Past and Future Water Use in Pacific Coast States


Book Description

We examine socioeconomic factors affecting water demand and expected trends in these factors. Based on these trends, we identify past, current, and projected withdrawal of surface water for various uses in Pacific Coast States (California, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington), including public, domestic, commercial, industrial, thermoelectric, livestock, and irrigation. Additionally, we identify projected demands for nonconsumptive instream recreational uses of water, such as boating, swimming, and fishing, which can compete with consumptive uses. Allocating limited water resources across multiple users will present water resource managers and policymakers with distinct challenges as water demands increase. To illustrate these challenges, we present a case study of issues in the Klamath Basin of northern California and southern Oregon. The case study provides an example of the issues involved in allocating scarce water among diverse users and uses, and the difficulties policymakers face when attempting to design water allocation policies that require tradeoffs among economic, ecological, and societal values.




A Review of Scientific Information on Issues Related to the Use and Management of Water Resources in the Pacific Northwest


Book Description

Fresh water is a valuable and essential commodity in the Pacific Northwest States, specifically Oregon, Washington, and Idaho, and one provided abundantly by forested watersheds in the region. The maintenance and growth of industrial, municipal, agricultural, and recreational activities in the region are dependent on adequate and sustainable supplies of fresh water from surface and ground-water sources. Future development, especially in the semiarid intermountain area, depends on the conservation and expansion of the region's water resource. This synthesis reviews the state of our knowledge and condition of water resources in the Pacific Northwest.




A Review of Scientific Information on Issues Related to the Use and Management of Water Resources in the Pacific Northwest


Book Description

Fresh water is a valuable & essential commodity in the Pacific Northwest States, specifically Oregon, Washington, & Idaho, & one provided abundantly by forested watersheds in the region. The maintenance & growth of industrial, municipal, agricultural, & recreational activities in the region are dependent on adequate & sustainable supplies of fresh water from surface & groundwater sources. Future development, especially in the semiarid intermountain area, depends on the conservation & expansion of the region's water resource. This synthesis, developed by the U.S. Forest Service, reviews the state of our knowledge & condition of water resources in the Pacific Northwest. Illustrations.




Economic Research Supporting Water Resource Stewardship in the Pacific Northwest


Book Description

This is a print on demand edition of a hard to find publication. Knowledge about the value of water to different users and methods with which to evaluate biophysical, economic, ecological, and social tradeoffs associated with allocating limited water resources among competing uses is vital to devising appropriate and effective water resource policies. Intended primarily for non-economists, this report reviews existing water resource economics literature (as of 2002) concerning the economic value of water in different uses in the Pacific Northwest, the evaluation of tradeoffs among uses, and the use of economic incentives for water conservation and protection or enhancement of water quality. Includes an annotated bibliography of water resource economics research.







Water, Today and Tomorrow


Book Description