4.6 Article

External Benefits of Irrigation in Mountain Areas: Stakeholder Perceptions and Water Policy Implications

Journal

LAND
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/land11091395

Keywords

agroecosystem services; alpine areas; extensive livestock farming; stakeholder participation; focus group; water resources; water framework directive

Funding

  1. Institut Agricole Regional, Reservaqua Project (Interreg V-A Italy-Switzerland Co-operation Programme)

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This study aimed to identify and prioritize the external benefits provided by irrigation in extensive grazing farms in an Italian alpine region. Findings showed that stakeholders prioritize hydro-geological and land maintenance, traditional agricultural landscape conservation, biodiversity conservation, and leisure recreational activities provision as the main benefits of irrigation.
Irrigation contributes to land and ecosystem degradation, especially in intensive farming areas. However, in marginal areas, long-established irrigation systems also supply agroecosystem services. This study aimed to identify and prioritize the external benefits provided by irrigation in extensive grazing farms in an Italian alpine region (Aosta Valley, NW Italy). Three local stakeholder groups (land irrigation consortia members, non-farmer users of the irrigation water service, and non-user citizens) engaged in focus group discussions. The transcriptions were analyzed with an integrated subjective and computer-assisted approach. The main result of the study showed that a convergence of stakeholder opinions led to prioritization of the same four benefits, i.e., hydro-geological and land maintenance, traditional agricultural landscape conservation, biodiversity conservation, and leisure recreational activities provision. Incorporating this information into decision-making processes is relevant in marginal mountain areas, especially in light of the implementation of the water pricing policy laid down in the EU Water Framework Directive. To this end, the economic value of the external benefits should be considered along with the recovery costs for water services. Such information is essential to balance the environmental costs of irrigation and to compare the resource cost of alternative water uses.

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