会议专题

Basin Economic Allocation Model (BEAM1)--An Economic Model for Water Use in Transboundary River Basins Customized for the Aral Sea Basin

  The water resources of the Aral Sea basin are under increasing pressure,particularly from the conflict over whether hydropower or irrigation water use should take priority.The purpose of the Aral Sea Basin Economic Allocation Model (BEAM) model is to explore the impact of changes to water allocation and investments in water management infrastructure on the overall welfare of the Aral Sea Basin.BEAM is developed as a decision support system to facilitate putting value on water use along with the sustainable use of water resources in support of development.The model estimates welfare changes associated with changes to how water is allocated between the five countries in the basin (Kazakhstan,Kyrgyz Republic,Tajikistan,Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan; water use in Afghanistan is assumed to be fixed).Water is allocated according to economic optimization criteria; n other words,the BEAM model allocates water across time and space so that the economic welfare associated with water use is maximized.The model is programmed in GAMS (General Algebraic Modelling System)-software developed by a group of economists at the World Bank.The model addresses the Aral Sea Basin as a whole-that is,the rivers Syr Darya,Amu Darya,Kashkadarya,and Zarafshan,as well as the Aral Sea.The model representation includes water resources,including 14 river sections,6 terminal lakes,28 reservoirs and 19 catchment runoff nodes,as well as land resources (i.e.,irrigated croplands).The model covers 5 sectors: agriculture (crops: wheat,cotton,alfalfa,rice,fruit,vegetables and others),hydropower,nature,households and industry.The focus of the model is on welfare impacts associated with changes to water use in the agriculture and hydropower sectors.The model aims at addressing the following issues of relevance for economic management of water resources:(1) Efficiency (estimating how investments in irrigation efficiency affect economic welfare).(2) Effectiveness (estimating how changes in how water is allocated affect welfare).(3) Equity (who will gain from changes in allocation of water from one sector to another and who will lose?).Stakeholders in the region have been involved in the development of the model,and about 10 national experts,including staff from the International Fund for Saving the Aral Sea (IFAS),have been trained in using the model.The model will be publicly accessible through a web-based user interlace that allows users to investigate scenarios and perform sensitivity analyses.Preliminary results suggest that:(1) At the margin,hydropower water use increases basin-wide welfare more than irrigation water use.(2) Under normal or average hydrological conditions,water scarcity is not a significant problem in the basin.(3) Under dry hydrological conditions,water scarcity is significant.Under these conditions,preliminary results suggest that cotton irrigation is less effective than other uses,particularly in Turkmenistan.(4) Investments in irrigation efficiency can have a significant impact on the effectiveness of water use for irrigation,thereby increasing the welfare of irrigation regions during dry periods.

water allocation ecnomic model DSS And sea basin

Palle Lindgaard-J(O)rgensen Niels Riegels, DHI Jesper Karup Pedersen Mikkel Kromanm, COWI Vadim Sokolov, GWP CACENA Anatoly Sorokin, SIC-ICWC

Presenter of the paper Central Asia and Caucasus Scientific Information Centre Interstate Commission for Water Cooperation

国际会议

The 5th International Yellow River Forum (第五届黄河国际论坛)

郑州

英文

409-417

2012-09-24(万方平台首次上网日期,不代表论文的发表时间)