Reversing property rights: Practice-based approaches for controlling agricultural nonpoint-source water pollution when emissions aggregate nonlinearly

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Abstract

Nonpoint-source water pollution remains a major issue despite decades of research and sizable conservation programs. We suggest that by taking advantage of contemporary modeling and optimization approaches, good approximations to physical relationships can be constructed so that even in the presence of unobservable field emissions and nonlinear fate and transport relationships, standard economic tools of command-and-control requirements, performance standards, and trading can be implemented. The Boone River Watershed in the U.S. state of Iowa is used for empirical demonstration. Although the approach can be used to construct voluntary conservation policies, the described policies involve imposing requirements on agricultural polluters rather than relying on voluntary actions alone. © 2013 The Author.

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Rabotyagov, S. S., Valcu, A. M., & Kling, C. L. (2014). Reversing property rights: Practice-based approaches for controlling agricultural nonpoint-source water pollution when emissions aggregate nonlinearly. American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 96(2), 397–419. https://doi.org/10.1093/ajae/aat094

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