Cape Town residents’ willingness to pay for a secure and ‘green’ water supply

IF 1 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q4 WATER RESOURCES
None JK Turpie, None GK Letley
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Abstract

The City of Cape Town experienced a serious drought between 2016 and 2018 which led to severe water shortages and concerns for the environment. This study took advantage of a period of unprecedented levels of awareness about water security in order to investigate households’ willingness to pay (WTP) for reliable water supply and their WTP to avoid environmental damages in securing this supply. Increasing the supply of water from dams and groundwater will ultimately impact on aquatic ecosystems, but alternatives are more expensive. We surveyed 248 households from 105 suburbs and used contingent valuation methods to investigate WTP for both secure and less damaging or ‘greener’ ways of supplying water. Depending on income level, households were willing to pay 63–127% more for their normal levels of consumption in order to have security of supply, and a further 35–68% more to ensure its environmental sustainability. Based on the relationship between WTP for 7 income categories, the overall WTP for secure water supply under non-drought conditions amounted to some 2.8 billion ZAR/year, which is about 90% higher than pre-drought revenues. Aggregate WTP for securing this supply using options that ensured the protection of the region’s rivers and estuaries was 3.3 billion ZAR. These results have an important bearing on water investment and pricing decisions over the longer term.
开普敦居民愿意为安全的“绿色”供水买单
开普敦市在2016年至2018年期间经历了严重的干旱,导致严重的水资源短缺和对环境的担忧。本研究利用了人们对水安全意识空前高涨的时期,以调查家庭为可靠供水的支付意愿(WTP),以及他们在确保供水时避免环境破坏的WTP。增加大坝和地下水的供水最终将影响水生生态系统,但替代方案的成本更高。我们调查了来自105个郊区的248户家庭,并使用条件评估方法来调查供水系统的安全性和低破坏性或“更环保”的供水方式。根据收入水平,家庭愿意为正常消费水平多支付63-127%,以确保供应安全,并进一步支付35-68%,以确保其环境可持续性。根据7种收入类别的用水计划之间的关系,非干旱条件下安全供水的总体用水计划约为28亿南非兰特/年,比干旱前的收入高出约90%。使用确保该地区河流和河口保护的方案来确保这一供应的总用水量为33亿兰特。这些结果对长期的水投资和定价决策具有重要影响。
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来源期刊
Water SA
Water SA 环境科学-水资源
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
6.70%
发文量
46
审稿时长
18-36 weeks
期刊介绍: WaterSA publishes refereed, original work in all branches of water science, technology and engineering. This includes water resources development; the hydrological cycle; surface hydrology; geohydrology and hydrometeorology; limnology; salinisation; treatment and management of municipal and industrial water and wastewater; treatment and disposal of sewage sludge; environmental pollution control; water quality and treatment; aquaculture in terms of its impact on the water resource; agricultural water science; etc. Water SA is the WRC’s accredited scientific journal which contains original research articles and review articles on all aspects of water science, technology, engineering and policy. Water SA has been in publication since 1975 and includes articles from both local and international authors. The journal is issued quarterly (4 editions per year).
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