{"title":"华夫饼的效益-成本分析:初步评估","authors":"D. A. Bangsund, E. DeVuyst, F. Leistritz","doi":"10.22004/AG.ECON.42216","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"An option to mitigating flood damages in the Red River Basin is the concept of using hundreds or thousands of ‘micro-basin’ storage areas comprised of roads and adjacent lands to retain a sufficient volume of water over a reasonable period in the spring to lower the flood crest heights on streams and rivers throughout the basin. This concept has been referred to as the Waffle. The present value of costs and benefits of implementing, maintaining, and operating the Waffle were estimated for a 50-year period. Costs included land enrollment expenses, landowner payments, infrastructure modifications and installations, and maintenance and administrative overhead. Data relating river crest heights with probability of flood occurrence and expected damages to residential and commercial properties and public infrastructure provided the basis for estimating benefits of the Waffle. The relationships between river crest heights and flood damages were adjusted for future population change and change in the value of real property over the 50-year period. Benefits were derived from changes in crest heights and flood event probabilities due to the Waffle influencing the expected river crest heights for various flood events, and reflected the difference between flood damage with and without the Waffle in four urban areas in the Basin. The analysis used numerous scenarios that reflected different expectations in Waffle size, cost, water storage capacity, crest height reductions, and future population. The combination of those situations produced 108 separate estimates of the net benefits of the Waffle. Net benefits were positive in 106 of the 108 scenarios evaluated. The magnitude of net benefits over the 50-year period were substantial: 85 percent of the scenarios evaluated resulted in over $300 million in net benefits and nearly half of the combinations had net benefits in excess of $500 million. The results from two alternative analyses showed that the Waffle produced substantial net benefits when only used for relatively large floods (greater than 100-year events) and also revealed that the Waffle is not economically sensitive to the inclusion or absence of high-frequency flood damages from Fargo/Moorhead. Overall, the economic feasibility of the Waffle, given the limited scope of benefits included in the study, was almost entirely determined by mitigated flood damages from Fargo/Moorhead. Without mitigated flood damages from Fargo/Moorhead, results from this study suggest the Waffle would only be economically in a limited number of situations (11 of 108 possibilities) if implemented on a basin-wide scale. Recent improvements and additions to structural flood protection in Wahpeton/Breckenridge and Grand Forks/East Grand Forks eliminate the potential to mitigate flood damages from all but the largest flood events. The positive results from this study suggest that dedicating additional resources to solving or answering many of the remaining issues with the Waffle would be justified.","PeriodicalId":356449,"journal":{"name":"Agribusiness & Applied Economics Report","volume":"6 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2008-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Benefit-cost Analysis of the Waffle: Initial Assessment\",\"authors\":\"D. A. 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The relationships between river crest heights and flood damages were adjusted for future population change and change in the value of real property over the 50-year period. Benefits were derived from changes in crest heights and flood event probabilities due to the Waffle influencing the expected river crest heights for various flood events, and reflected the difference between flood damage with and without the Waffle in four urban areas in the Basin. The analysis used numerous scenarios that reflected different expectations in Waffle size, cost, water storage capacity, crest height reductions, and future population. The combination of those situations produced 108 separate estimates of the net benefits of the Waffle. Net benefits were positive in 106 of the 108 scenarios evaluated. The magnitude of net benefits over the 50-year period were substantial: 85 percent of the scenarios evaluated resulted in over $300 million in net benefits and nearly half of the combinations had net benefits in excess of $500 million. The results from two alternative analyses showed that the Waffle produced substantial net benefits when only used for relatively large floods (greater than 100-year events) and also revealed that the Waffle is not economically sensitive to the inclusion or absence of high-frequency flood damages from Fargo/Moorhead. Overall, the economic feasibility of the Waffle, given the limited scope of benefits included in the study, was almost entirely determined by mitigated flood damages from Fargo/Moorhead. Without mitigated flood damages from Fargo/Moorhead, results from this study suggest the Waffle would only be economically in a limited number of situations (11 of 108 possibilities) if implemented on a basin-wide scale. Recent improvements and additions to structural flood protection in Wahpeton/Breckenridge and Grand Forks/East Grand Forks eliminate the potential to mitigate flood damages from all but the largest flood events. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
减轻红河流域洪水损害的一种选择是使用数百或数千个由道路和邻近土地组成的“微流域”储水区的概念,以便在春季的合理时期内保留足够的水量,以降低整个流域溪流和河流的洪峰高度。这个概念被称为华夫饼。实施、维护和运营“华夫饼”的成本和效益的现值估计为50年。成本包括土地登记费用、土地所有者付款、基础设施改造和安装、维护和管理费用。有关河堤高度与洪水发生概率以及对住宅、商业财产和公共基础设施的预期损害的数据为估算“华夫饼”的效益提供了基础。根据未来50年的人口变化和房地产价值变化,调整了河堤高度与洪涝灾害的关系。由于华夫饼对各种洪水事件的预期河面高度的影响,洪水事件的波峰高度和洪水事件概率的变化产生了效益,并反映了流域四个城区有华夫饼和没有华夫饼的洪水损害的差异。分析使用了许多情景,反映了对华夫饼大小、成本、储水量、波峰高度降低和未来种群的不同期望。这些情况结合起来,对华夫饼的净收益产生了108个不同的估计。在评估的108个方案中,有106个方案的净收益为正。50年期间的净效益是巨大的:85%的评估情景产生了超过3亿美元的净效益,近一半的组合产生了超过5亿美元的净效益。两种替代分析的结果表明,当仅用于相对较大的洪水(大于100年的事件)时,Waffle产生了实质性的净效益,并且还揭示了Waffle对Fargo/Moorhead的高频洪水损害的包含或不存在的经济敏感性。总的来说,考虑到研究中所包含的有限利益范围,华夫饼的经济可行性几乎完全取决于法戈/穆尔黑德减轻的洪水损害。如果没有法戈/穆尔黑德的洪水灾害减轻,本研究的结果表明,如果在整个流域范围内实施,华夫饼只能在有限的情况下(108种可能性中的11种)具有经济效益。在Wahpeton/Breckenridge和Grand Forks/East Grand Forks,最近对结构防洪的改进和补充消除了除最大洪水事件外减轻洪水损害的可能性。这项研究的积极结果表明,投入额外的资源来解决或回答华夫饼的许多剩余问题是合理的。
Benefit-cost Analysis of the Waffle: Initial Assessment
An option to mitigating flood damages in the Red River Basin is the concept of using hundreds or thousands of ‘micro-basin’ storage areas comprised of roads and adjacent lands to retain a sufficient volume of water over a reasonable period in the spring to lower the flood crest heights on streams and rivers throughout the basin. This concept has been referred to as the Waffle. The present value of costs and benefits of implementing, maintaining, and operating the Waffle were estimated for a 50-year period. Costs included land enrollment expenses, landowner payments, infrastructure modifications and installations, and maintenance and administrative overhead. Data relating river crest heights with probability of flood occurrence and expected damages to residential and commercial properties and public infrastructure provided the basis for estimating benefits of the Waffle. The relationships between river crest heights and flood damages were adjusted for future population change and change in the value of real property over the 50-year period. Benefits were derived from changes in crest heights and flood event probabilities due to the Waffle influencing the expected river crest heights for various flood events, and reflected the difference between flood damage with and without the Waffle in four urban areas in the Basin. The analysis used numerous scenarios that reflected different expectations in Waffle size, cost, water storage capacity, crest height reductions, and future population. The combination of those situations produced 108 separate estimates of the net benefits of the Waffle. Net benefits were positive in 106 of the 108 scenarios evaluated. The magnitude of net benefits over the 50-year period were substantial: 85 percent of the scenarios evaluated resulted in over $300 million in net benefits and nearly half of the combinations had net benefits in excess of $500 million. The results from two alternative analyses showed that the Waffle produced substantial net benefits when only used for relatively large floods (greater than 100-year events) and also revealed that the Waffle is not economically sensitive to the inclusion or absence of high-frequency flood damages from Fargo/Moorhead. Overall, the economic feasibility of the Waffle, given the limited scope of benefits included in the study, was almost entirely determined by mitigated flood damages from Fargo/Moorhead. Without mitigated flood damages from Fargo/Moorhead, results from this study suggest the Waffle would only be economically in a limited number of situations (11 of 108 possibilities) if implemented on a basin-wide scale. Recent improvements and additions to structural flood protection in Wahpeton/Breckenridge and Grand Forks/East Grand Forks eliminate the potential to mitigate flood damages from all but the largest flood events. The positive results from this study suggest that dedicating additional resources to solving or answering many of the remaining issues with the Waffle would be justified.