4.7 Article

Assessing and improving the outcomes of nonpoint source water quality trading policies in urban areas: A case study in Virginia

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JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
卷 345, 期 -, 页码 -

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ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2023.118724

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Water quality trading; Stormwater management; Nonpoint source pollution; Watershed management

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Nonpoint source (NPS) water quality trading is a market-based approach to improving water quality, but it can increase localized pollutant loadings, especially in rural areas. Virginia's NPS WQT program has enabled thousands of transactions, but its impacts on urban water quality have not been thoroughly assessed. Through simulation, we found that NPS WQT increased phosphorus loading in an urban catchment, especially during years with greater rainfall. In a policy alternative where buyers and sellers are collocated in the catchment, the phosphorus increase from development was completely offset, indicating undervaluation of credits for urban mitigation practices.
Nonpoint source (NPS) water quality trading (WQT) is a market-based approach to improving water quality. Past work has shown that these programs could increase localized pollutant loadings, in part by exporting water quality controls from urban to rural areas. Virginia's NPS WQT program has enabled thousands of transactions and may provide a model for other programs, but its impacts on urban water quality have not been thoroughly assessed. We quantify the impact of NPS WQT purchases in Virginia on water quality and hydrology in an urban catchment. We go on to assess outcomes of a policy alternative where buyers and sellers are collocated in the urban catchment. Simulation results show that NPS WQT increased total phosphorus (TP) loading by an average of 0.8 lbs TP/year for each 1.0 offsite credits purchased in the analyzed catchment. The TP loading increased in years with greater rainfall, such that TP loads were increased by up to 1.2 lbs TP/year for each offsite credit purchased. These loading increases may or may not be acceptable, depending on the cumulative number of purchases within an urban catchment and existing local water quality issues. In our policy alternative with buyers and sellers collocated in the catchment, we found that the TP increase from development was completely offset at the catchment scale, with a decrease of 4.3 lbs TP/year for each 1.0 credits purchased. This suggests that credits awarded for urban mitigation practices are undervalued compared with water quality requirements for credit purchasers. This undervaluation is a result of the Virginia trading program using one approach to compute the credit value for buyers and a different approach to compute the credit value for sellers. We demonstrate how using a single model to determine both buyer and seller credit values in urban areas could provide greater transparency and mitigate the risk of urban pollution hot spots. This work demonstrates the importance of consistency in the scale of pollutant load calculations between buyers and sellers for NPS WQT, and contributes novel insight into the implications of WQT for urban NPS pollution.

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