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Entries Tagged ‘david zetland’

California Water Usage Stats: Southern Californians Use 110 Gallons of Capita Per Day (GCD); People in Bay Area Use 97 GCD; San Francisco, 63 GCD (Aguanomics)

(April 21, 2009, Aguanomics)
Southern Californians use about 350 gallons of water per day per household (of 3). That’s about 110 gallons/capita/day (gcd).
People in San Francisco use about 63 gcd, and people in the Bay Area use about 97 gcd.
(Original Post Here)

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No Amount of Profligate use Will Go Punished: Letter to SFPUC GM Asking for “More Agressive Block Rate Pricing” (Aguanomics)

(April 16, 2009, Aguanomics)
SFPUC’s announcement of rate hikes to begin in July 2009 are so modest as to make me think that no amoung of profligate use will go punished. Please consider the following, submitted as Comment to the Chronicle’s March 5 article, “On Coping With the Drought”:
“For every conscientous consumer, operating on personal principles [...]

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Smart Water Metering: Water Conservation More Effective When We Know How Much are We Using?; Main Problem with Submetering is Cost of Installation (Aguanomics)

(March 19, 2009, Aguanomics)
ID asks:
One of the structural issues I see with regard to pricing water is metering.

I’m sure the technology exists or could easily exit to monitor my water usage tied to a dollar amount.
I would like an easy to read display: Gallons used, unit cost, total cost. Generally metering is on [...]

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Veiled Water Wonk Wars: Robert Stavins Vs. David Zetland on Water Conservation Pricing (LeakBird)

David Zetland of Aguanomics and Professor Robert Stavins, Director of the Environmental Economics Program at Harvard, were “on the same page“ with regard to water conservation pricing after Professor Stavins wrote a recent op-ed for the Huffington Post.  Until Stavins took a slightly different tack on two water pricing misconceptions.
In his first piece, Professor Stavins [...]

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Join LeakBird @ The PG&E/ USGBC Water Conservation Showcase in San Francisco Next Week: David Zetland will Be There Too! (LeakBird)

We at Leakbird Industries are proud to be part of next week’s Water Conservation Showcase, on Tuesday, March 24, from 10:00 am to 7:30 pm, at the Pacific Energy Center in San Francisco.
Lot’s of folks in the water industry are going to be there, and Aguanomics’ David Zetland is even stopping by!
There’s a short list [...]

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David Zetland is Right: Water Rates have to Rise, and Globally Too (LeakBird)

I think that David Zetland is onto the zeitgeist, only it hasn’t happened yet. What do I mean, or what is Mr. Zetland saying essentially?
Price water according to its scarcity, and water shortages will become a thing of the past.
This is the axe we hear Mr. Zetland grinding again and again, and it appears that [...]

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Biggest Risk to Business – Water Rationing and Water Shortage: Why not Raise Water Prices Instead, which can be Passed on More Easily to Consumer? (Aguanomics)

(March 10, 2009, Aguanomics)
The title of this post is my reformulation of “missing the forest for the trees,” and the subject of the post is a new report from the Pacific Institute.
In Water Scarcity and Climate Change: Growing Risks for Businesses and Investors, the PI assesses the various risks to water supplies that companies should [...]

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Basic Water Supply & Demand: As Water Reserves are Dwindling, Water Prices SHOULD be Rising (Aguanomics)

(March 5, 2009, Aguanomics)
…Says Harvard Professor Stavins at the Huffington Post. His op/ed continues:
Throughout the United States, water is under-priced. Efficient use of water will take place only when the price reflects the actual additional cost of making that water available. Lest one fear that higher water rates would mean that Americans would go thirsty, [...]

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Water Managers NEED to Manage People, Not Meters (Aguanomics)

(March 6, 2009, David Zetland, Aguanomics)
(via DW) The Mayor’s office sent out this press release [pdf] yesterday:
San Diego Mayor Jerry Sanders is calling on all San Diegans to step up water conservation efforts in the wake of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s state of emergency declaration for California’s water supplies.
“The Governor’s message is right on target,” said [...]

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The Coming Great Water Shortage — San Francisco Public Utilities Commission may have to Declare Temporary Water Rationing: Serves 2.5M Bay Area Customers (LeakBird)

With all of the rain California has been receiving over the last few weeks, water levels are back to 80% in Sierra snowpack terms and there is “drought improvement“.  The 167-mile stretch of the Hetch-Hetchy system, which provides 85% of the Bay Area’s water, can continue to flow at four fifths capacity.  But water restrictions [...]

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Australia Ahead of California on Its Water Markets: Every Household Metered for Water Down Under; Water Licenses, Not Water Rights; Better Indoor & Underground Water Efficiency; Less Water Consumption Per Capita — Zetland: Cheap Water’s Result is Water Shortage (David Zetland, Aguanomics)

(March 4, 2009, David Zetland, Aguanomics)
RT writes:
I am an economist from Australia who works on among other issues urban water policy.
I read with interest your nicely-written Forbes article.
We seem to have pretty much a similar situation here in Australia and a few of us make similar suggestions.
I’d love to understand more about the your situation [...]

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Non-Tributary Water: New Source of 1M Acre Feet (AF) of Fresh Water in California (Aguanomics)

(March 3, 2009, Aguanomics)
I talked to Ray Walker, a retired water rights analyst, about the “new source” of water he’s been mentioning in comments to this blog. Since both of us are interested to find out if any water managers are interested in this new supply, I am posting his request for expressions of interest. [...]

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When You have a Water Monopoly, Who is Your Overseer?: Some People are Just Plain against For-Profit Water Companies, for the Wrong Reasons; Cheap Water may be a Benefit, but it’s Part of the Problem (Aguanomics)

(Feb. 28, 2009, Aguanomics)
Aquadoc’s review of Blue Gold attracted an interesting comment:
—————-
Mike, I am compelled to answer your hypothetical question of Maude Barlow: “why is privatization of our water so bad?”
While designing and constructing water delivery sources by experts make sense, the delivery of water is not a highly specialized technology and therefore is quite [...]

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Public Vs. Private Water Market Tradeoffs: The Problem is Monopoly; Solution is Competition and/or Strict Community Monitoring (Aguanomics)

(Feb. 25, 2009, Aguanomics)
Readers will know that I favor neither public nor private (investor-owned) provision of water, since the problems of ownership structure are less important than the problems of monopoly. (And the solution to monopoly — if not competition — is careful community monitoring.)
For more evidence on what does and does not matter, read [...]

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Unregulated Groundwater in California State’s Biggest Water Policy Problem, Says David Zetland: How Price or Market Water Sans Knowledge of Supply and Demand? (Aguanomics)

(Feb. 24, 2009, Aguanomics)
The battle is getting started:
The California Legislative Analyst’s Office recommends that the Legislature turn groundwater over to the state, which would remove local control
[snip]
[farmers] say they fear that the state would require water meters, find out how much water everyone’s using and charge for it.
Valente, vineyard and orchard manager for John Kautz [...]

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San Diego Water Rationing without Regard to Prior Water Conservation Makes No Sense (David Zetland, Aguanomics)

(Feb. 23, 2009, David Zetland, Aguanomics)
I’m thinking that the water managers and politicians in San Diego must be drinking something other than simple, tasty water. It seems that they are bound and determined to implement the most-stupid possible water rationing scheme, i.e.,
Even San Diegans who have torn out their lawns, planted drought-tolerant landscaping and scrimped [...]

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Tiered “Conservation” Pricing for Local Businesses: Flat Fee for Water Meter Size + Block Water Rate Schedule (Aguanomics)

(Feb. 19, 2009, Aguanomics)
Throughout this blog, I have advocated all-in-auctions for allocation of water among rights’ holders at the wholesale level (e.g., among farmers in an irrigation district, urban water agencies that buy from a wholesaler, or between sectors — ag, urban and environment) and conservation pricing for homeowners at the retail level (i.e., every [...]

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Tenant-Landlord Water Conservation Incentive Problems: Landlords Avoid Water Submetering Because of Cost of Installation; but Tenants who Face Flat Water Fees or Who Are NOT Submetered have No Incentive to Conserve Water (Aguanomics)

(Feb. 19, 2009, Aguanomics)
CL sent in this:
I recently got a letter from my apartment complex telling me they are switching from hot water sub-metering to a ratio-utility billing system [RUBS], and they will bill based on square footage of the apartment. From what I can tell, sub metering is superior because it gives people a [...]

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Farmers Need Water Markets, Especially in Light of Water Shortages, Drought and Economic Crises (Aguanomics)

(Feb. 17, 2009, Aguanomics)
Tom Graff of EDF asks:
Can we use the attention the drought has focused on water to address long-term issues, including most notably the effects of climate change, simultaneously with the focus on addressing this year’s immediate drought-related problems?…and here’s what I said:
Now is the time to introduce the radical (!) notion of [...]

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The Poor Use A Lot Less WATER Than The Rich: Unemployed Farm Workers in California, Lloyd Carter’s Apology, and The Hydraulic Brotherhood (Aguanomics)

(Feb. 15, 2009, Aguanomics)
Last week, Judge Wanger of the US District moderated a debate between farmers and environmentalists over water exports from the Delta last week in Fresno.
Although the debate included the typical give and take, the part that got everyone’s attention was this comment by Lloyd Carter, who represented the environmentalists. When asked about [...]

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The Uneconomics of Water Rationing: Revolution, The Water Shortage Myth and the Fairness-Efficiency Doctrine (Aguanomics)

(Feb. 12, 2009, Aguanomics)
I have criticized rationing as uneconomical, and I have criticized dumb rationing as unfair, yet water managers continue to pursue it.
What do I mean by that? Cutting EVERYONE back by 20% when supply falls by 20%. That’s not only lame compared to raising prices, but it’s patently unfair to cut water wasters [...]

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Entrepreneurial Water: Desalinating 900 Ft. Deep in the Ocean; 54 DXW Desalination Plants could Supply Water to All of SoCal (Aguanomics)

(Feb. 11, 2009, Aguanomics)
On Monday, I visited DXV Water Technologies, a start-up with a new technology for desalination.
I met with Michael Motherway (president), Curt Roth (VP engineering), and Diem Vuong (inventor), and we discussed their technology, markets and other issues of supply and demand. Here’s one write up [PDF].
I HIGHLY recommend that you listen to [...]

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Australian Drought Compared to Georgia’s: Toxic Swamp, Dead Sea or Pray for Rain (Aguanomics)

(Feb. 9, 2009, Aguanomics)
David Besley sent me his article comparing Australia to Georgia. Besides the usual points (farmers can survive and thrive with water markets), the article had some new stuff:
Before it reaches the Southern Ocean, the Murray drains into two large lakes that are surrounded by wetlands.
[snip]
“We had the driest years on record in [...]

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If You Want MORE Water, You should Pay (A Lot MORE) for It: Fantastic 23-Minute David Zetland Talk on Four Key Water Issues — Video (LeakBird)

I finally got to catch David Zetland in person the other night, at the Black Rocks Arts Foundation (BRAF) on 3rd St.  The theme was “Elemental Interactions: Water” and Mr. Zetland opened with a 23-Minute talk, which I was able to film with my Flip camcorder.
I’ve broken Zetland’s talk up into three 7-minute parts:
Part 1 [...]

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Farmers’ Water Usage Can’t Be Discussed in Terms of Citizens’ Water Usage, Unless You Change the Score: It’s More Like 16%!!! (Aguanomics)

(Jan. 28, 2009, Aguanomics)
This post is important and perhaps paradigm shifting. Let’s see if you agree…
It’s conventional wisdom that farmers “use” 70-80 percent of all developed* water supplies. But farmers do not use water in the same way as municipal and industrial (M&I) users do. When I use water to flush the toilet, that water [...]

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US Food Price Increases Due to Water Scarcity to Precede Fed Inflation (LeakBird)

(Photo Courtesy of Old-Photos.Blogspot.com)
Drought and water shortages may drive up the cost of food in America this year, before the Fed’s printing press can even produce symptoms of inflation. Though Peter Gleick may focus on “water footprinting”, David Zetland says it’s not the core issue.
The core issue is price. And price needs to reflect water’s [...]

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Laissez-Faire My Water: Water Crisis a Service Crisis or Resource Crisis? (LeakBird)

(Image Courtesy of CaliforniaGreenSolutions)
Is the water crisis a resource crisis or a service crisis? No matter what anyone says, each seems to fall on one side or the other. Frank R. Rijsberman claims the water crisis is both, but he seems to lean more toward a service crisis.
And opinions vary so widely on related topics, [...]

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Water Markets DO NOT Already Exist in California: So Few Trades, So Few Actors…But That will Change (Aguanomics)

(Jan. 21, 2009, Aguanomics)
So, a few days ago Mike Wade said that “water markets” already exist in California, but facts appear to contradict that assertion.
As a businessman once said to me “Water markets? Great — where does the WSJ publish the price?”
In fact, water IS traded here and there in California, but there are so [...]

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Water Rationing IS VERY Costly: Fantastic David Zetland Interview on Bloomberg Radio (Aguanomics)

(Jan. 16, 2009, Aguanomics)
David Zetland, an agricultural and resource economist at the University of California, Berkeley, talks with Bloomberg’s Tom Keene about the economics of bottled and tap water, conservation, and global water supply and management.
The 26 minute interview [.mp3] is — in my not-humble opinion — pretty damn good.
In it, Keene and I [...]

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