Incentive-compatible payments for watershed services along the Eastern Route of China's South-North Water Transfer Project

被引:65
|
作者
Sheng, Jichuan [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Webber, Michael [3 ]
机构
[1] Nanjing Univ Informat Sci & Technol, Collaborat Innovat Ctr Forecast & Evaluat Meteoro, 219 Ningliu Rd, Nanjing 210044, Jiangsu, Peoples R China
[2] Nanjing Univ Informat Sci & Technol, Sch Econ & Management, 219 Ningliu Rd, Nanjing 210044, Jiangsu, Peoples R China
[3] Univ Melbourne, Sch Geog, 221 Bouverie St, Parkville, Vic 3010, Australia
基金
澳大利亚研究理事会; 中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
South-North Water Transfer Project; Eastern route; Payments for watershed services; Evolutionary game; Numerical simulation; RIVER-BASIN; ECO-COMPENSATION; UNITED-STATES; FORM GAMES; QUALITY; MANAGEMENT; ALLOCATION; STABILITY; DYNAMICS; REFORMS;
D O I
10.1016/j.ecoser.2017.04.006
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
In transboundary rivers, upstream and downstream users have different interests, which affect their willingness to pay to protect the river's ecological services. This is true of the Eastern Route of China's South-North Water Transfer Project (SNWTP), with the added complication that the State Council Office (of SNWT Construction Committee) supervises upstream and downstream users. This paper analyses the strategies of upstream users, downstream users and the State Council Office, to explore an incentive-compatible system of payments for watershed services through a tripartite evolutionary game model. The results demonstrate that: First, whether lower Yangtze governments can obtain payments for reduced access to water depends on State Council Office's supervision costs. Second, upstream and downstream users' initial willingness to participate may determine the ultimate evolutionary stable strategy. Third, State Council Office could ensure that payment system works, by increasing punishment for users that are initially unwilling to pay for watershed services. Fourth, high opportunity costs and high payments to upstream governments reduce the upstream and downstream users' incentives to participate. All these factors need to be considered in designing payment systems for watershed services to establish an incentive-compatible scheme and realize appropriate water governance in SNWTP. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:213 / 226
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Tuning of PI Controllers for Middle Route South-North Water Transfer Project
    Guo, Xiaochen
    Li, Chen
    Mu, Xiangpeng
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 35TH IAHR WORLD CONGRESS, VOLS I AND II, 2013, : 934 - 943
  • [22] Authoritarian neoliberalization of water governance: the case of China's South-North Water Transfer Project
    Sheng, Jichuan
    Webber, Michael
    Han, Xiao
    TERRITORY POLITICS GOVERNANCE, 2021, 9 (05) : 691 - 707
  • [23] China's South-North water project almost ready
    Huang, Ganlin
    FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT, 2013, 11 (10) : 523 - 523
  • [24] Water-energy nexus of the Eastern Route of China's South-to-North Water Transfer Project
    Chen, Dan
    Zhang, Di
    Luo, Zhaohui
    Webber, Michael
    Rogers, Sarah
    WATER POLICY, 2019, 21 (05) : 945 - 963
  • [25] A study on the environmental geology of the Middle Route Project of the South-North water transfer
    Wang, LS
    Ma, C
    ENGINEERING GEOLOGY, 1999, 51 (03) : 153 - 165
  • [26] The impact of the South-North Water Transfer Project (CTP)'s central route on groundwater table in the Hai River basin, North China
    Ye, Aizhong
    Duan, Qingyun
    Chu, Wei
    Xu, Jing
    Mao, Yuna
    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2014, 28 (23) : 5755 - 5768
  • [27] Governance rescaling and neoliberalization of China's water governance: The case of China's South-North Water Transfer Project
    Sheng, Jichuan
    Webber, Michael
    ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING A-ECONOMY AND SPACE, 2019, 51 (08): : 1644 - 1664
  • [28] Governmentality within China's South-North Water Transfer Project: tournaments, markets and water pollution
    Sheng, Jichuan
    Webber, Michael
    Han, Xiao
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY & PLANNING, 2018, 20 (04) : 533 - 549
  • [29] Water, technology, society and the environment: interpreting the technopolitics of China's South-North Water Transfer Project
    Lin, George C. S.
    REGIONAL STUDIES, 2017, 51 (03) : 383 - 388
  • [30] Of maps and eating bitterness: The politics of scaling in China's South-North Water Transfer Project
    Crow-Miller, Britt
    Webber, Michael
    POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY, 2017, 61 : 19 - 30