This state-of-the art resource draws upon the accumulated wisdom of a carefully chosen team of internationally recognized experts selected for their extensive experience in the essential aspects of water supply systems. You'll find authoritative, detailed coverage of:* Historical perspectives of urb
Managing Urban Water Supply
โ Scribed by Donald E. Agthe, R. Bruce Billings, Nathan Buras (auth.), Donald E. Agthe, R. Bruce Billings, Nathan Buras (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer Netherlands
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 292
- Series
- Water Science and Technology Library 46
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
We, the editors, have long believed that a strong knowledge of relatively simple economic and engineering concepts is valuable in solving water management problems. The lack of such knowledge has been apparent to us in some of the journal articles, research proposals and books we have reviewed. The articles which have been written concerning specific local water economies and management issues are scattered over a wide variety of journals, making them hard to access. Most of the extensive water resources literature is concerned with large regional water projects or with narrow technical and regional issues. This book was written to make practical economic and engineering concepts readily available to urban water supply managers, thereby filling a gap in the available literature. It is concerned with decisions made daily, monthly, or annually by managers of urban water supply systems. The book includes basic chapters presenting supply and cost concepts, calculation of demand elasticities, use of marketing concepts, public goods analysis, water markets, industrial water demand and the use of price in water conservation. The authors have included multiple examples of how these concepts can aid in managing urban water supply. The water provider is generally a governmental entity or regulated private utility. Most books on public utilities and their management emphasize gas, electricity, or telephone rather than water. Water is different because of m~or variations in quality by source and the necessity for proper disposal of waste water.
โฆ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xxv
Introduction....Pages 1-9
Hydrology and Water Supply....Pages 11-22
Price Rationing....Pages 23-43
Water Supply Economics....Pages 45-70
Elasticity of Demand for Water Resource Managers....Pages 71-86
Water Transactions as an Urban Water Supply Strategy....Pages 87-101
Market Structure and Price Regulation....Pages 103-113
Industrial and Commercial Water Demands....Pages 115-125
Public Drinking Water in the United States....Pages 127-145
Water System Organization and Financial Decision Making....Pages 147-165
Drinking Water Disinfection in the United States: Balancing Infectious Disease, Cancer and Costs, Market and Nonmarket Failures....Pages 167-185
Effects of Land Subsidence in the Greater Houston Area....Pages 187-203
Solving Groundwater Overdraft in Arizona Urban Areas....Pages 205-218
Urban Water in Israel....Pages 219-240
The British Experience....Pages 241-255
Concluding Remarks....Pages 257-269
Back Matter....Pages 271-277
โฆ Subjects
Hydrogeology; Regional/Spatial Science
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>Supply of sufficient clean drinking water is often taken for granted, but it requires a considerable technical and financial effort to ensure reliable and economic water supply. <br/> This volume presents an up-to-date overview of water supply management and aims at efficient management of water
The complete guide to managing the quantity and quality of urban storm water runoff. Focuses on the planning and design of facilities and systems to control flooding, erosion, and non-point source pollution. Explains the practical application of the state-of-the-art in concepts and methods, based on
Integrated urban water management relies on data allowing us to analyse, understand and predict the behaviour of the individual water cycle components and their interactions. The concomitant monitoring of the complex of urban water system elements makes it possible to grasp the entirety of relations
Understanding the impacts of urbanization on the urban water cycle and managing the associated health risks demand adequate strategies and measures. Health risks associated with urban water systems and services include the microbiological and chemical contamination of urban waters and outbreak of wa