water resource economics

32
Economic Analysis of Alternative Water Plans: Water Resource Economics Water Resources Planning and Management Daene C. McKinney

Upload: twila

Post on 25-Feb-2016

41 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

Water Resource Economics. Water Resources Planning and Management Daene C. McKinney. Consumers. Purchase “ goods ” and “ services ” Have “ preferences ” expressed by “ utility ” function. Good 2. Good 1. Consumer ’ s Budget. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Water  Resource Economics

Economic Analysis of Alternative Water Plans:

Water Resource EconomicsWater Resources Planning and

ManagementDaene C. McKinney

Page 2: Water  Resource Economics

River Basin Planning

• Municipal Water Supply– Benefits: Try to meet targets

• Irrigation Water Supply– Benefits: Try to meet targets

• Hydropower– Benefits: Try to meet targets

minimum

penalty for missing target in month t

target releaseXI,tTI,t

ZI

wM weight for Municipal demandwI weight for Irrigation demandwP weight for Recreation TM,t monthly target for municipal demandTI,t monthly target for irrigation demandTP,t monthly target for recreation

𝑴𝒊𝒏𝒊𝒎𝒊𝒛𝒆 𝒁=∑𝒕=𝟏

𝑻 [𝑾𝑴(𝑻𝑴 , 𝒕 −𝑿𝑴 ,𝒕𝑻 𝑴 , 𝒕 )

𝟐

+𝑾 𝑰 (𝑻 𝑰 ,𝒕 −𝑿 𝑰 ,𝒕𝑻 𝑰 , 𝒕 )

𝟐

+𝑾 𝑷 (𝑻 𝑷 , 𝒕−𝑿 𝑷 ,𝒕𝑻 𝑷 ,𝒕 )

𝟐 ]

Municipal

GainsLosses

EnvironmentalFlow

Reservoir

Irrigation

Inflow

Rt

Qt

St K1

S.T.

Page 3: Water  Resource Economics

Decision Making• Developing and managing water resources systems involves making

decisions.• Modeling and data management tools can contribute to the information

needed to make informed decisions.• Decisions in water resources management inevitably involve making

tradeoffs – compromising – among competing opportunities, goals or objectives.

• One of the tasks of water resources system planners or managers involved in evaluating alternative designs and management plans or policies is to identify the tradeoffs, if any, among competing opportunities, goals or objectives.

• It is then up to a largely political process involving all interested stakeholders to find the best compromise decision.

Page 4: Water  Resource Economics

System Performance Criteria• Measures indicating just how well different management plans and

policies serve the interests of all stakeholders are typically called system performance criteria

• B/C framework – Convert impacts into a single monetary metric– Find the plan that maximizes benefits vs costs. – Does not address distributional issues of who benefits and who pays, and by how much.

• Water resources planning and management takes place in a multi-criteria environment

• Stakeholders – individuals or interest groups who have an interest in the outcome of any plan

• Quantification of an objective is the adoption of some quantitative scale that provides an indicator for how well the objective would be achieved

Page 5: Water  Resource Economics

Economic Criteria• Water resources system development and management is often motivated

by economic criteria.• Two economic concepts: scarcity and substitution.

– Scarcity - supplies of natural, synthetic and human resources are limited. Hence people are willing to pay for them. They should therefore be used in a way that generates the greatest return, i.e. they should be used efficiently.

– Substitution - individuals, social groups and institutions are generally willing to trade a certain amount of one objective value for more of another

Page 6: Water  Resource Economics

• Maximize economic profit from water supply for irrigation, M&I water use, and hydroelectric power generation, subject to institutional, physical, and other constraints

Objective for Ag, Muni and Hydropower Water Use

Page 7: Water  Resource Economics

• Profit from agricultural demand sites = equal to crop revenue minus fixed crop cost, irrigation technology improvement cost, and water supply cost

Objective for Agricultural Water Use

A harvested area (ha)p crop price (US$/mt)FC fixed crop cost (US$/ha)TC technology cost (US$/ha)Cw water price (US$/m3)wag water delivered to demand sites in growing season (m3)

Page 8: Water  Resource Economics

Objective for Municipal Water Use

• Benefit from industrial and municipal demand sites is calculated as water use benefit minus water supply cost

Muni(w) benefit from M&I water use (US$),wmuni,t municipal water withdrawal in period t(m3)w0 maximum water withdrawal (m3)p0 willingness to pay for additional water at full use (US$)e price elasticity of demand (estimated as -0.45) 1/e

Page 9: Water  Resource Economics

Objective Function for Hydropower Water Use

• The profit from power generation

Pt Power production for each period (KWh)wturbine,t Water passing turbines for each period (m3)Ppower Price of paid for power (US$/KWh)Cp Cost of producing power (US$/KWh)

Page 10: Water  Resource Economics

Consumers

• Purchase “goods” and “services”• Have “preferences” expressed by “utility” function

),...,,( 21 nxxxx

),...,,()( 21 nxxxuu x x 2

x 1

Indifference curve ),( 21 xxu

Increasing utility

u

Better Bundles

Worse Bundles

Good 2

Good 1

Page 11: Water  Resource Economics

Consumer’s Budget

• Consumers have a “budget”, expressed by a budget constraint

m/p2

m/p1

x1

x2

Unaffordable bundles

Affordable bundles

Budget line p1x1+p2x2=m

Slope = -p1/p2

mxpxp 2211

Good 2

Good 1

Page 12: Water  Resource Economics

Consumer’s Problem

0

tosubject)(Maximize

xxp

x

m

u

K

kkk xpmuL

1)(),( xx

0

,...,1,0

1

K

kkk

kkk

xpmL

Kkpxu

xL

Kkp

xu

k

k ,...,1

m

u

Purchase so that the ratio of marginal benefit (marginal utility) to marginal cost (price) is equal among all purchases

The ratio (in dimensions of $/unit or shadow price) is the Lagrange multiplier, the change in utility for a change in consumer income

Page 13: Water  Resource Economics

Consumer’s Problem (2 goods)

x 2

x 1 x 1 *

x 2 * Budget line slope = -p1/p2

Optimal choice MRS12 = -p1/p2

Indifference curve slope = MRS12

Increasing utility 0)(

0

0

2211

22

11

xpxpm

pxu

pxu

mxpxp

xxu

1111

21tosubject

),(Maximize

Solution: slope of budget line equals slope of indifference curve

2

2

1

1p

xu

px

u

Good 2

Good 1

Page 14: Water  Resource Economics

Demand

• Solution to Consumer’s Problem gives puschase amounts which aggregate to demand

m,* * pxx

Price, p

Quantity, x

Demand curve x(p,m)

Page 15: Water  Resource Economics

Willingness-to-Pay• Value - What is someone willing to pay?• Suppose consumer is willing to pay:

– $38 for 1st unit of water– $26 for 2nd unit of water– $17 for 3rd unit of water– And so on

• If we charge p* = $10– 4 units will be purchased for $40– But consumer is willing to pay $93 – Consumer’s surplus is $53

Price, p

Quantity, x 1 2 3 4

p*=10

20

30

40 38

26

17

12

5

WTP = Gross Benefit = 93

CS = Net Benefit = 53

Total cost = 40

Price, p

Quantity, q

Page 16: Water  Resource Economics

Willingness-to-Pay

Page 17: Water  Resource Economics

Market Prices – Revealed WTP • Some goods or services are traded in markets

– Value can estimated from consumer surplus (e.g., fish, wood)

• Ecosystem services used as inputs in production (e.g., clean water)– Value can be estimated from contribution to profits made from the

final good

• Some services may not be directly traded in markets– But related goods that can be used to estimate their values are trade in

markets • Homes with oceanviews have higher price• People will take time to travel to recreational places• Expenditures can be used as a lower bound on the value of the view or the

recreational experience

Page 18: Water  Resource Economics

Firms

• Firms produce outputs from inputs (like water) • Firm objective: maximize profit

x

y

Production function y = f(x)

Slope = df/dx

Input, x1

Input, x2

Isoquant

Increasing output

y0

y1

y2

0)( yf x

input

output

input 1

input 2

Page 19: Water  Resource Economics

Production Function

Ymax= maximum yield (mt/ha)b0 … b8 = coefficients,x = irrigation water applied

(mm)Emax = Max ET (mm)s = irrigation water salinity

(dS/m)u = irrigation uniformity

)]/ln()/([ max2max10max ExaExaaYY

sbubba 2100

sbubba 5431 sbubba 8762

0.00

2.00

4.00

6.00

8.00

0 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000Input, x (m3/ha)

Out

put,

y (to

n/ha

)

I II III

Page 20: Water  Resource Economics

Profit

• Output• Input• Revenue• Cost

• Profit

N

nnnxwC

1

pyR

)(xfy

CR

x

N

nnnxwpf

1)(x

Page 21: Water  Resource Economics

The Firm’s Problem

Nnwxfp

x nnn

,...,1,0

Nnp

wxf n

n,...,1

x

y

Prod. Fcn. y = f(x)

slope = df/fx

Isoprofit line = py – wx slope = w/p

x*

y*

/w

df/dx= w/p

Page 22: Water  Resource Economics

Revenue (1) Price-setting Firm

Revenue

• Marginal Revenue

pyR

dydpyp

dydp

pR

yR

dydR

• Increase in output (dy) has two effects 1. (1) Adds revenue from sale of more units, and2. (2) Causes value of each unit to decrease

(1) (2)

Page 23: Water  Resource Economics

Revenue (2) Price-taking Firm

Revenue

• Marginal Revenue– derivative WRT y

pyR

pdypyd

dydR )(

• Competitive firm: p is constant

Page 24: Water  Resource Economics

ExampleLinear demand function

byayp )(

• Marginal revenue– slope is twice that of demand

byadydR 2

y

Demand function p = a - by

b

Revenue py = ay – by2

y*

2 b

a

a/2b

p Marginal Revenue

= a – 2by

a/b y y

a

• Revenue2byaypyR

y

Demand function p = a - by

b

Revenue py = ay – by2

y*

2 b

a

a/2b

p Marginal Revenue = a – 2by

a/b y y

a

y

Demand function p = a - by

b

Revenue py = ay – by2

y*

2 b

a

a/2b

p Marginal Revenue = a – 2by

a/b y y

a

Page 25: Water  Resource Economics

Cost Functions

01

1

),...,(

tosubject

Minimize

yxxf

xw

N

N

nnn

0

,...,10

0

yfL

Nnxfw

xL

nn

n

n

m

n

m

xf

xf

ww

Page 26: Water  Resource Economics

Cost FunctionsTotal Cost (fixed and variable costs)

Average cost (cost per unit to produce y units)

)(:min)( xxw fyyTC

)()( yVCFCyTC

yyTCAC )(

Marginal cost (cost to produce additional unit)

dydVC

dydTCMC

Page 27: Water  Resource Economics

Example (1) Price-taking Firm• How much water should a water company produce

)()(Maximize yTCpyy

dydTCpy

dydp

dyd 0

MCp

)()( yMCpyMR

y* Product

Price &

p = MC

Page 28: Water  Resource Economics

Example (2) Price-setting Firm• Firm influences market price • Choose production level and price to maximize profit

)()(Maximize yTCpyy

dydTCpy

dydp

dyd 0

y

Price & Cost

p = MC

MC

AC

Demand

p*

y*

MR

MR = MC

pm

ym

)()( yMCpydydpyMR

)()( yMCyMR

Page 29: Water  Resource Economics

• Profit from agricultural demand sites = equal to crop revenue minus fixed crop cost, irrigation technology improvement cost, and water supply cost

Objective Function for Agricultural Water Use

A harvested area (ha)p crop price (US$/mt)FC fixed crop cost (US$/ha)TC technology cost (US$/ha)Cw water price (US$/m3)wag water delivered to demand sites in growing season (m3)

Page 30: Water  Resource Economics

Objective Function for Municipal and Industrial Water Use

• Benefit from industrial and municipal demand sites is calculated as water use benefit minus water supply cost

Muni(w) benefit from M&I water use (US$),wmuni,t municipal water withdrawal in period t(m3)w0 maximum water withdrawal (m3)p0 willingness to pay for additional water at full use (US$)e price elasticity of demand (estimated as -0.45) 1/e

Page 31: Water  Resource Economics

Objective Function for Hydropower Water Use

• The profit from power generation

Pt Power production for each period (KWh)wturbine,t Water passing turbines for each period (m3)Ppower Price of paid for power (US$/KWh)Cp Cost of producing power (US$/KWh)

Page 32: Water  Resource Economics

• Maximize economic profit from water supply for irrigation, M&I water use, and hydroelectric power generation, subject to institutional, physical, and other constraints

Combined Objective Function for Ag, M&I and Hydropower Water Use