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Prepared for the International Society of Ecological Economics Biennial Conference, Montreal July 11-14, 2004. Cost-Effectiveness Analysis and a Border Region: A Critical Analysis. Dr. James F. Booker Siena College New York, U.S.A. or. How can an ugly duckling be made respectable?.
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Prepared for the International Society of Ecological Economics Biennial Conference, Montreal July 11-14, 2004. Cost-Effectiveness Analysis and a Border Region: A Critical Analysis Dr. James F. Booker Siena College New York, U.S.A.
or How can an ugly duckling be made respectable?
Outline • Institutional background • Physical setting • Uncovering techniques to bias a cost-effectiveness analysis • Cost-effectiveness applied effectively
Background • U.S. obligation to deliver Colorado River flows to Mexico (Mexican Water Treaty of 1944). • Obligation to count only decent quality water (Minute No. 242, 1973).
The U.S. strategy for meeting Minute 242:Colorado River Basin Salinity Control Act (1974) • Construct “bypass” for agricultural drainage • accomplished quickly and still in operation • restored one part of the Colorado River Delta, the Cienega de Santa Clara. • Construct the Yuma Desalting Plant to desalt the drainage water • first operated in 1990 after 14 years of construction. • cost of $258 million • shut down almost immediately due to high costs and technical difficulties.
What’s Wrong with the Bypass? • U.S. cannot receive credit for the water under the 1944 Treaty with Mexico. • Desalting plant would produce water near the quality of Colorado River water for delivery to Mexico – thus allowing more water use in the U.S.
Current Context • 4th year of severe drought in the Colorado River Basin Lake Powell (Living Rivers) • 50% of basin storage depleted Lake Mead (NASA Earth Observatory)
The main point: Yuma Desalting Plant is a water supply project .
How an ugly duckling can be made respectable.. source: U.S. Bureau of Reclamation
How to manipulate cost-effectiveness analyses: • Use sunk costs to justify more costs. • Combine the ugly duckling and the swan. • Leave out relevant (though perhaps non-quantifiable) costs.
Conclusions • Ecological economists should be prepared to do cost benefit and cost-effectiveness analyses in order to influence policy. • When done correctly, building on neoclassical approaches will identify the ugly ducklings.