Impact of nitrate fertilizer restrictions on Salt River Project and Roosevelt Water Conservation District growers.

Environmental pollution has become one of the most important of society's problems and the extent of this problem continues to grow every day. Society, through an extreme concern for pollution, is beginning to construct policies, laws, and institutions to deal with this problem. Unfortunately,...

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Main Author: Schoneman, David Frederick,1947-
Other Authors: Willett, Gayle S.
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 1974
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191600
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1916002015-10-23T04:37:27Z Impact of nitrate fertilizer restrictions on Salt River Project and Roosevelt Water Conservation District growers. Schoneman, David Frederick,1947- Willett, Gayle S. Day, John C. Environmental pollution has become one of the most important of society's problems and the extent of this problem continues to grow every day. Society, through an extreme concern for pollution, is beginning to construct policies, laws, and institutions to deal with this problem. Unfortunately, in many cases, laws are being enacted, policies developed, and institutions built or modified to combat pollution without full knowledge of the parameters of the system upon which they must operate. Several types of regulatory programs may be imposed by government to control farm pollution. For example, regulations may take the form of restrictions upon inputs used in production, land use, and waste disposal practices. All of these controls have potentially significant effects upon farm operation and costs of production. An important aspect of this problem is the probable economic impact of such restrictions upon the agricultural industry and upon individual producers. This study investigates the economic impact of nitrate fertilizer restrictions on Arizona's Salt River Project and Roosevelt Water Conservation District growers. A procedure to identify this impact, incorporating production functions and a linear programming formulation was utilized. The integrated model is described, the results for the irrigation districts are presented, and tentative implications drawn. Limitations of the study and additional research possibilities are also outlined. 1974 Thesis-Reproduction (electronic) text http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191600 213386730 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description Environmental pollution has become one of the most important of society's problems and the extent of this problem continues to grow every day. Society, through an extreme concern for pollution, is beginning to construct policies, laws, and institutions to deal with this problem. Unfortunately, in many cases, laws are being enacted, policies developed, and institutions built or modified to combat pollution without full knowledge of the parameters of the system upon which they must operate. Several types of regulatory programs may be imposed by government to control farm pollution. For example, regulations may take the form of restrictions upon inputs used in production, land use, and waste disposal practices. All of these controls have potentially significant effects upon farm operation and costs of production. An important aspect of this problem is the probable economic impact of such restrictions upon the agricultural industry and upon individual producers. This study investigates the economic impact of nitrate fertilizer restrictions on Arizona's Salt River Project and Roosevelt Water Conservation District growers. A procedure to identify this impact, incorporating production functions and a linear programming formulation was utilized. The integrated model is described, the results for the irrigation districts are presented, and tentative implications drawn. Limitations of the study and additional research possibilities are also outlined.
author2 Willett, Gayle S.
author_facet Willett, Gayle S.
Schoneman, David Frederick,1947-
author Schoneman, David Frederick,1947-
spellingShingle Schoneman, David Frederick,1947-
Impact of nitrate fertilizer restrictions on Salt River Project and Roosevelt Water Conservation District growers.
author_sort Schoneman, David Frederick,1947-
title Impact of nitrate fertilizer restrictions on Salt River Project and Roosevelt Water Conservation District growers.
title_short Impact of nitrate fertilizer restrictions on Salt River Project and Roosevelt Water Conservation District growers.
title_full Impact of nitrate fertilizer restrictions on Salt River Project and Roosevelt Water Conservation District growers.
title_fullStr Impact of nitrate fertilizer restrictions on Salt River Project and Roosevelt Water Conservation District growers.
title_full_unstemmed Impact of nitrate fertilizer restrictions on Salt River Project and Roosevelt Water Conservation District growers.
title_sort impact of nitrate fertilizer restrictions on salt river project and roosevelt water conservation district growers.
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 1974
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191600
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