
Water Policy Vol 10 No 5 pp 439458 © IWA Publishing 2008 doi:10.2166/wp.2007.056
Evaluating environmental benefits from changes in water abstraction and waste water disposal
K. G. Willis
School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape, Centre for Research in Environmental Appraisal and Management, University of Newcastle, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU, UK . ken.willis@newcastle.ac.uk
ABSTRACT
Water companies are regional monopolies in the UK. The minimum standards of service and prices they can charge for water supply and sewage, are set by the government and the regulator OFWAT. This paper outlines the scope for the Environment Agency (EA) to impose higher standards on water companies than the statutory minimum, in order to generate greater environmental benefits. It investigates how the inappropriate application of the technique to assess environmental benefits by the EA leads to too many environmental schemes passing a costbenefit test and hence how too much investment may be channelled into environmental schemes in relation to the benefits the public really receive from the improvements. By inappropriate application of environmental valuation methods, the EA is shaping public policy through institutional practice.
Keywords: Environmental valuation; Institutional practice; Water improvement choice
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