Cover image for Water-quality trading : a guide for the wastewater community
Title:
Water-quality trading : a guide for the wastewater community
Publication Information:
New York : McGraw-Hill, 2006
ISBN:
9780071464185
Added Author:
Added Corporate Author:

Available:*

Library
Item Barcode
Call Number
Material Type
Item Category 1
Status
Searching...
30000004607275 TD370 W37 2006 Open Access Book Book
Searching...
Searching...
30000010078247 TD370 W374 2006 Open Access Book Book
Searching...

On Order

Summary

Summary

Publisher's Note: Products purchased from Third Party sellers are not guaranteed by the publisher for quality, authenticity, or access to any online entitlements included with the product.







Water-quality trading is a market-based approach that allows a facility to meet its regulatory obligations by using the pollutant reductions created by another facility capable of doing it at a much lower cost. This resource is a practical guide for wastewater treatment plants to use in evaluating the potential for water-quality trading and provides the framework for designing and implementing the trade.


Author Notes

Cy Jones is the Regulatory Planning and Compliance Manager for the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission in Laurel, Maryland. He has a B.S. in zoology and an M.S. in environmental engineering from the University of Iowa. He served as Chair of the Water Environment Research Foundation's Project Subcommittee for five water-quality-trading demonstration projects and has participated in efforts to develop nutrient-trading programs in the Chesapeake Bay watershed.

Lisa Bacon is a Principal Technologist with CH2M Hill in Herndon, Virginia. She has 16 years of experience providing strategic and technical support to utilities, watershed communities, and state and federal agencies, helping them identify and implement ways to increase the cost effectiveness of watershed management programs. Ms. Bacon wrote several early U.S. Environmental Protection Agency trading studies and was the lead contract author for U.S. EPA's 1996 Draft Framework for Watershed-Based Trading. She was the Principal Investigator for the Water Environment Research Foundation's (WERF's) "Nitrogen Credit Trading in Maryland: A Market Analysis for Establishing a Statewide Framework" project and is currently the Principal Investigator for the WERF project featured in the workshop, "Water Quality Credit Trading: Tools for Assessment and Implementation." Lisa has supported trading pilot studies for watersheds in Alabama, Colorado, Florida, Michigan, Mississippi, Pennsylvania, and Washington, and is currently supporting trading and watershed permitting initiatives in California, Maryland, Oregon, Texas, and Virginia.

Mark S. Kieser is principal of Kieser & Associates, an environmental science and engineering firm in Kalamazoo, Michigan, that specializes in water resources research, watershed management, water-quality modeling, and new program development. Mr. Kieser has a bachelor's degree in biological sciences from Wittenberg University in Springfield, Ohio, and master's degree in biological sciences from Michigan Technological University in Houghton, Michigan. He led one of the five U.S. Environmental Protection Agency supported water-quality trading projects in the United States in the late 1990s. Mr. Kieser served on the state of Michigan Water Quality Trading Workgroup that developed the framework for Michigan's 2002 water-quality trading program. Mr. Kieser has also served as Acting Chair of the Environmental Trading Network since 2001, an internationally recognized clearinghouse for market-based environmental programs. He is currently directing other regionally and nationally recognized projects in watershed management and urban stormwater research. David Sheridan is a principal in Aqua Cura, a consulting engineering firm in Camp Hill, Pennsylvania, specializing in water management. He is trained in civil engineering, with a B.S. from the University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and M.S. and Ph.D. from Penn State University and is a registered professional engineer in ten states and the District of Columbia.

The Water Environment Research Foundation (WERF) is a not-for-profit 501(c)(3) organization that funds and manages water quality research for our subscribers through a diverse public-private partnership between municipal utilities, corporations, academia, industry, and the federal government. WERF is dedicated to advancing science and technology addressing water quality issues as they impact water resources, the atmosphere, the lands, and quality of life. WERF is headquartered in Alexandria, VA.


Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction to Water-Quality Trading (Cy Jones)
Chapter 2 General Conceptual Models for Water-Quality Trading (Cy Jones)
Chapter 3 Water Quality and Wastewater Treatment Plants (Cy Jones)
Chapter 4 Economic Framework for Evaluating Trading Opportunities (Lisa Bacon)
Chapter 5 Trade (Cy Jones)
Chapter 6 Science, Data, and Analytical Needs (David Sheridan)
Chapter 7 Societal Requirements for Water-Quality Trading (Cy Jones)
Chapter 8 Gaining Public Acceptance (Mark S. Kieser)
Chapter 9 Making the Decision (Cy Jones)
List Of Acronyms Glossary
Appendix A A Synopsis Of Michigan's Water-Quality-Trading Regulations
Appendix B Best Management Practice List For The Lower Boise River Pollution Trading Program
Appendix C Perpetual Conservation Easement
Appendix D Water-Quality-Trading Resources Environmental Trading Network
Index
List Of Figures
List Of Tables