Stanford Researchers Develop Financing Framework to Fund Critical Freshwater Projects

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Stanford Researchers Develop Financing Framework to Fund Critical Freshwater Projects

A new report by a team of researchers at Stanford University offers a framework to fund water projects based on lessons learned from the energy sector

"Our sophisticated water system is slowly reaching the end of its lifetime and is in need of renewed investment due to population growth, urbanization, climate change impacts, environmental degradation, aging infrastructure, and ever-increasing operation and maintenance costs," said report co-author Newsha Ajami, the director of urban water policy at Stanford's Water in the West program. "Tackling these modern challenges calls for new thinking and innovative, multipurpose infrastructure solutions."

The new report also calls for significant investment, which is harder than ever to come by when traditional federal and state government funds are limited. Local utilities and municipalities are often too cash-strapped to meet existing operations and maintenance obligations, let alone finance new projects.

The need for innovation to the nation's water infrastructure was underscored this week by the Obama administration's unprecedented inclusion of $267 million dedicated to water innovation in the proposed federal budget.

In their report, Ajami and her co-authors identify financing tools and techniques from the electricity sector with potential to bridge the financing gap to next-generation water systems.

Among the report's recommended solutions is the use of innovative, multipurpose water projects called "distributed solutions." Designed to be implemented at a local level, such projects include "green infrastructure" built to manage storm water, or homes and offices designed to flush toilets with gray water rather than potable water. The researchers write that providing incentives for such small- to medium-scale projects at the local level can be more efficient and economical than relying on more traditional funding models.

The report recommends four central elements that are essential to upgrade the nation's water infrastructure:

Catalyzing change through external forces. Regulations such as direct enforcement, economic incentives and innovative pricing structures that have proved successful in the electricity sector can similarly be used to promote adoption of innovative water projects.

Establishing public and private funding. In the electricity sector, distributed clean energy projects – such as customer-, community- or utility-scale solar and wind energy systems ­– often rely on a diverse set of public and private funding sources. Similarly, the water sector should take advantage of funding sources such as bonds, end-user fees and venture capital.

Using resource pathways to facilitate flow of funding. Once funding for a project has been acquired, stakeholders should be able to access these funds through resource pathways. Pathways used in the electricity sector include loans and grants, rebates, tax credits and on-bill initiatives. They could be used in the water sector to promote cost-sharing opportunities among customers or to eliminate upfront costs.

Attached link

http://news.stanford.edu/news/2016/february/water-finance-framework-021016.html

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