The potential of collective action for the control of nonpoint source pollution in European rural areas
Action collective et gestion des pollutions diffuses agricoles dans les zones rurales européennes
Résumé
This paper aims at providing for a first assessment of the potential of co-operative agreements for limiting non-point source nitrate pollution from agriculture. In the European Union (EU) context, regulatory instruments and individual incentive schemes have been the main policy instruments implemented to control pollution from agriculture. There also exist some examples of voluntary cooperation among farmers to enhance water quality. However, there has been no systematic assessment of the costs and benefits of such agri-environmental cooperation. Transaction costs economics are used as a framework to assess the potential advantages of collective action as an alternative or a complement to other policy tools. To identify the conditions under which cooperation may be successful, we then use the Socio-Ecological Systems framework (Ostrom, 2009). A review of empirical studies relative to cases of collective action for agricultural water pollution prevention in the EU context serves as a basis for the identification of the factors likely to affect the success of cooperation for water quality management in agriculture. The analysis relies more particularly on two cases: the Environmental Co-operatives in the Netherlands and the “Ferti-Mieux” operations in France.