Irrigators’ preferences for policy instruments to improve water supply reliability

被引:0
|
作者
Villanueva, Anastasio J. [1 ,2 ]
Glenk, Klaus [3 ]
机构
[1] IFAPA-Institute of Agricultural and Fisheries Research and Training, Centro IFAPA Camino de Purchil, PO Box 2027, Granada,18080, Spain
[2] WEARE-Water, Environmental and Agricultural Resources Economics Research Group, Universidad de Córdoba, Spain
[3] Land Economy, Environment & Society Group. Scotland's Rural College, Edinburgh, United Kingdom
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Information on irrigators' preferences for policy instruments that facilitate adaptation to changes in water supply under climate change is urgently needed to design efficient related policies. The present study analyzes irrigators' preferences toward policy instruments to improve water supply reliability. The analysis is based on a Best-Worst-Scaling (BWS) experiment drawing on survey data (N = 202, collected in Oct–Dec 2016) on southern Spanish irrigators' preferences for five different policy instruments, including supply-side (building of a new pond, improved existing distribution and storage infrastructures) and demand-side approaches (water markets, banks, and storage account). In terms of irrigators' preferences, water storage account and improved infrastructure generally rank highly, whereas water banks and particularly water markets rank lowly. Results of a latent class model show a high degree of preference heterogeneity. Four discrete classes of irrigators’ preferences were identified and labeled as follows: market haters, pond haters, bank haters, and pond lovers, representing 44%, 26%, 20%, and 10% of the surveyed irrigators, respectively. Several factors including farm and irrigator characteristics have a significant influence on class membership. Together, the results highlight promising opportunities to efficiently address uncertain water supply under climate change. © 2020 Elsevier Ltd
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Irrigators' preferences for policy instruments to improve water supply reliability
    Villanueva, Anastasio J.
    Glenk, Klaus
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2021, 280
  • [2] Assessing irrigators' preferences for water market lease attributes with a stated preferences approach
    Cook, Joseph
    Rabotyagoy, Sergey S.
    WATER RESOURCES AND ECONOMICS, 2014, 7 : 19 - 38
  • [3] Segmenting and Targeting Irrigators' Preferences Regarding Proposed Water Transfers
    Lafreniere, Katherine C.
    Deshpande, Sameer
    Bjornlund, Henning
    SOCIETY & NATURAL RESOURCES, 2015, 28 (04) : 423 - 438
  • [4] Decision makers' preferences of policy instruments
    Vesely, Arnost
    Petrusek, Ivan
    EUROPEAN POLICY ANALYSIS, 2021, 7 (01) : 165 - 184
  • [5] INCORPORATING PUBLIC PREFERENCES IN PLANNING URBAN WATER-SUPPLY RELIABILITY
    HOWE, CW
    SMITH, MG
    WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 1993, 29 (10) : 3363 - 3369
  • [6] Heterogeneous preferences for water rights reforms among smallholder irrigators in South Africa
    Speelman, Stijn
    Veettil, Prakashan Chellattan
    BIO-BASED AND APPLIED ECONOMICS, 2013, 2 (02): : 131 - 149
  • [7] Cost-reflective pricing: empirical insights into irrigators' preferences for water tariffs
    Cooper, Bethany
    Crase, Lin
    Rose, John M.
    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND RESOURCE ECONOMICS, 2018, 62 (02) : 256 - 278
  • [8] An overview of water sharing and participation issues for irrigators and their communities in Alberta: Implications for water policy
    Bjornlund, H.
    Xu, W.
    Wheeler, S.
    AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT, 2014, 145 : 171 - 180
  • [9] Water supply security and clean energy: A project proposal for irrigators in the river Torrox
    Perea-Moreno, Alberto J.
    Hernandez-Escobedo, Quetzalcoatl
    Jesus Aguilera-Urena, Ma
    TECNOLOGIA Y CIENCIAS DEL AGUA, 2017, 8 (03) : 151 - 158
  • [10] An IUWM incorporated model to improve water supply reliability in intermittent and no service areas
    Mohapatra, Snigdha Sarita
    Wu, Wenyan
    Tiwari, Manoj Kumar
    Arora, Meenakshi
    RESOURCES CONSERVATION AND RECYCLING, 2022, 181