Abstract

Introduction: Land use intensification and urbanisation processes are degrading hydrological ecosystem services in the Guapi-Macacu watershed of Rio de Janeiro. A proposal to pay farmers to restore natural watershed services might be an alternative to securing the water supply in the long-term for the around 2.5 million urban water users in the study region. This study quantifies the costs of changing current land use patterns to enhance watershed services and compares these costs to the avoided costs associated with water treatment for public supply. Methods: We use farm-household data to estimate the opportunity costs of abandoning current land uses for the recovery of natural vegetation; a process that is very likely to improve water quality in terms of turbidity due to reduced inputs from erosion. Opportunity cost estimates are extrapolated to the watershed scale based on remote sensing land use classifications and vulnerability analysis to identify priority zones for watershed management interventions. To assess the potential demand for watershed services, we analyse water quality and treatment cost data from the main local water treatment plant. Results: Changing agricultural land uses for watershed services provision generally comes at high opportunity costs in our study area near to the metropolis of Rio de Janeiro. Alternative low cost watershed conservation options do exist in the livestock production sector. These options have the potential to directly reduce the amount of sediments and nutrients reaching the water bodies, and in turn decrease the costs of treatment needed for drinking water. Land cover changes at the scale needed to improve water quality will, nonetheless, likely exceed the cost of additional investments in water treatment. Conclusions: The state water utility company’s willingness to pay for watershed services alone will not be enough to induce provision of additional watershed services. We conclude that monetary incentives conditioned on specific adjustments to existing production systems could still have a complementary role to play in improving watershed services. However, we note that our willingness to pay analysis focusses on only one of the potentially wide range of ecosystem services provided by natural vegetation in the Guapi-Macacu watershed. Factoring these ecosystem services into the willingness to pay equation is likely to change our assessment in favour of additional conservation action, be it through PES or other policy instruments.

Highlights

  • IntroductionPopulation and economic growth are increasing the demand for water resources and, at the same time, amplifying the pressure on ecosystems that deliver watershed services (Porras et al 2008)

  • Land use intensification and urbanisation processes are degrading hydrological ecosystem services in the Guapi-Macacu watershed of Rio de Janeiro

  • The economic aspects of watershed services supply and demand are poorly studied and many payments for watershed services (PWS) initiatives begin operating without quantitative knowledge of such parameters (Martin-Ortega et al 2012). To address this knowledge gap, we focus on two research questions within our study area of the Guapi-Macacu watershed in the state of Rio de Janeiro: 1. What are the costs associated with shifting land uses to foster improved and enhanced watershed services?

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Summary

Introduction

Population and economic growth are increasing the demand for water resources and, at the same time, amplifying the pressure on ecosystems that deliver watershed services (Porras et al 2008). Land and water linkages are challenging to manage as watershed services have a common good characteristic (Porras et al 2008) and are generally unaccounted for in monetary terms. As a result, they are often degraded and this is not reflected in traditional economic measures, such as GDP (TEEB 2009; Costanza et al 1997; FAO 2007). The design of policy measures that encourage farmers to adopt watershed conservation measures and, at the same time, maintain or even increase productivity has become a major research issue

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