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New England Public Policy Center
Research Report No. 05-1
by Robert Tannenwald
and Nicholas Turner
Given New England’s ample rainfall, green forests, and extensive
wetlands, many of the region’s inhabitants might question
the notion that it faces potentially severe water shortages.
Yet, parts of the region already confront such shortages.
These shortages are likely to spread, absent corrective action.
This paper describes the characteristics of New England responsible
for its looming water problems, identifies areas within the
region most vulnerable to such problems, and analyzes alternative
strategies for alleviating them. Small, shallow, porous aquifers
are the region’s primary geological impediment to trapping
and tapping adequate water supplies. Urbanization and a spatial
mismatch between economic growth and water availability are
contributing factors. Areas within the region most vulnerable
to water shortages include, but are not limited to, southern
Maine, southern New Hampshire, northern Vermont, and Massachusetts’ North
Shore and Route 495 corridor. While no single solution to
potential water shortages is clearly superior, the authors
conclude that conservation is a promising, effective tactic
that should be an important component of any water strategy.
Keywords: natural resource (water) economics, regional resource/land
use, publicly provided water supplies, natural resource (water)
policy
JEL classification codes: H40, Q25, Q28, R14
- Full-text paper, with maps and tables (2.1
MB)

- Paper only (330 K)

Maps and tables only (1.8
MB) 
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