Litcius/Paper detail

Confronting our Agricultural Nonpoint Source Control Policy Problem

Kurt Stephenson, Leonard Shabman, James S. Shortle, Zachary M. Easton

2022JAWRA Journal of the American Water Resources Association20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Federal and state agricultural and environmental agencies have spent enormous sums since the 1990s to reduce nonpoint source (NPS) water pollution from agriculture. Yet, water quality problems are pervasive, and agriculture is a major cause. The lack of progress is often attributed to insufficient funding for pollution control practices relative to the scale of the problem. However, we attribute the lack of progress to shortcomings in agricultural NPS pollution control policy. We illustrate our argument after considering nearly four decades of federal, state, and local efforts to reduce agricultural NPS pollution to the Chesapeake Bay. Additional funding for current programs, absent fundamental program reform, is unlikely to produce reductions from agriculture needed to achieve desired water quality outcomes.

Topics & Concepts

Nonpoint source pollutionAgricultureChesapeake bayAgricultural pollutionWater qualityEnvironmental planningControl (management)BusinessClean Water ActPollutionNatural resource economicsScale (ratio)Environmental scienceEnvironmental resource managementEconomicsGeographyEstuaryManagementOceanographyCartographyBiologyGeologyEcologyArchaeologySoil and Water Nutrient DynamicsEconomic and Environmental ValuationWater Quality and Resources Studies