• Title/Summary/Keyword: water resource policy

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The Impacts of Climate Change on Paddy Water Demand and Unit Duty of Water using High-Resolution Climate Scenarios (고해상도 기후시나리오를 이용한 논용수 수요량 및 단위용수량의 기후변화 영향 분석)

  • Yoo, Seung-Hwan;Choi, Jin-Yong;Lee, Sang-Hyun;Oh, Yun-Gyeong;Park, Na-Young
    • Journal of The Korean Society of Agricultural Engineers
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    • v.54 no.2
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    • pp.15-26
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    • 2012
  • For stable and sustainable crop production, understanding the effects of climate changes on agricultural water resources is necessary to minimize the negative effects which might occur due to shifting weather conditions. Although various studies have been carried out in Korea concerning changes in evapotranspiration and irrigation water requirement, the findings are still difficult to utilize fordesigning the demand and unit duty of water, which are the design criteria of irrigation systems. In this study, the impact analysis of climate changes on the paddy water demand and unit duty of water was analyzed based on the high resolution climate change scenarios (specifically under the A1B scenario) provided by the Korea Meteorological Administration. The result of the study indicated that average changes in the paddy water demand in eight irrigation districts were estimated as -2.4 % (2025s), -0.2 % (2055s), and 3.2 % (2085s). The unit duty of water was estimated to increase on an average within 2 % during paddy transplanting season and within 5 % during growing season after transplanting. This result could be utilized for irrigation system design, agricultural water resource development, and rice paddy cultivation policy-making in South Korea.

Freshwater Conflicts and Sustainable Policies in the Asia-Pacific Region : Cases of Seoul and Sydney (아시아-태평양 지역의 물 갈등과 지속가능한 정책 : 서울과 시드니의 비교)

  • Choi, Byung-Doo;Rumley, Dennis;Son, Myoung-Won;Lumley, Sarah
    • Journal of the Korean association of regional geographers
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    • v.7 no.4
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    • pp.146-164
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    • 2001
  • The purpose of this paper is to outline a research agenda for the evaluation of the sustainability of freshwater policies, especially as they relate to large cities in the Asia-Pacific region, and to co-work a comparative study on the cases of Seoul and Sydney on the basis of the research agenda. The overall long-tenn aim of the present research is to develop a framework for sustainable urban freshwater policy in the Asia-Pacific region. The nature of freshwater policies for a sample of 16 large cities in the Asia-Pacific region will be critically evaluated for 5 years in the future. For the purposes of this research agenda, four main types of urban water conflict have been evaluated - jurisdictional conflicts, conflicts related to accessibility, sectoral conflicts and environmental conflicts. Of course, in reality, aspects of these four types of conflict invariably overlap. In the case study, the environmental conflict over fresh water of Seoul can be seen as a jurisdictional, sectoral and accessibility-related conflict between the central government and Seoul local government which want to regulate the lan-use with the water conservation zone around the Paldang Dam located at a upstream of the Han River on the hand, and the Yangpyong local governmant and its population within the conservation zone which have struggled against such a regulation, on the other. In the case study on the Sydeny water crisis in 1998, the environmental conflict over fresh water of Sydney in Australia can be seen as a jurisdictional conflict between the State government and the Sydney local government and the corporatized Sydney Water which have been responsible to supply fresh water on the one hand, and the Sydney population who have been suffered from the contaminated water, on the other. Over the past ten years, both globally and in the Asia-Pacific region, including in S. Korea and Australia, the concept of sustainable development has taken on a growing role in the determination of environmental policy. The balance for sustainable policy would be between the requirement to augment water supply to cope with projected future demands and the need to improve efficiency of water use.

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The Change Process of River Management Policy and the Factors of Dam and River-mouth Weir's Problems in Japan (일본 하천관리정책의 변화과정과 댐.하구언 문제의 요인)

  • Ito, Tatsuya;Lee, Chul Woo
    • Journal of the Korean association of regional geographers
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    • v.20 no.2
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    • pp.176-188
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    • 2014
  • Since the late 1990s, a nationwide movement against dam and river-mouth weir plans in Japan has been promoted with a movement against a river-mouth weir for the Nagara river(長良川). This movement has been a catalyst for institutional frameworks on the central government's dam and river-mouth weir plans. Subsequently, water resource and river management policies have entered a new phase, with provinces governors's participation in "Statements on withdrawal from dam and river-mouth weir" as well as the seizing of power by the Democratic Party. However, problems with dams and river-mouth weirs have been confused due to poor countermeasures from the Democratic Party and to the Liberal Democratic Party(LDP)'s return to power. The fundamental causes on this situation are the non-establishment of fiscal norms for public projects and the rigidity of the water-right allocation system in Jananese policy-making processes. To successfully settle future policy on water resources and rivers, the first priority is to prepare specific institutional frameworks on finance of public projects and to organize a practical policy coordination system among government organizations. These policy tasks provide implications for river and water management policy in Korea.

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Price Perception under Increasing Block Rates - The Case of Residential Water Demand - (누진요금제도에서의 가격 인식: 가정용 상수도 수요 분석)

  • Kim, Yeonbae;Kim, Tai-Yoo
    • Environmental and Resource Economics Review
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    • v.10 no.2
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    • pp.161-172
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    • 2001
  • 누진요금에서의 수요행위는 그 복잡성으로 인해 많은 논의를 불러 왔다. 그러한 논의 중 주요한 하나는 과연 소비자들이 한계가격에 반응하는가 아니면 평균가격에 반응하는가이다. 본 연구에서 우리는 서울시 가정용 상수도 수요 자료를 사용하여 체증 누진요금에서의 가격인식 행동을 분석하였다. Shin (1985)의 방법론이 분석을 위하여 사용되었으며, 내생성 문제를 해결하기 위해 도구변수 추정법이 사용되었다. 분석 결과 서울의 경우에는 소비자들이 한계가격보다는 평균가격에 반응함을 알 수 있었다.

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Legal Issues in Commercial Use of Space Resources: Legal Problems and Policy Implications of U.S. Commercial Space Launch Competitiveness Act of 2015 (우주 자원의 상업적 이용에 관한 법적 문제 - 미국의 2015년 '우주 자원의 탐사 및 이용에 관한 법률' 의 구조와 쟁점 -)

  • Kim, Young-Ju
    • The Korean Journal of Air & Space Law and Policy
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    • v.32 no.1
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    • pp.419-477
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    • 2017
  • In Space contains valuable natural resources. These provide a compelling reason for entrepreneurs, investors, and governments to pursue space exploration and settlement. The Outer Space Treaty of 1967 explicitly forbids any government from claiming a celestial resource such as the Moon or a planet. Article II of the Outer Space Treaty states that "outer space, including the Moon and other celestial bodies, is not subject to national appropriation by claim of sovereignty, by means of use or occupation, or by any other means." The U.S. Commercial Space Launch Competitiveness Act of 2015 (CSLCA), however, makes significant advances in furthering U.S. commercial space industry, which explicitly allows U.S. citizens to engage in the commercial exploration and exploitation of 'space resources' including water and minerals. Thus, some scholars argue that the United States recognizing ownership of space resources is an act of sovereignty, and that the act violates the Outer Space Treaty. This paper suggests that it is necessary to guarantee the right to resources harvested in outer space. More specifically, a private ownership of extracted space resources needs to promote new space business and industry. As resources on Earth become increasingly difficult and expensive to mine, it is clear that our laws and policies must encourage private appropriation of space resources. CSLCA which addresses all aspects of space resource extraction will be one way to encourage space commercial activity.

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Balancing Water Supply Reliability, Flood Hazard Mitigation and Environmental Resilience in Large River Systems

  • Goodwin, Peter
    • Proceedings of the Korea Water Resources Association Conference
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    • 2016.05a
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    • pp.1-1
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    • 2016
  • Many of the world's large ecosystems are severely stressed due to population growth, water quality and quantity problems, vulnerability to flood and drought, and the loss of native species and cultural resources. Consequences of climate change further increase uncertainties about the future. These major societal challenges must be addressed through innovations in governance, policy, and ways of implementing management strategies. Science and engineering play a critical role in helping define possible alternative futures that could be achieved and the possible consequences to economic development, quality of life, and sustainability of ecosystem services. Science has advanced rapidly during the past decade with the emergence of science communities coalescing around 'Grand Challenges' and the maturation of how these communities function has resulted in large interdisciplinary research networks. An example is the River Experiment Center of KICT that engages researchers from throughout Korea and the world. This trend has been complemented by major advances in sensor technologies and data synthesis to accelerate knowledge discovery. These factors combine to allow scientific debate to occur in a more open and transparent manner. The availability of information and improved communication of scientific and engineering issues is raising the level of dialogue at the science-policy interface. However, severe challenges persist since scientific discovery does not occur on the same timeframe as management actions, policy decisions or at the pace sometimes expected by elected officials. Common challenges include the need to make decisions in the face of considerable uncertainty, ensuring research results are actionable and preventing science being used by special interests to delay or obsfucate decisions. These challenges are explored in the context of examples from the United States, including the California Bay-Delta system. California transfers water from the wetter northern part of the state to the drier southern part of the state through the Central Valley Project since 1940 and this was supplemented by the State Water Project in 1973. The scale of these activities is remarkable: approximately two thirds of the population of Californians rely on water from the Delta, these waters also irrigate up to 45% of the fruits & vegetables produced in the US, and about 80% of California's commercial fishery species live in or migrate through the Bay-Delta. This Delta region is a global hotspot for biodiversity that provides habitat for over 700 species, but is also a hotspot for the loss of biodiversity with more than 25 species currently listed by the Endangered Species Act. Understanding the decline of the fragile ecosystem of the Bay-Delta system and the potential consequences to economic growth if water transfers are reduced for the environment, the California State Legislature passed landmark legislation in 2009 (CA Water Code SS 85054) that established "Coequal goals of providing a more reliable water supply for California and protecting, restoring, and enhancing the Delta ecosystem". The legislation also stated that "The coequal goals shall be achieved in a manner that protects and enhances the unique cultural, recreational, natural resource, and agricultural values of the Delta as an evolving place." The challenges of integrating policy, management and scientific research will be described through this and other international examples.

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Appropriate Policy for DSM Program in Competitive Electric Market (전력산업 주조개편에 따른 수요관리 추진방향)

  • Jin, B.M.;Rhee, C.H.;Kim, C.S.
    • Proceedings of the KIEE Conference
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    • 2001.05a
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    • pp.334-338
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    • 2001
  • The importance of DSM Program is increasing since it can solve the problems of electric power resource space shortage, air & water pollution and create new industry and induce economic development through energy import reduction. This study describes the government's policy and direction on DSM at the national level after introducing competition in electricity market. Moreover, it tries to make contribution to government's decision-making by analyzing existing DSM programs' implementation and providing new evaluation system for DSM programs.

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A study on the evaluation system of climate policy measures in the water resource sector: A case study of Chungcheongnam-do's climate change adaptation implementation plan (수자원 분야 기후정책의 평가시스템에 관한 연구: 충청남도 기후변화적응대책 세부시행계획을 중심으로)

  • Park, Hun;Cho, Ara;Choi, Dongjin
    • Journal of Korean Society of Water and Wastewater
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    • v.33 no.6
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    • pp.421-428
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    • 2019
  • This study developed an evaluation system of adaptation countermeasures for climate change in the water resources sector using the Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP), and the assessment procedures were applied to the Second Chungcheongnam-do Climate Change Adaptation Implementation Plan (Chungnam Implementation Plan). Firstly, the evaluation criteria are composed of two levels according to the hierarchical structure, and AHP gives priority to 4 evaluation criteria of the first level and 16 alternative indicators of the second level. Secondly, after the importance of the evaluation criteria or indicators has been determined, the significance of each measure was evaluated by applying it to the water-sector measures of the Chungnam Implementation Plan, and the effectiveness of the evaluation system was validated. The Chungnam case study shows that the evaluation system will be more effective and efficient when it is applied during development phase rather than after the implementation plan is finalized. It is also expected that the evaluation system will be used to evaluate and prioritize climate change adaptation policies in other regions, and then to compare the means of adaptation to climate change in various regions and to select recommendation policies.

The Case Study of Economic Value Assessment of Spring Rainfall in the Aspect of Water Resources (수자원 측면에서의 봄비의 경제적 가치평가 사례 연구)

  • Park, So-Yeon;Ryoo, Kyong-Sik;Kim, Jung-Yun;Kim, Baek-Jo
    • Journal of Environmental Science International
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    • v.23 no.2
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    • pp.193-205
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    • 2014
  • The direct-runoff of South Korea's representative dams (Soyanggang, Chungju, Andong, Daecheong, and Seomjingang) and precipitation were analyzed mainly with the evenly distributed spring rainfall events across the country for the last five years. For precipitation, an increasing was presented during the period 2008-2011, but did not continue to increasing 2012. The average precipitation of the five dams displayed a similar trend. Except for Chungju and Andong Dams, the trend of runoff was similar to the one shown in the precipitation. Despite the precipitation of 2009 increased, the runoff volume decreased for Andong and Chungju Dams. In addition, Chungju Dam remarkably showed a bigger runoff volume compared to other dams. As for the Sumjingang Dam, the runoff volume was the smallest, and the difference is as great as over 15-fold when compared to other runoff values. After the result of analyzing the relation between a single runoff event and synoptic weather patterns, pattern 4 contributed to the greatest impact on this event and weather patterns. The total runoff volume of the five dams for spring rain event for the last five years that exhibited this characteristic was estimated at 5.68 billion tons($10^6m^3$). Lastly, the value of this estimation was assessed as approximately 273.1 billion KRW.

Estimating of the Greenhouse Gas Mitigation and Function of Water Resources Conservation through Conservation of Surface Soils Erosion and Policy Suggestion (표토유실 보전을 통한 온실가스배출 저감과 수자원 보전 기능의 산출 및 정책제안)

  • Oh, Seung-Min;Kim, Hyuck Soo;Lee, Sang-Pil;Lee, Jong Geon;Jeong, Seok Soon;Lim, Kyung Jae;Kim, Sung-Chul;Park, Youn Shik;Lee, Giha;Hwang, Sang-Il;Yang, Jae-E
    • Journal of Soil and Groundwater Environment
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    • v.22 no.6
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    • pp.74-84
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    • 2017
  • Soil erosion is often extreme in Korea due to high rainfall intensities and steep slopes, and climate change has also increased the risk of erosion. Despite its significane, erosion-induced soil organic carbon (SOC) emission and water resource loss are not well understood, along with the lack of an integrated surface soil erosion protection policy. Therefore, to design adequate protection policies, land users, scientists, engineers and decision makers need proper information about surface soil and watershed properties related to greenhouse gas emission potential and water conservation capability, respectively. Assuming the total soil erosion of $346Tg\;yr^{-1}$, soil organic matter (SOM) content of 2% (58% of SOM is SOC), and mineralization rate of 20% of the displaced carbon, erosion-induced carbon emission could reach $800Gg\;C\;yr^{-1}$. Also the available water capacity of the soil was estimated to be 15.8 billion tons, which was 14 times higher than the yearly water supply demand in Seoul, Korea. Therefore, in order to prevent of soil erosion, this study proposes a three-stage plan for surface soil erosion prevention: 1) classification of soil erosion risk and scoring of surface soil quality, 2) selection of priority areas for conservation and best management practices (BMP), and 3) application of BMP and post management.