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Wellhead treatment costs for groundwater contaminated with pesticides: A preliminary analysis for pineapple in Hawaii
Authors:Ephraim D. Leon-Guerrero  Keith Loague  Richard E. Green
Affiliation:(1) Department of Landscape Architecture, University of California, 94720 Berkeley, California, USA;(2) Department of Soil Science, University of California, 94720 Berkeley, California, USA;(3) Department of Agronomy and Soil Science, University of Hawaii, 96822 Honolulu, Hawaii, USA;(4) Present address: Contra Costa County Public Works Department, 94553-4897 Martinez, California, USA
Abstract:In Hawaii, trace concentrations of pesticides used in the production of pineapple were found in the groundwater supplies of Mililani Town in the Pearl Harbor Basin on the island of Oahu. Groundwater serves as the major source of drinking water and residents pay for wellhead treatment of the contaminated water, via their monthly water bill. The agricultural chemical users within the Pearl Harbor Basin do not include these wellhead treatment costs in their production costs. The agricultural industry benefits from using pesticides but does not pay the entire societal cost of using these chemicals. In this study we evaluate the specific financial cost of wellhead treatment, and not the economic value of groundwater. While wellhead treatment costs could conceivably be shared by several parties, this study focuses on the financial impact of the pineapple industry alone. This study factors annual wellhead treatment costs into annual pineapple production costs to measure the effect on annual financial return from pineapple production. Wellhead treatment costs are calculated from the existing granulated activated carbon (GAC) water treatment facility for Millilani Wells I and II. Pineapple production costs are estimated from previous cost of production studies. The inclusion of wellhead treatment costs produces different production-cost results, depending on the scale of analysis. At the local scale, the Mililani wellhead treatment costs can be factored into the production costs of the pineapple fields, which were probably responsible for contamination of the Mililani Wells, without causing a deficit in economic return. At the larger regional scale, however, the return from all of the pineapple grown in the Pearl Harbor Basin can not sustain the cost of wellhead treatmentfor the entire water supply of the basin. Recommendations point to the prevention of groundwater contamination as more cost-effective measure than wellhead treatment.
Keywords:Pesticides  Groundwater contamination  Cost-benefit analysis  Wellhead treatment
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