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Could catchment conservation be funded through urban water tariffs? A case study of three South African cities

Water scarcity is a global issue that has traditionally been addressed by over-abstracting surface water and constructing more dams. However, these solutions are environmentally destructive and, in some cases, insufficient to meet future water demands. To secure future water supply, it is necessary...

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Main Author: du Plessis, Nicola
Other Authors: Turpie, Jane
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author du Plessis, Nicola
author2 Turpie, Jane
author_browse Turpie, Jane
du Plessis, Nicola
author_facet Turpie, Jane
du Plessis, Nicola
author_sort du Plessis, Nicola
collection Thesis
description Water scarcity is a global issue that has traditionally been addressed by over-abstracting surface water and constructing more dams. However, these solutions are environmentally destructive and, in some cases, insufficient to meet future water demands. To secure future water supply, it is necessary to invest in the protection and restoration of catchment areas which have become degraded due to human activities. In many developing countries, catchment management is financed solely by public funding, which is often insufficient to cover the costs of catchment conservation. Supplementary funding sources thus need to be investigated to ensure the future success of these interventions. This study aimed to address whether household water tariff pricing could be used as a mechanism for securing funds for catchment restoration. The objectives of the study were to (i) elicit households' willingness to pay (WTP) for water, (ii) determine factors influencing WTP, and (iii) investigate whether aggregate revenue generated from households' WTP at the municipal scale could cover the costs needed for catchment conservation in that water service provider region. Household surveys were conducted on 1244 households in three coastal metropolitan municipalities in South Africa: the City of Cape Town, Nelson Mandela Bay, and eThekwini. Contingent valuation revealed that average WTP for water across all three municipalities was R540 per household per month, 4.6% more than what households currently pay for water. Factors that significantly influenced WTP included income, age, household size, municipality, and satisfaction with municipal service delivery. Based on the WTP for 11 income categories, aggregate WTP for water amounted to R5.94 billion per year for the City of Cape Town, R5.83 billion per year for eThekwini, and R1.26 billion per year for Nelson Mandela Bay municipality. This translated to a positive consumer surplus of R1.2 billion for the City of Cape Town and R826 million for eThekwini, which is approximately three times greater than the estimated budgets required to cover the costs to restore both of the catchment areas supplying water to these municipalities. Since WTP for water was lower than the amount that residents currently pay in Nelson Mandela Bay, water pricing cannot be considered a mechanism to finance catchment conservation for this municipality. Choice models further revealed that households were willing to pay 34% more than their current water bill to avoid water restrictions, and 22% more to secure water supply through more environmentally sustainable options. These results demonstrate the importance of context and scale when making water investment and pricing decisions over the longer term.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:44:09.904Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
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publisherStr Department of Biological Sciences
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37163 Could catchment conservation be funded through urban water tariffs? A case study of three South African cities du Plessis, Nicola Turpie, Jane Visser, Martine Anderson, Pippin Conservation Biology Water scarcity is a global issue that has traditionally been addressed by over-abstracting surface water and constructing more dams. However, these solutions are environmentally destructive and, in some cases, insufficient to meet future water demands. To secure future water supply, it is necessary to invest in the protection and restoration of catchment areas which have become degraded due to human activities. In many developing countries, catchment management is financed solely by public funding, which is often insufficient to cover the costs of catchment conservation. Supplementary funding sources thus need to be investigated to ensure the future success of these interventions. This study aimed to address whether household water tariff pricing could be used as a mechanism for securing funds for catchment restoration. The objectives of the study were to (i) elicit households' willingness to pay (WTP) for water, (ii) determine factors influencing WTP, and (iii) investigate whether aggregate revenue generated from households' WTP at the municipal scale could cover the costs needed for catchment conservation in that water service provider region. Household surveys were conducted on 1244 households in three coastal metropolitan municipalities in South Africa: the City of Cape Town, Nelson Mandela Bay, and eThekwini. Contingent valuation revealed that average WTP for water across all three municipalities was R540 per household per month, 4.6% more than what households currently pay for water. Factors that significantly influenced WTP included income, age, household size, municipality, and satisfaction with municipal service delivery. Based on the WTP for 11 income categories, aggregate WTP for water amounted to R5.94 billion per year for the City of Cape Town, R5.83 billion per year for eThekwini, and R1.26 billion per year for Nelson Mandela Bay municipality. This translated to a positive consumer surplus of R1.2 billion for the City of Cape Town and R826 million for eThekwini, which is approximately three times greater than the estimated budgets required to cover the costs to restore both of the catchment areas supplying water to these municipalities. Since WTP for water was lower than the amount that residents currently pay in Nelson Mandela Bay, water pricing cannot be considered a mechanism to finance catchment conservation for this municipality. Choice models further revealed that households were willing to pay 34% more than their current water bill to avoid water restrictions, and 22% more to secure water supply through more environmentally sustainable options. These results demonstrate the importance of context and scale when making water investment and pricing decisions over the longer term. 2023-03-02T12:16:15Z 2023-03-02T12:16:15Z 2022 2023-02-20T12:42:11Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37163 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Conservation Biology
du Plessis, Nicola
Could catchment conservation be funded through urban water tariffs? A case study of three South African cities
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Could catchment conservation be funded through urban water tariffs? A case study of three South African cities
title_full Could catchment conservation be funded through urban water tariffs? A case study of three South African cities
title_fullStr Could catchment conservation be funded through urban water tariffs? A case study of three South African cities
title_full_unstemmed Could catchment conservation be funded through urban water tariffs? A case study of three South African cities
title_short Could catchment conservation be funded through urban water tariffs? A case study of three South African cities
title_sort could catchment conservation be funded through urban water tariffs a case study of three south african cities
topic Conservation Biology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37163
work_keys_str_mv AT duplessisnicola couldcatchmentconservationbefundedthroughurbanwatertariffsacasestudyofthreesouthafricancities