Title: Water Quality Credit Trading 101
1Water Quality Credit Trading 101
By Jim Klang Kieser Associates
Improving Conservation Agricultural Economics
with Water Quality Credit Trading the BMP
Challenge
2Learning Objectives
- Background - Watershed approach - Clean
Water Act - Water Quality Trading
- What is WQ Trading?
- Why allow for trading?
- Can you participate?
- - Trading examples in MN
- Why agriculture should be involved
3Watershed Approach
- Most effective comprehensive approach in
addressing currentwater quality problems. - Builds a broad-based community of understanding
- Community-developed desired goals
- Applies many tools to solve water quality
concerns - Nutrients and sediments are 2 of the most
important pollutants affecting water bodies - Originate from many sources
- Persistent in the environment transport,
deposition throughout the watershed with little
or no chemical/physical degradation - Contribute to a loss of aesthetic, recreation and
fishery quality
EPA Draft Watershed Handbook
4Clean Water Act
- National goal Fishable, swimmable, and drinkable
waters - Numeric and narrative
- water quality standards
- National Pollutant
- Discharge Elimination System (NPDES)
- Regulates Pollution
- Municipal and industrial
- Includes large livestock operations
- Minimum standards considers the source type,
pollution strength - and economics (Technology Based Effluent
Limits). - Occasionally,a waterbody requires additional
protection and Water-Quality Based Effluent
Limits are applied to a permit - Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL)
- Program for impaired watersheds (sets a budget
for pollution) - Regulatory correction of NPDES sources by setting
Water-Quality Based Effluent Limits, and - Incentive-based nonpoint source corrections
5Wastewater Minimum Requirements
6Wastewater Minimum Requirements
7Wastewater Minimum Requirements
Tradable 0
8Water Quality Credit Trading
- One of the tools used in the watershed
management approach to achieve water quality
goals efficiently. - ? Introduces flexibility in the regulatory
process Trading can be included in NPDES
permits, allowing a point source with and high
treatment costs to pay another to make a
voluntary and surplus pollutant reduction for a
lower cost.
From EPA 2004 Water Quality Trading Assessment
Handbook
9Potential Tradable Pollutants
- Pollutants that
- come from both point and nonpoint sources
- tend to be transported through stream network
without assimilation - have a water-quality based effluent limit
For agriculture, most commonly traded pollutants
Phosphorus, Sediment, Nitrogen
In some watersheds, physical variables are also
being traded flows, temperature
Pollutants that - are lethally toxic
- accumulate in organisms, such as fish (mercury
, PCBs, pesticides)Are not traded
10Trading Overview
- The Trading Currency
- Surplus Pollutant Reductions Credits
- (Unit of mass over a period of time)
- Credits become Units of Exchange
- Real a Point Source/Non-point Source action
results - in a pollutant load
reduction - Surplus load reduction is greater than required
by permit and/or TMDL allocation goals - Quantifiable load reduction can be measured by
a standard method/equation - Watershed-based credits can only be
produced and traded within the same,
pre-defined watershed - Net improvement (trading ratio)
- trading ratio has to be greater than 11
(account for uncertainties, provides net water
quality benefit for water)
11Types of Trading
Point Source/Point Source (between permitted
wastewater facilities) Point source/Non-point
source (between permitted and non-permitted
sources with voluntary credits) Non-point
source/Non-point source (between regulated
municipal stormwater permittees and
unregulated agriculture)
12Why Allow for Trading? (Overview)
- Cost
- Ancillary environmental benefits
- Additional funding opportunities for BMP
implementation - Policy opportunities
13Why Allow for Trading? (1)
- Cost
- WWTPs face large capital costs to comply with
more stringent water quality-based effluent
limits (NPDES permits, TMDLs) - Agricultural BMPs can produce pollutant load
reductions at a much lower cost.
14Some WWTP Cost Information
Wastewater Treatment Size (Million Gallons/ Day) Type of Treatment Typically Applied Treatment Costs (/lb P)
Blue Lake 55 Continuous 0.20
Mankato 10 Continuous 2.00
Industrial 1.5 Continuous 14-18
Mid Size Rural 0.2 Continuous 5-18
Small Rural 0.05 Ponds 60
Cost examples from Minnesota Pollution Control
Agency and WWTP Representatives
15Emerging Market Information
Trading Program Location Buyer Treatment Costs (/lb P) Ag Credit Price Range (/lb P) Average Credit Price (/lb P)
Michigan 292 3 652 --
Ohio 23.37 1 12 1.50
PA 30 - 3,000 6 113 9.27
Ontario 775 156 --
Minnesota 0.2-60 3-24 --
16Why Allow for Trading? (2)
- Ancillary environmental benefits Examples
- Sediment and other sediment attached pollutant
load reductions - Reduced flood peaks (by reconnecting riparian
flood plains) - Habitat (game, fish, birds)
- Wetland restoration
- Hydrologic damping (storage and/or increased
evapotranspiration with perennial vegetation) - Water temperature reductions (riparian shading)
- Assimilative capacity (eroding sediments and
sediment attached pollutants deposited and stored
in the flood plain)
17Why Allow for Trading? (3)
- Additional incentives to implement nonpoint
source BMPs - Water quality credits
- Carbon sequestration credits
- Wetland mitigation banking credits
- Habitat credits (endangered species)
- Minimization of risk associated with BMPs when
adopting different farm management techniques
18Why Allow for Trading (4)
- Policy opportunities
- Trading program could help maintain
- working lands
- Trading often accelerates practice implementation
cycle, due to flexibility and monetary advantages - Trading goals can result in net benefits (extra
reductions required for each trade) - Trading allows for equitable decisions in future
growth management
19New and Expanding Facilities
- Minnesota River Basin management uses WQT as a
future growth management tool All expansions
and new facilities must buy Credits for
Allocation Rights Currently Point to Point
Trades (May-Sept) - Lake Pepin management could require similar
measures year around Credits and Point to Point
and Point to Nonpoint Trades may be eligible
20Trading Program Participation
- Step 1- Ag. producer installs additional BMPs
(above baseline requirements) from a selection of
BMPs with approved crediting equations - Consideration Setting a Baseline (Yet to be
determined in MN) - Baseline corresponds to a minimum BMP
implementation goal. Options could be - Baseline set by TMDL load allocation
- Baseline defined by state policy or formal rule
- Baseline defined through local stakeholder input
- Baseline could be a combination of all of these
21Trading Program Participation
- Step 2 - Pollutant load reductions from BMP
calculated using standard methods such as RUSLE2
(NRCS soil erosion model). - Consideration Requirements for credit generation
- BMP selection
- Implementation period BMP lifespan
- Quantification of BMP reductions
- Cost of installation
22Trading Program Participation
- Step 3 Trading credits then must factor in a
Trading Ratio calculation using an approved ratio
that accounts for uncertainties and provides for
net water quality benefits. - Consideration Trading ratios may contain
- Factors to account for equivalency between
pollutant load discharges at sellers and buyers
locations - Margin of Safety to ensure conservative estimates
are applied for variability of nonpoint sources - Net benefits included for stream
- Bioavailability differences between sources
23Trading Program Participation
- Step 4 Connecting credit sellers to buyers
(aggregator, broker, or individual contact) - Consideration Legally binding agreements
compliance, and supporting framework - Third party verification of BMP credit,
installation, maintenance WQ monitoring - Legally binding trading agreement between farmer
and credit buyer/banker - Sellers compliance with terms of contract allow
buyer (PS) to comply with permit requirements - Supporting framework options may have a middleman
or a buyer to seller relationship
24Trading Program Participation
- Step 5 Registering credits with the state
regulatory agency (MPCA, or third party) - Consideration Credit registry types
- Reporting requirement in a NPDES permit
- Web-based registry (e.g., WRIs NutrientNet
which includes location, contact and credit
calculationswww.nutrientnet.org) - Web facilitated reporting (e.g., Minnesota River
Basin Phosphorus General Permit, includes
contracts, reporting forms and lists current
trades)
25Agricultural Perspectives
- Survey of Agricultural Representatives
- Main Points/Concerns Discovered
- Desire to avoid rewarding poor past decisions
- Site visits needed, but must be done by someone
knowledgeable about farming practices - Balance to promote working land BMPs
- Concern with setting wrong baselines (required
BMPs before being able to generating a credit) - Farmers should be provided good technical support
for WQT - Participation should always be voluntary
26MN Point Source-Nonpoint Source Trading
27MN Point Source-Nonpoint Source Trading
- Rahr Malting Company
- Goal Malt producer wanted to expand by operating
its own permitted wastewater treatment plant. - Issues - Minnesota River waste load allocation
for CBOD fully allocated to other dischargers. -
Previously high sanitary sewer district
industrial user fees forced Rahr towards other
options - SolutionPoint to nonpoint source NPDES water
quality trade permit trades with agriculture
offset Rahrs CBOD loading by reducing several
parameters causing dissolved oxygen stress in the
river upstream of facility.
28Rahr Malting 8 Mile Creek
Rahr installed four erosion control sites 8 Mile
Creek Channel stabilization, livestock exclusion
29Rahr Malting Rush River Site
Results - Discharge of up to 150 lbs CBOD/day
- 212 lbs of CBOD reductions/ year from erosion
control sites
30MN Point Source-Nonpoint Source Trading
- Southern MN Beet Sugar Co-op
- Goal Cooperative wanted to expand but faced air
water quality compliance issues - Issues - Expanded NPDES discharge difficult to
obtain because of Minnesota River D.O. problems
- Air quality permit requirements regarding H2S
gas emissions from lagoons - Prohibitive costs
for expanding spray irrigation treatment process - Solution Point to nonpoint source NPDES water
quality trade permit - facilitates continuous discharge from on-site
wastewater treatment - requires 2.6 times TP offset reductions from
upstream NPS
31Spring Cover Crops
58,832 acres planted in 2005
32West Fork Beaver Creek
Results - Trading requirements exceeded- West
Fork Beaver Creek channel stabilization,
livestock exclusion- Spring cover crop contracts
with shareholders over 50,000 acres.
33Next Steps in MN (Rules are being developed)
- The MPCA is promulgating Rules on Water Quality
Trading - High level of Stakeholder involvement
- July 2008 draft deadline goal
- CIG Project Team includes MPCA
34Why Agriculture Should be Involved in Trading
- Potential revenue
- Discussions influence stewardship goals
- Agriculture knows what works best on the farm
- Giving agriculture recognition for what it has
already done
35Common Questions
Can conservation practices Ive implemented in
the past be used to generate credits? Will
Depend on MPCA Rule and Guidance. What is the
life of my credits? Annually renewable/saleable
for the life of the practice. If I sell credits,
will I eventually be regulated? No. But credits
are used by someone who is regulated. What
happens if I default on implementing my
practices? You may have liability within your
private contract and MN rules. Who could buy my
credits? Any regulated facility within your
watershed. How much is my credit
worth? Determined by market demand.