Department of Economic Analysis - University of Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain; IA2- AgriFood Institute of Aragon, Calle Miguel Servet, 177, 50013, Zaragoza, Spain.
Department of Economic Analysis - University of Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain; IA2- AgriFood Institute of Aragon, Calle Miguel Servet, 177, 50013, Zaragoza, Spain.
J Environ Manage. 2019 Jul 1;241:645-657. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2019.03.042. Epub 2019 Apr 19.
The quality and availability of water are affected by numerous variables, through which the evaluation of water uses from different perspectives, and policy proposals to save water have now become essential. This paper aims to study water use and the water footprint from a river basin perspective, taking into account regions, sectors, and municipalities, while considering the physical frontier along with the administrative sectors. To this end, we have constructed a multi-regional input-output table for the Ebro river basin, disaggregating the primary sector into 18 different crops and 6 livestock groups. We pay special attention to crop production because it is the most water-consuming industry. The construction of the multi-regional input-output model represents an important contribution to the literature, in itself, since, to the best of our knowledge, it is the first to be built for this large basin. We extend this multi-regional input-output model to assess the water footprint by sectors and regions within the basin. We use these data to propose two scenarios: reallocating final demand to reduce the blue water footprint (scenario 1), and increasing value added (scenario 2). These scenarios outline the opportunity costs of saving water in socioeconomic terms in the basin. In another application, we downscale the multi-regional input-output model results at the municipal level and depict them using a geographical information system, identifying the hotspots and the areas that would pay for the socioeconomic opportunity costs of saving water. Our results suggest that saving 1 hm of blue water could cost around €41,500 of value added if we consider the entire basin. However, this water re-allocation implies losses and gains at the municipal level: some municipalities would reduce value added by more than €30,000, while others would gain more than €85,000 of value added. These tools and results can be useful for policy makers when considering re-allocating water. The contribution and the novelty of this paper is the construction of the multiregional input-output model for the Ebro river basin, and its link with geographical systems analysis at the municipal level.
水的质量和供应受到众多因素的影响,因此需要从不同角度评估水的用途,并提出节约用水的政策建议。本文旨在从流域角度研究水的利用和水足迹,考虑地区、部门和城市,并考虑物理边界和行政部门。为此,我们构建了一个埃布罗河流域的多区域投入产出表,将初级部门细分为 18 种不同的作物和 6 种牲畜。我们特别关注作物生产,因为它是耗水最多的行业。多区域投入产出模型的构建本身就是对文献的重要贡献,因为据我们所知,这是为这个大流域构建的第一个模型。我们扩展了这个多区域投入产出模型,以评估流域内各部门和地区的水足迹。我们使用这些数据提出了两个方案:重新分配最终需求以减少蓝水足迹(方案 1),以及增加附加值(方案 2)。这些方案从流域的社会经济角度概述了节约用水的机会成本。在另一个应用中,我们将多区域投入产出模型的结果在市级层面进行了细化,并使用地理信息系统进行了描绘,确定了热点和愿意为节约用水的社会经济机会成本买单的区域。我们的结果表明,如果考虑整个流域,节约 1 亿立方米的蓝水可能需要花费约 41500 欧元的附加值。然而,这种水资源再分配会导致市级层面的损失和收益:一些城市会减少超过 30000 欧元的附加值,而另一些城市会获得超过 85000 欧元的附加值。这些工具和结果对于政策制定者在考虑重新分配水资源时可能会有所帮助。本文的贡献和新颖之处在于构建了埃布罗河流域的多区域投入产出模型,并将其与市级地理系统分析联系起来。