Details zur Publikation

Kategorie Textpublikation
Referenztyp Zeitschriften
DOI 10.1007/s00267-010-9486-2
Volltext Shareable Link
Titel (primär) How widely applicable is river basin management? An analysis of wastewater management in an arid transboundary case
Autor Dombrowsky, I.; Almog, R.; Becker, N.; Feitelson, E.; Klawitter, S.; Lindemann, S.; Mutlak, N.
Quelle Environmental Management
Erscheinungsjahr 2010
Department OEKON
Band/Volume 45
Heft 5
Seite von 1112
Seite bis 1126
Sprache englisch
Keywords River basin management; Scale; Wastewater management options; Institutional arrangements; Cost benefit analysis; Multi-criteria analysis; Kidron/Wadi Nar basin
Abstract The basin scale has been promoted universally as the optimal management unit that allows for the internalization of all external effects caused by multiple water uses. However, the basin scale has been put forward largely on the basis of experience in temperate zones. Hence whether the basin scale is the best scale for management in other settings remains questionable. To address these questions this paper analyzes the economic viability and the political feasibility of alternative management options in the Kidron/Wadi Nar region. The Kidron/Wadi Nar is a small basin in which wastewater from eastern Jerusalem flows through the desert to the Dead Sea. Various options for managing these wastewater flows were analyzed ex ante on the basis of both a cost benefit and a multi-criteria analysis. The paper finds that due to economies of scale, a pure basin approach is not desirable from a physical and economic perspective. Furthermore, in terms of political feasibility, it seems that the option which prompts the fewest objections from influential stakeholder groups in the two entities under the current asymmetrical political setting is not a basin solution either, but a two plant solution based on an outsourcing arrangement. These findings imply that the river basin management approach can not be considered the best management approach for the arid transboundary case at hand, and hence is not unequivocally universally applicable.
dauerhafte UFZ-Verlinkung https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=9886
Dombrowsky, I., Almog, R., Becker, N., Feitelson, E., Klawitter, S., Lindemann, S., Mutlak, N. (2010):
How widely applicable is river basin management? An analysis of wastewater management in an arid transboundary case
Environ. Manage. 45 (5), 1112 - 1126 10.1007/s00267-010-9486-2