic low-price elasticity assumption. Commercial irrigation enjoys the highest subsidy being the major consumer followed by mining and hence the most to be affected by policy change in this regard. Results also indicate that the total maximum economic value offstream users are willing to pay for increasing water yields to supply the full requirement levels currently enjoyed at the SPSB is estimated at about R2.8/ m'. Although this value does not properly measure the net social gain or loss of environmental protection, it serves as a benchmark value against which per unit costs of potential alternative water supply options can be compared. A few caveats remain as key limitations of the study call for further research work. First, this study did not generate information on instream benefits to compare with offstream values lost as a result of protecting the ecological Reserve. Second, the study can benefit from improved specification of the water sector model parameters, particularly the supply side as better information will allow estimation of an upward sloping supply (marginal cost) curve.

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Main Authors: Hassan, R.M., Farolfi, Stefano
Format: article biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:P10 - Ressources en eau et leur gestion,
Online Access:http://agritrop.cirad.fr/526314/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/526314/1/document_526314.pdf
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spelling dig-cirad-fr-5263142022-12-30T18:27:32Z http://agritrop.cirad.fr/526314/ http://agritrop.cirad.fr/526314/ Water value, resource rent recorvery and economic welfare cost of environmental protection : A water-sector model for the Steelpoort sub-basin in South Africa. Hassan R.M., Farolfi Stefano. 2005. Water S.A., 31 (1) : 9-16. Researchers Water value, resource rent recorvery and economic welfare cost of environmental protection : A water-sector model for the Steelpoort sub-basin in South Africa Hassan, R.M. Farolfi, Stefano eng 2005 Water S.A. P10 - Ressources en eau et leur gestion This study developed an analytical framework and an empirical water sector model to evaluate current and alternative water allocation regimes in the Steelpoort sub-basin (SPSB) in terms of the key objectives of the national water act of South Africa. The analyses showed that bulk water is currently not only oversupplied to offstream uses in the SPSB at the expense of the ecological Reserve (instream benefits) but also underpriced. The water research levy, the only mechanism used for rent capture, recovers a negligible proportion of the water resource rent (RR) (less than 2% at best) implying that almost all RR dissipates to various offstream users in the form of indirect subsidies of about R0).42/m3 with the more realistic low-price elasticity assumption. Commercial irrigation enjoys the highest subsidy being the major consumer followed by mining and hence the most to be affected by policy change in this regard. Results also indicate that the total maximum economic value offstream users are willing to pay for increasing water yields to supply the full requirement levels currently enjoyed at the SPSB is estimated at about R2.8/ m'. Although this value does not properly measure the net social gain or loss of environmental protection, it serves as a benchmark value against which per unit costs of potential alternative water supply options can be compared. A few caveats remain as key limitations of the study call for further research work. First, this study did not generate information on instream benefits to compare with offstream values lost as a result of protecting the ecological Reserve. Second, the study can benefit from improved specification of the water sector model parameters, particularly the supply side as better information will allow estimation of an upward sloping supply (marginal cost) curve. article info:eu-repo/semantics/article Journal Article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion http://agritrop.cirad.fr/526314/1/document_526314.pdf application/pdf Cirad license info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess https://agritrop.cirad.fr/mention_legale.html
institution CIRAD FR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cirad-fr
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CIRAD Francia
language eng
topic P10 - Ressources en eau et leur gestion
P10 - Ressources en eau et leur gestion
spellingShingle P10 - Ressources en eau et leur gestion
P10 - Ressources en eau et leur gestion
Hassan, R.M.
Farolfi, Stefano
Water value, resource rent recorvery and economic welfare cost of environmental protection : A water-sector model for the Steelpoort sub-basin in South Africa
description This study developed an analytical framework and an empirical water sector model to evaluate current and alternative water allocation regimes in the Steelpoort sub-basin (SPSB) in terms of the key objectives of the national water act of South Africa. The analyses showed that bulk water is currently not only oversupplied to offstream uses in the SPSB at the expense of the ecological Reserve (instream benefits) but also underpriced. The water research levy, the only mechanism used for rent capture, recovers a negligible proportion of the water resource rent (RR) (less than 2% at best) implying that almost all RR dissipates to various offstream users in the form of indirect subsidies of about R0).42/m3 with the more realistic low-price elasticity assumption. Commercial irrigation enjoys the highest subsidy being the major consumer followed by mining and hence the most to be affected by policy change in this regard. Results also indicate that the total maximum economic value offstream users are willing to pay for increasing water yields to supply the full requirement levels currently enjoyed at the SPSB is estimated at about R2.8/ m'. Although this value does not properly measure the net social gain or loss of environmental protection, it serves as a benchmark value against which per unit costs of potential alternative water supply options can be compared. A few caveats remain as key limitations of the study call for further research work. First, this study did not generate information on instream benefits to compare with offstream values lost as a result of protecting the ecological Reserve. Second, the study can benefit from improved specification of the water sector model parameters, particularly the supply side as better information will allow estimation of an upward sloping supply (marginal cost) curve.
format article
topic_facet P10 - Ressources en eau et leur gestion
author Hassan, R.M.
Farolfi, Stefano
author_facet Hassan, R.M.
Farolfi, Stefano
author_sort Hassan, R.M.
title Water value, resource rent recorvery and economic welfare cost of environmental protection : A water-sector model for the Steelpoort sub-basin in South Africa
title_short Water value, resource rent recorvery and economic welfare cost of environmental protection : A water-sector model for the Steelpoort sub-basin in South Africa
title_full Water value, resource rent recorvery and economic welfare cost of environmental protection : A water-sector model for the Steelpoort sub-basin in South Africa
title_fullStr Water value, resource rent recorvery and economic welfare cost of environmental protection : A water-sector model for the Steelpoort sub-basin in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Water value, resource rent recorvery and economic welfare cost of environmental protection : A water-sector model for the Steelpoort sub-basin in South Africa
title_sort water value, resource rent recorvery and economic welfare cost of environmental protection : a water-sector model for the steelpoort sub-basin in south africa
url http://agritrop.cirad.fr/526314/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/526314/1/document_526314.pdf
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