Allocation of treated wastewater among competitive farmers under asymmetric information

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Abstract

Following suitable treatment, municipal wastewater can be used for agricultural irrigation; the potential benefit to the agricultural sector is especially significant in arid and semiarid regions, where fresh water is scarce. The analysis focuses on a region which consists of a principal (a wastewater "producer" (a city)), and two competitive agents (water users (two groups of farmers' associations)), who make decisions under conditions of asymmetric information. First, we develop an optimization model aimed at maximizing the principal's profits from conveying treated wastewater without damaging the farmers' reservation utilities or profits. The analysis determines the treated-wastewater allocation, income transfers, and profit allocation among the three assumed economic entities. Contracts composed of transfer payment-wastewater combinations are studied in a mechanism design setting in which the city has incomplete information on the farmers' demand for treated wastewater. The theoretical analysis is applied to the situation in the Sharon region of Israel. The empirical results show that regional cooperation is profitable for all of the involved economic entities. Copyright 2010 by the American Geophysical Union.

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APA

Axelrad, G., & Feinerman, E. (2010). Allocation of treated wastewater among competitive farmers under asymmetric information. Water Resources Research, 46(1). https://doi.org/10.1029/2008WR007687

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