Water Quality Trading Program
Water quality trading is a tool for achieving water quality improvements. Under the right circumstances, trading has the potential to yield both environmental and economic benefits, while promoting increased interaction among watershed stakeholders.
The water quality trading program is a voluntary program that allows a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit holder (point source) to meet its regulatory obligations by using pollutant reductions generated by another wastewater point source or non-point source.
The rules in Chapter 3745-5 of the Ohio Administrative Code provide the administrative requirements for the development and implementation of water quality trading programs in Ohio.
Ohio Trading Projects
Under Construction
Related Documents
- U.S. EPA's Water Quality Trading Evaluation, Final Report [PDF 527K] - The report assesses the effectiveness of U.S. EPAs activities to support water quality trading and provides insight on why more trading activity has not occurred. It is based on interviews with individuals associated with 11 different water quality trading programs and initiatives.
- U. S. EPAs Water Quality Trading Toolkit for Permit Writers provides NPDES permit writers with guidance on incorporating trading provisions into permits. While the Toolkit is geared toward state and regional permitting authorities, all stakeholders including permitted entities, agriculture and other nonpoint sources, watershed groups, and other parties interested in trading, will utilize the Toolkit.
- Great Miami River Watershed Water Quality Credit Trading Program Operations Manual [PDF 1,403K] - The Miami Conservancy Districts Operations Manual addresses the trading programs development, implementation, evaluation and adaptation.
- Testing the Waters: The Great Miami River Watershed Water Quality Credit Trading Program [PDF 168K] - A September 2006 article by Katherine Hamilton for the Ecosystem Marketplace.
- Alpine Cheese Phosphorus Nutrient Trading Plan [PDF 3,101K] - The plan includes a description of the pollution abatement strategies to be employed, a schedule for their implementation, and a monitoring plan to identify potential remediation sites and to gauge success over time. It also identifies the parties responsible for each part of the implementation process and includes a cooperative agreement between the Holmes Soil and Water Conservation District and Ohio EPA.
- Water Quality Trading Policy (January 13, 2003) [PDF 112K] U.S. EPAs policy on water quality trading.
- WRI Policy Note: Conservation Best Management Practices, Cost-Share, and Water Quality Trading Programs, July 2006 [PDF 323K] - This article from the World Resources Institute addresses the question, "Should ALL reductions in nutrients and sediment resulting from the implementation of conservation best management practices (BMPs) partially paid for by federal or state cost-share funding be eligible for sale in a water quality trading program?"
- WRI Policy Note: Paying for Environmental Performance: Using Reverse Auctions to Allocate Funding for Conservation Programs, January 2007 [PDF 367K] - This article from the World Resources Institute addresses the question, "Can reverse auctions be used to achieve cost-effective improvements in environmental quality?" The Miami Conservancy Districts trading program in the Great Miami River Watershed uses a reverse auction to determine which BMP proposals to fund.
- Water Quality Trading Assessment Handbook (EPA 841-B-04-001; November 2004) [PDF 1,372K] This U.S. EPA handbook was prepared to help answer the questions:
- How do you know when and where trading is the right tool?
- Will water quality trading work in my watershed?
- Getting Paid for Stewardship: An Agricultural Community Water Quality Trading Guide [PDF 3,117K] - This guide outlines the concept and basic elements of water quality trading for the individuals and organizations that serve as agricultural advisors to producers, such as soil and water conservation districts, Certified Crop Advisers (CCAs), Extension agents, farm bureaus, United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) agencies, such as the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) and Farm Service Agency (FSA), universities, producer associations and other agricultural interests.
Related Links
- Great Miami River Watershed Water Quality Credit Trading Program
- U.S. EPA Water Quality Trading Page
- Wisconsin DNR Watershed Based Pollutant Trading Page
- Minnesota River Basin General Phosphorus Permit: Phase 1 - The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency issued this permit in December 2005. It covers 40 wastewater treatment facilities and is being used to implement a TMDL for dissolved oxygen. It includes provisions for trading.
- Idaho DEQ Pollutant Trading Page
- Pennsylvania DEP Nutrient Trading Page
- Oregon DEQ Water Quality Trading Page
- Clean Water Services Watershed-based Permit - This permit was issued by Oregon DEQ to Clean Water Services, a water quality management agency. Clean Water Services operates several municipal wastewater plants, and this permit includes provisions for temperature trading for implementing a temperature TMDL.
- Environmental Trading Network - A national clearinghouse for water quality trading projects