Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1055765 Journal of Environmental Management 2014 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Improved pastures covered 56.5% of the area and discharged 51.2 mtons P yr−1.•Dairy farms covered only 4.6% of the area but contributed 20.5 mtons P yr−1.•Dairy, ornamental, and sod farms had the highest P loadings >6.5 kg ha−1 yr−1.•A trading program cost savings were of 27% when compared to a regulatory program.•Dairies, ornamentals, row crops, and sod farms were the potential credit buyers.

Water quality and economic models were linked to assess the economic and environmental benefits of implementing a phosphorus credit trading program in an agricultural sub-basin of Lake Okeechobee watershed, Florida, United States. The water quality model determined the effects of rainfall, land use type, and agricultural management practices on the amount of total phosphorus (TP) discharged. TP loadings generated at the farm level, reaching the nearby streams, and attenuated to the sub-basin outlet from all sources within the sub-basin, were estimated at 106.4, 91, and 85 mtons yr−1, respectively. Almost 95% of the TP loadings reaching the nearby streams were attributed to agriculture sources, and only 1.2% originated from urban areas, accounting for a combined TP load of 87.9 mtons yr−1. In order to compare a Least-Cost Abatement approach to a Command-and-Control approach, the most cost effective cap of 30% TP reduction was selected, and the individual allocation was set at a TP load target of 1.6 kg ha−1 yr−1 (at the nearby stream level). The Least-Cost Abatement approach generated a potential cost savings of 27% ($1.3 million per year), based on an optimal credit price of $179. Dairies (major buyer), ornamentals, row crops, and sod farms were identified as potential credit buyers, whereas citrus, improved pastures (major seller), and urban areas were identified as potential credit sellers. Almost 81% of the TP credits available for trading were exchanged. The methodology presented here can be adapted to deal with different forms of trading sources, contaminants, or other technologies and management practices.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
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