Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5771295 | Journal of Hydrology | 2017 | 14 Pages |
â¢A smart market for trading nutrient credits, with wetlands as credit suppliers.â¢Centralized clearing with linear optimization.â¢Nodal prices and start-up payments incentivizing lumpy investments in wetlands.â¢BBC watershed simulation: WWTPs, wetland builders, farmers, and environmental agents.â¢Huge gains from investments in wetland construction.
Nutrient trading and constructed wetlands are widely discussed solutions to reduce nutrient pollution. Nutrient markets usually include agricultural nonpoint sources and municipal and industrial point sources, but these markets rarely include investors who construct wetlands to sell nutrient reduction credits. We propose a new market design for trading nutrient credits, with both point source and non-point source traders, explicitly incorporating the option of landowners to build nutrient removal wetlands. The proposed trading program is designed as a smart market with centralized clearing, done with an optimization. The market design addresses the varying impacts of runoff over space and time, and the lumpiness of wetland investments.We simulated the market for the Big Bureau Creek watershed in north-central Illinois. We found that the proposed smart market would incentivize wetland construction by assuring reasonable payments for the ecosystem services provided. The proposed market mechanism selects wetland locations strategically taking into account both the cost and nutrient removal efficiencies. The centralized market produces locational prices that would incentivize farmers to reduce nutrients, which is voluntary. As we illustrate, wetland builders' participation in nutrient trading would enable the point sources and environmental organizations to buy low cost nutrient credits.