Incentives for Adoption of Low Impact Development Approaches on a Larger Scale
Publication: World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2008: Ahupua'A
Abstract
On-site integrated water management has become one of the critical elements for protecting our water and treating it as a useful resource. Water conservation, capture, and reuse can help maintain a supply of water for current and future water needs. Preventing excessive quantities of runoff while maintaining the quality of surface waters can reduce or, in some cases, eliminate pollution from entering our natural drainage areas and limit hydromodification thereby protecting the ecological functioning of our natural receiving waters (rivers, streams, lakes, and wetlands). Despite the current regulatory environment, there are inconsistencies in the ability to successfully implement on-site integrated water management. Reasons for this include the necessity for regulators to approve new approaches (e.g., new road standards, site clustering), a change in designs standards, consideration of whole-life cycle cost, permit reviewers must have proper training and approved procedures, and the public must become more educated in stormwater management. While it is hoped that developers will recognize the validity and marketability of integrated water management, one of the largest impediments to implementation is the lack of incentives to encourage developers and builders to use integrated water management techniques. It is necessary to focus research on tools that lead to the successful adoption of on-site integrated water management, in particular methods that may condition and encourage public, developer, and builder acceptances of this approach. A watershed sustainability index based on holistic water management strategies that provide a framework for evaluation and a transparent rating system for new and redevelopment projects would be developed in this research effort. The watershed index, created through an expert panel, would define a set of standards and apply a numerical "credit" method measuring the degree to which the standards are met. The standards would be based on low impact development techniques such as integrated site design and decentralized stormwater controls that value greater flow attenuation, larger runoff volume reductions, and extended runoff duration while also minimizing the generation and transport of stormwater pollutants. The index would use an independent, third-party verification process to "score" a development's design and build based on on-site integrated water management and incorporation of multiple benefit techniques. Watershed managers, regulators, and developers would be able to estimate the number of credits earned as a measure of effort to minimize land development impacts on hydrology and water quality.
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© 2008 American Society of Civil Engineers.
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Published online: Apr 26, 2012
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