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Título
An actionable hydroeconomic Decision Support System for the assessment of water reallocations in irrigated agriculture. A study of minimum environmental flows in the Douro River Basin, Spain
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Socio-hydrology
Decision Support Systems
Mathematical programming
Environmental flows
Water scarcity
Clasificación UNESCO
5308 Economía General
Fecha de publicación
2021
Editor
Elsevier
Citación
Pérez-Blanco, C. D., Gil-García, L., & Saiz-Santiago, P. (2021). An actionable hydroeconomic Decision Support System for the assessment of water reallocations in irrigated agriculture. A study of minimum environmental flows in the Douro River Basin, Spain. Journal of Environmental Management, 298, 113432. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.113432
Resumen
[EN] Despite major recent advances in socio-hydrology and hydroeconomics research, interdisciplinary methods and
models for water policy assessment remain largely concealed to the academic arena. Most river basin authorities
still base decision-making on inputs from hydrologic Decision Support Systems (DSS), and have limited information on the economic costs that water policies may impose on the economy. This paper presents a time-variant
hierarchical framework that connects a hydrologic module and an economic module by means of two-way
feedback protocols. The hydrologic module is designed to fit the AQUATOOL DSS, the hydrologic model used
by Spanish river basin authorities to inform decision-making at a basin scale; while the economic module is
populated with a Positive Multi-Attribute Mathematical Programming (PMAMP) model that represents the
behavior and adaptive responses of irrigators. The proposed hierarchical framework is used to assess the economic repercussions of strengthening irrigation quotas so to achieve minimum environmental flows in the Douro
River Basin (Spain) under climate change. Results show that reductions in agricultural water allocations to meet
environmental flow requirements create nonlinear incremental profit and employment losses in irrigated agriculture that are on average low to moderate (between − 4% and − 12.9 % for profit, and between − 4.6 % and
− 12 % for employment, depending on the scenario). During extreme droughts, the abrupt reductions in water
availability and agricultural allocations can test farming systems past the breaking point and lead to catastrophic
profit and employment losses (>80 %).
URI
ISSN
0301-4797
DOI
10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.113432
Versión del editor
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Patrocinador
Publicación en abierto financiada por la Universidad de Salamanca como participante en el Acuerdo Transformativo CRUE-CSIC con Elsevier, 2021-2024