On May 3, the Chesapeake Bay Commission released Nutrient Credit Trading for the Chesapeake Bay: An Economic Study by RTI International. The study reports that nutrient trading could produce a potential cost savings of 20% to 80%, depending on implementation parameters. The highest cost savings reported are achieved through a watershed-wide program that allows urban stormwater systems to swap with farmers, as agricultural best management practices offer lower cost options. The report also recommends government-defined rules and enforcement, as well as technical assistance and information, in order to actually deliver on pollution reductions.
Related Posts
Featured Products
Style 711/731 ProFlex™ Check Valves – Proco Products
January 15, 2021What is a check valve and why is it useful? Check […]Filterra® Bioretention System – Contech Engineered Solutions
January 13, 2021Filterra® Bioretention – Low Impact Development […]sEAmless Compliance Portal – EA Engineering, Science, and Technology, Inc., PBC
January 21, 2021EA Environmental, Health, Safety and Sustainability […]Atkins Water Practice – Atkins/SNC-Lavalin
January 21, 2021At SNC-Lavalin’s Atkins business, we take advantage of […]PipeCAST™ Monitoring Platform — CDM Smith
January 19, 2021PipeCAST™ — Actionable Engineering Insights, Right at […]
WEF Stormwater on Twitter
Tweets by @wefstormwaterHappening @ WEF
Polls
