
CONFERENCES AND WORKSHOPS
ETN Training Workshop
on Water Quality Trading
August
22-24, Cincinnati Marriott, Cincinnati OH.
Designed
for stakeholders and state agencies in EPA Region 5 and the Ohio River Basin. Presentations and speakers bios are now available
Second
National Water Quality Trading Conference
Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, May 23-25, 2006
Co-hosted
by:
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, U.S. Department of Agriculture, with the Environmental
Trading Network as one of the Cooperating Organizations. Conference agenda, presentations, and biographies have been posted.
A Workshop on Environmental Credits Generated Through Land-Use Changes:
Challenges and Approaches
March 8-9,
2006 -- Baltimore, Maryland
Sponsored
by:Texas A&M U., Department of
Agricultural Economics,The Environmental
Trading Network, Environmental
Defense Climate and Air Program
The workshop was used to study and discuss the challenges that arise when market-based mechanisms are used to encourage changes in practices on the land in order to achieve environmental goals. The primary focus was on carbon sequestration and nutrient run-off reductions, though lessons will be applicable to a wide range of environmental issues. For more information, click here.
Symposium
on Servicing Development within the Lake Simcoe Watershed
April 6, 2006 - King City, Canada
The
draft summary of the proceedings is now available. Mark S. Kieser presented: "Setting up effluent trading
programs and case studies in the US" at the conference.
2000 Great
Lakes Trading Network Conference
Chicago, IL - May 18,2000
Brochure A conference entitled "Markets for the New Millenium - How can Water Quality Trading Work for You?" drew experts in market based trading from as far as Taiwan and Japan. Over one hundred people attended the first conference of the Great Lakes Trading Network where progress on current trading demonstration projects and new ideas in trading frameworks were presented. Also attending were officials from the Environmental Protection Agency. All attested to the success of current projects and the need for evaluating the future trading development of the federal agency in trading initiatives. Highlights of the conference included a presentation by Paul Faeth of the World Resources Institute author of "Fertile Ground: Nutrient Trading's Potential to Cost Effectively Improve Water Quality". His work at WRI has focused on the viability of trading as a means of cost-effectively improving water quality throughout the United States. "Conventional regulatory approaches to water quality management can work, but they can be very expensive, and often don't target the biggest sources of pollution" said Faeth, "Our report shows that trading could save a lot of money in the watersheds we studied. With 3,400 waterways impaired by nutrients in the U.S., we're going to need a cost-effective solution to this problem." States' Perspectives on Trading to Achieve Reductions Required by the Clean Water Act, Roberta H. Savage, The Association of State and Interstate Water Pollution Control Administrators. The Chespeake Bay Program's Nutrient Trading Activities, Cy Jones, Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission. Fox-Wolf Basin 2000's Role in Watershed-Based Trading, Bruce Johnson, Fox-Wolf Basin 2000. Effluent Trading and the Lower Boise River Demonstration Project (Paper or Presentation), David Mabe, Water Director for the State of Idaho. Nitrogen Credit Trading for the Long Island Sound Watershed, Robert E. Moore, Malcolm Pirnie. Find Another Way, Paul Kramer, Rahr Malting Company. Second Progress Report on the Trading of Water Pollution Credits (Executive Summary, Full Paper), Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources. Market-Based Incentives and Water Quality, Paul Faeth, World Resources Institute.
The Network hosts monthly conference calls. Conference calls are typically held the last Wednesday of each month from 11:00 am to noon, Eastern Time.
The phone
number for the conference call is 630-536-0905, room #1232. The conference is
limited to 25 participants. Therefore, if you wish to participate, be sure to
phone promptly at 11:00 a.m. EST. Follow the links below for minutes from ETN
calls.
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2004 |
2003 |
2002 |
2001 |
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November 12, 2003 (Draft) October 15, 2003 (Draft) |
2000
1999
A Growing Water Grant, funded by the Great Lakes Protection Fund, has been awarded to the ETN. Titled Restoring Flow Regimes through Growing Water Transactions: Basin-wide Case Studies, the project will examine market mechanisms for water conservation and examine four case studies. The project work plan will be posted here soon. Project Partners: Applied Ecological Services, Environmental Banc and Exchange, Kieser & Associates, King and Associates, Policy Solutions, The Shaw Group, Sixteenth Street Community Health Center
Click here to visit the project home page.
View
GLPF "Restoring Natural Flow Regimes" previously funded projects.
US EPA TARGETED WATERSHED 2004
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On July 19, 2004 the USEPA announced its Targeted Watersheds under the 2004 program. Trading was featured in five of the fourteen targeted watersheds. These watersheds include the Lake Tahoe (CA/NV), Bear River (ID, UT, WY), Kalamazoo River (MI), Cape Fear (NC) and Passaic River (NJ). |
| Read a summary of each trading project (PDF). Link to the US EPA Targeted Watersheds page. |
For more information, check out the Kalamazoo River 2004 EPA Targeted Watershed Grant website. |
ETN, partnering with the World Resources Institute and Kieser & Associates, will assist the Kalamazoo River project leader, the Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish Band of Pottawatomi (The Gun Lake Tribe), in developing, testing and implementing ?model ? tools and infrastructure necessary to enable functioning water quality trading markets. Funding will support agricultural BMPs to achieve load allocation goals in an EPA-approved Kalamazoo River phosphorus TMDL. Reductions will be used to test marketplace instruments and apply agricultural participation and credit banking schemes. Trading approaches will be instituted that allow for voluntary participation, insulate producers from NPDES permit liability and can be delivered consistently through traditional programs. Transferable marketplace and regulatory instruments developed here will: facilitate access to trading programs; minimize transaction and administrative costs;connect buyers and sellers; facilitate decision-making, and; quantify and track reductions. Tools will be integrated with existing regulatory programs to foster active markets. More information is available here.
The Great Lakes Protection Fund
(GLPF) provided financial assistance to complete a 6-month project aimed to
promote market-based approach to ecosystem improvement in the Great Lakes
through further developing the well-maintained and functioning Environmental
Trading Network. This grant also supported a feasibility study on an ecosystem
multiple markets (EMMs) framework for achieving higher ecosystem improvement
than current market-based schemes.