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Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
Trade-offs across values in cesspool management highlight challenges to policy making
Ist Teil von
  • Journal of environmental management, 2023-03, Vol.330, p.116853, Article 116853
Ort / Verlag
England: Elsevier Ltd
Erscheinungsjahr
2023
Link zum Volltext
Quelle
MEDLINE
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • On-site Sewage Disposal Systems (OSDS) are globally common, and in Hawai'i they present a risk of contamination to drinking water sources and nearshore waters. State legislation has commanded that all cesspools are to be banned by 2050, thus requiring tens of thousands of systems to be converted in the coming decades. This project followed a participatory structured decision-making (SDM) approach to collaboratively design cost-effective and equitable solutions for thousands of cesspools in the high elevation areas of north Maui, Hawai'i. Participatory workshops with a diverse group of stakeholders set ten objectives and brainstormed 33 alternatives, for which the technical team then modeled groundwater nutrients, costs, and equity. All alternatives posed trade-offs, though composting toilets performed best across most objectives, albeit with high maintenance burden. Discounting innovative toilets, the multi-objective analysis suggests that the state should invest in cluster sewering of high-density communities, followed by incentivizing septic tank solutions in properties with the highest effluent flow first, then expanding across the area. The total project cost (installation and operation/maintenance) would be $183–258 million, depending upon the sewer-septic combination. An efficiency frontier reveals sub-par combinations, including aerobic treatment units and passive absorption systems, which cost much more and deliver lower mass flux reduction than more cost-effective alternatives. This study contributes a novel case of rural sanitation to the literature in which decision support tools are used to facilitate evidence-based, collaborative decision-making for sanitation planning. The state could use a similar participatory SDM process when approaching other communities to discuss their cesspool upgrade strategies. Broadening the use of decision analytic techniques can have wider ecological, economic, and social benefits for the state and contexts beyond Hawai'i, as SDM provides a transparent and rigorous, evidence-based decision-theoretic framework to explore multiple values and strategies to address difficult resource management problems. •Cesspools responsible for 33% of groundwater nitrogen; are the only manageable source.•Site conditions limit technical options for cesspool upgrades, whose costs and benefits vary.•Trade-offs between objectives complicate decisions on cesspool upgrade strategies.•Structured decision-making reveals creative alternatives to meet stakeholder objectives.•Converting all cesspools in area would cost $183–258 million over the next 60 years.
Sprache
Englisch
Identifikatoren
ISSN: 0301-4797
eISSN: 1095-8630
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.116853
Titel-ID: cdi_crossref_primary_10_1016_j_jenvman_2022_116853

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