Reforming Agricultural Nonpoint Pollution Policy in an Increasingly Budget-Constrained Environment

Short, JS; Ribaudo, M; Horan, RD; Blandford, D

HERO ID

2513920

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2012

Language

English

PMID

22242937

HERO ID 2513920
In Press No
Year 2012
Title Reforming Agricultural Nonpoint Pollution Policy in an Increasingly Budget-Constrained Environment
Authors Short, JS; Ribaudo, M; Horan, RD; Blandford, D
Journal Environmental Science & Technology
Volume 46
Issue 3
Page Numbers 1316-1325
Abstract Agricultural nonpoint source water pollution has long been recognized as an important contributor to U.S. water quality problems and the subject of an array of local, state, and federal initiatives to reduce the problem. A "pay-the-polluter" approach to getting farmers to adopt best management practices has not succeeded in improving water quality in many impaired watersheds. With the prospects of reduced funding for the types of financial and technical assistance programs that have been the mainstay of agricultural water quality policy, alternative approaches need to be considered. Some changes to the way current conservation programs are implemented could increase their efficiency, but there are limits to how effective a purely voluntary approach can be. An alternative paradigm is the "polluter pays" approach, which has been successfully employed to reduce point source pollution. A wholesale implementation of the polluter-pays approach to agriculture is likely infeasible, but elements of the polluter-pays approach could be incorporated into agricultural water quality policy.
Doi 10.1021/es2020499
Pmid 22242937
Wosid WOS:000299864400008
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English