PROPOSAL TO STUDY ECONOMIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS OF REDUCING SOIL EROSION IN ALBANIA
James G. BOCKHEIM
ltc-uw@facstaff.wisc.edu
Working paper, no. 9. Albania series
September 1997, 12 pages; Adobe Acrobat pdf 84K bytes
Retrieve FULL TEXT in Adobe Acrobat format
| To save document directly to your computer for later viewing or printing, hold down the <shift> key while you click on the above link. | |
| Adobe Acrobat Reader software is required to read and print this document. If you do not have Acrobat Reader already, you can download free software now. | |
ABSTRACT: Soil erosion and associated nonpoint pollution are critical problems
affecting the economic welfare, food security, and public health of Albania. Nearly 60
million tons of sediment are deposited by Albanian rivers into the Adriatic Sea each year.
This translates into a national average soil erosion rate of 27.2 tons per hectare per
year, which is more than twice the level of "tolerable" erosion established by
many countries. This also means that an average of 2.3 mm of valuable topsoil are lost to
the ocean each year. Accompanying the topsoil are agrochemicals such as pesticides and
fertilizers as well as industrial pollutants, which are transported to reservoirs, rivers,
lakes, and the ocean, thereby causing a degradation in water quality. The objectives of
the proposed study include: to quantify the magnitude of soil erosion and its effects on
water quality at three levels of intensity: site-specific, watershed, and the nation as a
whole; to identify high-risk areas for immediate soil erosion control using a geographic
information system; to create a public awareness program that uses soil erosion control as
an example of land protection in Albania; to monitor the effectiveness of soil erosion
control on discharge of sediments into the Adriatic Sea using remote sensing; and to
determine the economic benefits of soil erosion control.
Keywords: Soil conservation--Environmental aspects--Albania; Soil
conservation--Economic aspects--Albania

Return to Publications Page
Return to LTC Home Page

Full text document posted courtesy of AgEcon Search: Research in Agricultural Economics http://agecon.lib.umn.edu
Please send questions or comments regarding this web page to