Agricultural Water Management Using Two-Stage Channels: Performance and Policy Recommendations Based on Northern European Experiences
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (1)
- Assess the key technical and environmental benefits of agricultural TSCs. The benefits were identified through a literature survey considering research under Boreal and Continental climates. Additionally, the performance of a reach-scale pilot site is demonstrated regarding flood mitigation, morphological stability, suspended sediment and phosphorus retention efficiency, and biodiversity indicators.
- (2)
- Evaluate the total costs and monetary environmental benefits of the TSC approach in comparison to the conventional dredging. The pilot-scale results were scaled up to a larger agricultural catchment considering a 60-year time period.
- (3)
- Investigate the bottlenecks in the financing and governance that are hindering the mainstreaming of TSCs. We provide recommendations on how to tackle the bottlenecks, including how to integrate TSCs into the CAP-AES based on their optimal spatial targeting with respect to other types of vegetated riparian buffers.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Description of the Two-Stage Channel Design Based on the Reach-Scale Pilot Site
2.2. Assessment of Technical and Environmental Performance and Benefits of Two-Stage Channels in Comparison to Conventional Dredging
2.2.1. Analyses of Flood Mitigation, Morphological Stability, and Nutrient Retention at the Primary Reach-Scale Pilot Site
2.2.2. Field Investigations on Biodiversity at the Primary Reach-Scale Pilot Site
2.3. Evaluation of Costs, Financing, and Monetary Environmental Benefits
2.3.1. Costs Based on Reach-Scale Pilot Sites
2.3.2. Monetary Environmental Benefits at the Catchment Scale
2.4. Analyses of Bottlenecks in Financing, Governance, and Capacity
3. Results
3.1. Benefits of Two-Stage Channels in Comparison to Conventional Dredging
3.2. Performance of the Case Study Two-Stage Channel
3.2.1. Mitigation of Flooding and High Water Tables
3.2.2. Retention of Suspended Sediment and Phosphorus
3.2.3. Plant Biodiversity
3.2.4. Diversity of Pollinating Insects
3.3. Costs and Monetary Environmental Benefits
3.3.1. Costs at Reach-Scale Pilot Two-Stage Channels
3.3.2. Total Costs and Monetary Environmental Benefits Scaled up to a Larger Catchment
3.4. Current Financing Situation and Bottlenecks in the Agri-Environmental Subsidy Scheme
3.5. Development Needs of Governance to Boost Nature-Based Solutions
4. Discussion
4.1. Potential of Two-Stage Channels for Decreasing the Harmful Hydro-Environmental Impacts of Agriculture
4.2. Proposed Financing Reform Based on Optimal Targeting of Two-Stage Channels and Re-Direction of Public Funding
4.3. Future Research Needs and Capacity Building for Mainstreaming Two-Stage Channels
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Indicator | Assessment Criteria | Scale of Analysis | Main Methodologies |
---|---|---|---|
Benefits through ecosystem services | Adapted CICES 5.1 framework for comparing TSCs and conventional dredging | Boreal and Continental climates | Literature survey supplemented by field investigations and expert judgement (Section 2.2) |
Water quality | Retention efficiency of suspended sediment and particulate phosphorus | Primary reach-scale pilot site | Field investigations (Section 2.2.1) |
Drainage and flood mitigation | Water levels at different discharges, channel bed level development | Primary reach-scale pilot site | Field investigations, hydraulic modelling (Section 2.2.1) |
Biodiversity | Abundance and species richness of plants and pollinating insects | Primary reach-scale pilot site | Field investigations (Section 2.2.2) |
Costs and financing | Construction and maintenance costs, value of lost field and crops; shares of financing | Primary and supplementary reach-scale pilot sites (n = 6) | Collection of realised and estimated costs and financing (Section 2.3.1) |
Monetary environmental benefits | Phosphorus retention, conservation of protected species | Catchment scale pilot site | Cost-benefit analysis based on up-scaled costs and additional environmental benefits (Section 2.3.2) |
Bottlenecks in financing, governance, and capacity | Current CAP-AES, regional and national governance and legislation, knowledge gaps | Finland, generalisable to Boreal and Continental climates | Expert interviews (Section 2.4) |
Cost Factor | Estimation Method for Two-Stage Channel | Estimation Method for Conventional Dredging |
---|---|---|
Realised construction costs and shares of financing | Personal communications with the leaders of the reach-scale pilot sites (Table S1) | No construction costs (channels have been constructed in the past) |
Maintenance interval | 50 years | 20 years |
Maintenance costs | Assumed 50% lower than for conventional dredging (2.5 €/m) | 5 €/m (Mikko Ortamala, personal communication, 18 January 2021); realised costs at Uuhikonoja |
Operation costs | Assumed negligible | Assumed negligible |
Adjacent land value (lost field area) | Lost field area estimated from channel design plans; region-specific selling prices of 2019 (7800–11,400 €/ha) [47] | No losses in field area |
Lost value of crops caused by lost field area | Typical crop yield of grains for Southern Finland (4 t/ha) [48]; present national selling price of grains (172 €/t) [49] | No losses in crops |
Section and Division | Code and Simple Descriptor | Potential Benefits of Two-Stage Channels (TSCs) |
---|---|---|
Regulation and Maintenance: Transformation of biochemical or physical inputs to ecosystems | 2.1.1.1 Bio-remediation and filtering of wastes by micro-organisms, algae, plants, and animals 2.1.1.2 Chemical and physical processing of wastes 5.1.1.3 Mediation of waste, toxics, and other nuisances by non-living processes | More vegetated surfaces trapping more suspended sediment (this study (Section 3.2.2), [23,56]) and particulate phosphorus (this study (Section 3.2.2), [21,56]) from the fields during floods Conventionally dredged streams remove little nitrogen [57], while floodplains enhance nitrogen removal through intensified denitrification [22,58,59] Conventionally dredged stream beds retain little dissolved phosphorus [57], while floodplains retain more dissolved phosphorus [56,60] Decreased turbidity at high flows [59,61] Vegetative uptake of nutrients higher in TSCs due to larger vegetative biomass EXP |
Regulation and Maintenance: Regulation of physical, chemical, and biological conditions | 2.2.1.1 Controlling or preventing soil loss | Protection of bank erosion since the banks are lower and the floodplain banks do not collapse into the low-flow channel EXP |
2.2.1.3 Regulating the flows of water in our environment | Long-term functioning of drainage since the TSC bed is self-cleansing and seldom needs maintenance (this study (Section 3.2.1 and Section 3.3.1), [12,62]) Likely long-term reduction of flood risks in the fields with less maintenance needs [12,63] Higher baseflow and dry-season water levels due to narrower low-flow channel EXP | |
2.2.2.1 Pollinating our fruit trees and other plants | Floodplains offer additional habitat for pollinators and may be important nectar sources in dry years (This study (Section 3.2.4)) | |
2.2.2.3 Providing habitats for wild plants and animals that can be useful to us | Floodplain increases plant biodiversity, particularly the number of wetland species (this study (Section 3.2.3), [64]) Larger fish diversity [16] Support for protected fish species through more natural-like main channel geometry and flow conditions allowing habitat restoration [65] Macroinvertebrate communities likely benefit from improved connectivity to floodplain [17] | |
Cultural: Direct (or indirect) interactions with living systems that depend on (or do not require) presence in the environmental setting | 3.1.1.2 Watching plants and animals where they live; using nature to destress | Landscape and recreational benefits for local residents through the more variable landscapes EXP |
3.1.2.1 Researching nature | Allows increasing knowledge about the biophysical characteristics or qualities of species or ecosystems associated with nature-based solutions for agricultural or riverine water management EXP | |
3.2.2.2 The things in nature that we want future generations to enjoy or use | Non-use values from preserving endangered species, habitats, and agricultural landscapes EXP |
Variable | Units/Unit Cost | Conventional Dredging | Two-Stage Channel Design |
---|---|---|---|
Project life | years | 60 | |
Channel length | km | 14.8 | |
Maintenance interval | years | 20 | 50 |
Maintenance costs | €5/€2.5 per channel metre | −222,000 | −44,000 |
Construction costs | €0/€21.2 per channel metre | 0 | −314,000 |
Adjacent land price | €0/€3.6 per channel metre | 0 | −53,000 |
Lost crop value | €0/€0.25 per channel metre | 0 | −223,000 |
Environmental benefits for biodiversity | €50 per Unio crassus mussel | 0 | 594,000 |
Environmental benefits for water quality | €249 per phosphorus kg | 0 | 951,000 |
Net costs in 60 years | € | −222,000 | 910,000 |
Equivalent annual net cost (EAC) | € per year | −1200 | 7400 |
Associated Cost Factor | Costs (€) of Conventional Dredging | Costs (€) of Two-Stage Channel (TSC) Design | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Maintenance costs | −15,000 | −3000 | Lost crop value computed assuming the proposed CAP-AES reform (3 m of TSC width replaces the required edge-of-field buffer strips; Figure 5 and Figure 6) | |
Construction costs | - | −21,200 | ||
Adjacent land value | - | −3600 | ||
Lost crop value | - | −2800 | ||
Total costs | −15,000 | −30,600 | ||
Difference in total costs | −15,600 | |||
Benefits | Rationale for paying | Payment (€) | Notes | |
Well-functioning drainage and flood mitigation | Farmers pay the costs for ensuring drainage and flow conveyance, equaling the estimated costs of conventional dredging | −15,000 | The total cost partitioning can be realized through public funding covering 74% of TSC construction costs | |
Improved water quality and biodiversity | Public funding covers the difference in total costs as the additional benefits are collective 1 | −15,600 |
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Västilä, K.; Väisänen, S.; Koskiaho, J.; Lehtoranta, V.; Karttunen, K.; Kuussaari, M.; Järvelä, J.; Koikkalainen, K. Agricultural Water Management Using Two-Stage Channels: Performance and Policy Recommendations Based on Northern European Experiences. Sustainability 2021, 13, 9349. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13169349
Västilä K, Väisänen S, Koskiaho J, Lehtoranta V, Karttunen K, Kuussaari M, Järvelä J, Koikkalainen K. Agricultural Water Management Using Two-Stage Channels: Performance and Policy Recommendations Based on Northern European Experiences. Sustainability. 2021; 13(16):9349. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13169349
Chicago/Turabian StyleVästilä, Kaisa, Sari Väisänen, Jari Koskiaho, Virpi Lehtoranta, Krister Karttunen, Mikko Kuussaari, Juha Järvelä, and Kauko Koikkalainen. 2021. "Agricultural Water Management Using Two-Stage Channels: Performance and Policy Recommendations Based on Northern European Experiences" Sustainability 13, no. 16: 9349. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13169349
APA StyleVästilä, K., Väisänen, S., Koskiaho, J., Lehtoranta, V., Karttunen, K., Kuussaari, M., Järvelä, J., & Koikkalainen, K. (2021). Agricultural Water Management Using Two-Stage Channels: Performance and Policy Recommendations Based on Northern European Experiences. Sustainability, 13(16), 9349. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13169349