Title: Water Demand Modeling
1Water Demand Modeling
- Emanuele Massetti
- FEEM and CMCC
- Prepared for the Capacity Building Programme on
the Economics of Adaptation - 2nd Regional Training Workshop Agenda
- Bangkok, 30 September 4 October 2013
2Source http//www.unep.org/dewa/vitalwater/articl
e42.html
3Source http//www.unep.org/dewa/vitalwater/articl
e43.html
4Water uses
5Water and Climate Change
6Water infrastructures
dx.cooperhewitt.org
artandfoodofitaly.blogspot.com
7Water infrastructures
www.thisoldhouse.com -
8Why pricing water?
- More efficient allocation across alternative uses
- Prices direct water where it is more valuable
- Prices more efficient than other approaches
- Reduces water losses
- Demand more efficient water uses
- Supply more efficient distribution of water
- Allows raising revenues for investments
The following slides use material from Sheila M.
Olmstead and Robert N. Stavins (2007), Managing
Water Demand Price vs. Non-Price Conservation
Programs. A Pioneer Institute Working Paper, No.
39, July 2007. This is an excellent and
accessible introduction to water pricing.
9Pricing of water (Theory)
- Buyers
- Willing to pay more for more units as scarcity
increases - Downward sloping demand curve
- Sellers
- Efficiency requires that water be sold at the
long-run marginal cost - Willing to supply more as price increases
- Upward sloping supply curve
- Equilibrium
- Marginal benefit equal to marginal cost
10Equilibrium in the market for water (Theory)
/unit
supply
demand
units
11Inefficient water pricing (Reality)
- Water is not typically traded in efficient
markets - Water not sold at the long-run marginal cost
- Water is priced too low
- Excessive use of residential water
- Relocation of industries and agriculture where
water is not abundant - Inefficient use of water in industry and
agriculture
12Pricing methods
- Flat water fees (unmetered)
- No incentive to save water
- Easy to administer
- Volumetric rates (metered)
- Increasing block prices
- Decreasing block prices
13Block tariffs
- IBP
- Affordability, right to water
- If too cheap, low investment
- DBP
- Subsidy to high consumers
- Possibly unsustainable patterns
http//www.unep.org/dewa/vitalwater/jpg/0296-tarif
f-EN.jpg
14Demand elasticity of water to price
15Demand functions of water
16Estimates in the literature
Sector Estimates
Residential demand -.33 / -.38
Industrial demand -.44 / -.97 -.15 / -.98 -.10 / -0.79
Agriculture -.48 to -1.24
Most studies based in developed countries.
17Price elasticities from demand functions
- Demand curves for water in particular sectors
- A demand curve explains water consumption as a
function of marginal prices and a set of other
important variables that influence consumption. - Urban residential water demand
- price, household income, family size, home and
lot size, weather...
18Price elasticities from demand functions
- Urban residential water demand
- price, household income, family size, home and
lot size, weather... - Industry and agriculture
- Demand as a function of industrial processes, of
crop choices and irrigation technology - In the long-run industrial process and
agricultural technologies, including crops and
land uses are endogenous
19Survey methods in the absence of water markets
- Willingness to pay (WTP) is the maximum amount a
person would be willing to pay, sacrifice or
exchange in order to receive a good (or to avoid
something undesired, such as pollution) - A market transaction occurs when the price is
equal or lower than the WTP - WTP as upper-bound to the price
- Several survey methods have been developed to
measure consumer willingness to pay. - Hypothetical
- Actual