Cost-Benefit Analysis of Groundwater Policy and Projects, with Case Studies: Groundwater Economics, Volume 2 by Charles Job (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Montgomery Village, Maryland,USA)
The competition for groundwater sources as a water supply reinforces the need for a strong economic rationale in decision-making. Evaluating economic decisions in the context of total water management and life-cycle water use is essential to making critical development and remediation choices. This revised volume provides fundamental economic and policy concepts related to groundwater, discusses important factors in life-cycle cost-benefit evaluation and explains triple-bottom-line analysis for different groundwater projects. It includes new and updated case studies on groundwater issues with solutions for a range of situations based on economic data.
FEATURES OF THIS VOLUME
- Provides an understanding for the fundamental economic approaches to groundwater policy and project evaluation
- Incorporates life-cycle cost-benefit approaches in a triple-bottom-line framework
- Includes new case studies on the economics of health protection, managed aquifer recharge, local versus regional supply and strategic life-cycle analysis
- Addresses local and regional groundwater economic choices through a series of practical applications
- Explores transboundary, international, climate change and macroeconomic factors influencing groundwater project and program decisions
Cost-Benefit Analysis of Groundwater Policy and Projects, with Case Studies, Second Edition, the second volume of the two-volume set Groundwater Economics, is a must-have for any professional or student who needs to understand and evaluate water resources and manage their use from a variety of sustainable approaches.