Marzieh Motallebi
Clemson University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marzieh Motallebi.
Journal of Environmental Management | 2017
Marzieh Motallebi; Dana L. Hoag; Ali Tasdighi; Mazdak Arabi; Deanna Osmond
A water quality trading (WQT) program was promulgated in North Carolina to address water quality issues related to nutrients in the highly urbanizing Jordan Lake Watershed. Although WQT programs are appealing in theory, the concept has not proved feasible in several attempts between point and nonpoint polluters in the United States. Many application hurdles that create wedges between success and failure have been evaluated in the literature. Most programs, however, face multiple hurdles; eliminating one may not clear a pathway to success. Therefore, we identify and evaluate the combined impact of four different wedges including baseline, transaction cost, trading ratio, and trading cost in the Jordan Lake Watershed program. Unfortunately, when applied to the Jordan Lake program, the analysis clearly shows that a traditional WQT program will not be feasible or address nutrient management needs in a meaningful way. The hurdles individually would be difficult to overcome, but together they appear to be unsurmountable. This analysis shows that there is enough information to pre-identify potential hurdles that could inform policy makers where, and how, the concept might work. It would have saved time, energy, and financial resources if North Carolina had done so before embarking to implement their program in the Jordan Lake Watershed.
Journal of The American Water Resources Association | 2017
Dana L. Hoag; Mazdak Arabi; Deanna Osmond; Marc Ribaudo; Marzieh Motallebi; Ali Tasdighi
A promising program to address water contamination from nutrients is water quality trading (WQT), whereby entities with high abatement costs purchase credits from entities with lower abatement costs. The concept has found some success with point source water pollution, but very few trades have occurred in over 50 programs in the United States (U.S.) that have focused on nonpoint sources (NPSs). To understand why success has been slow, we identified three environments needed for programs to succeed: physical, economic, and institutional. We estimate that only 5% of watersheds in the U.S. currently listed as nutrient impaired provide a viable physical environment for trading nitrogen; 13% are suitable for phosphorus. Economic and institutional challenges would shrink that domain even further. Therefore, we find places with the ideal physical, economic, and institutional environments necessary for feasible WQT programs are virtual policy utopias — rare places with ideal environments. Fortunately, a growing literature provides the tools necessary to identify where these policy utopias are and to expand that domain through a better understanding about how to manage WQT programs more effectively.
Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis | 2018
Rebecca D. Chandler; E. A. Mikhailova; Christopher J. Post; Stephen Moysey; Mark A. Schlautman; Julia L. Sharp; Marzieh Motallebi
ABSTRACT Ecosystems provide various goods and services (provisioning, regulating, cultural, and supporting) that benefit humans both directly and indirectly. Soil plays an important role in ecosystem services therefore soil analyses can provide quantitative and qualitative data to evaluate ecosystem goods and services. Soil analyses must be integrated with the frameworks for ecosystem services and existing organizational hierarchy of soil systems to provide missing links to scale, time, degree of computation and complexity. This case study demonstrates the importance of evaluating soil organic carbon (SOC) within this newly proposed context using glaciated soils at the Cornell University Willsboro Research Farm in upstate New York as the example. The vertical distribu tion of SOC was analyzed quantitatively by soil depth class (topsoil versus subsoil), soil order, and other relevant variables that relate to the organizational hierarchy of soil systems.
Journal of Applied Sciences | 2008
Mohammad Ghorbani; Alireza Koocheki; Marzieh Motallebi
World applied sciences journal | 2008
Naser Shahnoushi Froshani; A.G.Ebadi; Mahmoud Daneshvar Kakhki; Marzieh Motallebi
Journal of Applied Sciences | 2009
Mohammad Ghorbani; Marzieh Motallebi
Water | 2016
Marzieh Motallebi; Caela O’Connell; Dana L. Hoag; Deanna Osmond
Economic Anthropology | 2017
Caela O'Connell; Marzieh Motallebi; Deanna Osmond; Dana L. Hoag
Research Journal of Environmental Sciences | 2009
Mohammad Ghorbani; Marzieh Motallebi
World applied sciences journal | 2008
Naser Shahnoushi Froshani; Marzieh Motallebi; Mohsen Tabraei; A.G.Ebadi; Mohammad Reza Kohansal; Hassan Aghel