How cost-effective are diffuse pollution measures in real agricultural landscapes?
Published on 12 July 2010 in Ecosystems and biodiversity , Food, health and wellbeing
Introduction
The European Water Framework Directive (EC, 2000) requires Member States to set water quality objectives and identify cost-effective mitigation measures to achieve good ecological status (GES) for all waters in Europe. Diffuse agricultural pollution is a key contributor affecting water quality (Fezzi, et al., 2008), and 24% of Scottish river water bodies and 18% of loch water bodies are considered at risk. The WFD stipulates that a cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) of water pollution mitigation measures be conducted, to identify the least cost options for meeting water quality objectives, as a pre-requisite to formulating programmes of measures (WATECO, 2003). However, depending on the attributes of land (topography, hydrology, cover, connectivity to water etc) and its economic productivity, the costs and effectiveness of agri-environmental measures vary significantly across the landscape.
Key Points
A review of CEA studies of agri-environmental measures related to WFD in UK indicates that most were based on ‘representative’ farm types. This may lead to biased cost and effectiveness estimates of measures, due to the inherent variability in effectiveness and abatement costs among ‘real-world’ farms.
This is being used to explore cost-effective targeting of buffer strips for mitigation of P loading into Rescobie Loch, Lunan Water, Angus, and results suggest that use of buffer strips alone will not allow cost-effective mitigation of water quality to the extent needed to achieve Good Ecological Status.
Research Undertaken
- Modest (ca. 20%) P reduction targets can be achieved cost-effectively by establishing 2 m width buffers on selected fields;
- For higher P reduction targets (up to 70% reduction), cost-effectiveness increases by targeting both the spatial configuration of fields and buffer width variability;
- For higher P reduction targets the marginal abatement cost increases at an increasing rate.
P reduction goal (%)
|
P reduced (kg/yr)
|
land area in buffers (ha)
|
Abatement costs (£)
|
||
total abatement cost(£k/yr)
|
average abatement cost
(£/kg P/yr)
|
marginal abatement cost
(£/kg P/yr)
|
|||
10
|
34
|
5
|
1.5
|
44
|
44
|
20
|
68
|
13
|
4.0
|
59
|
73
|
30
|
102
|
24
|
7.9
|
77
|
115
|
40
|
136
|
49
|
15.4
|
113
|
222
|
50
|
170
|
107
|
33.4
|
197
|
529
|
60
|
204
|
209
|
66.5
|
326
|
972
|
70
|
238
|
395
|
129.0
|
542
|
1838
|
Policy Implications
- Landscape based CEA is needed to achieve realistic assessment of diffuse pollution measures.
- Based on the single benefit of P mitigation, the case study demonstrated that it is unlikely that a single measure, such as buffer strips, will be sufficient to achieve environmental targets for Rescobie Loch. So other measures need to be considered.
- Additional positive and negative impacts, not related to the targeted objective must also be considered. Implementing a mitigation measure for reducing a particular pollutant may generate co-benefits (e.g., enhance biodiversity) or unintended impacts (e.g., pollution swapping). Ranking and choice of measures based on CEA findings should be further supplemented by qualitative assessment of wider co-benefits and external costs.
- Since the P export coefficient, delivery ratio, and buffer P trapping efficiency estimates were based on expert judgements, the results reported in this study are only indicative.
References
Author
Bedru B. Balana , Andy Vinten, Manuel Lago, Marie Castellazzi and Bill Slee b.balana@macaulay.ac.uk
Topics
Ecosystems and biodiversity , Food, health and wellbeing