Print Email Facebook Twitter Exploring distributive justice in water resource allocation Title Exploring distributive justice in water resource allocation: A rival framings approach on the operationalization of equality in multi-objective optimization models for water systems Author Rimon, Farley (TU Delft Technology, Policy and Management) Contributor Zatarain Salazar, J. (mentor) Duran, J.M. (graduation committee) Kwakkel, J.H. (graduation committee) Degree granting institution Delft University of Technology Corporate name Delft University of Technology Programme Engineering and Policy Analysis Project HIPPO Lab Date 2023-08-28 Abstract Water, an essential resource for diverse purposes like environmental protection, urban water supply, energy generation, and agriculture, faces intensifying demand amid depleting supplies. Multi-Objective Optimization (MOO)-models are vital for addressing complex water system challenges with limited resources. However, varying approaches to distributive justice in these models introduce normative bias, leading to uncertainty in the derived implications from the model. This thesis is the first approach to understanding how the operationalization of distributive justice shapes the implications drawn from the 'optimal' outcomes of MOO-models. This thesis studied: 'How do different operationalization formulations for inequality in existing multi-objective optimization models shift the Pareto front?'. A rival framings approach acknowledges diversity in perspectives, for which it is suitable to contrast the operationalization formulation. The rival framing focused on the inequality metric and the aggregation method over time for this metric, both used for the formulation of inequality in the objective formulation. The case study revolves around the Conowingo Reservoir in the Lower Susquehanna River Basin. Utilizing an Evolutionary Multi-Object Direct Policy Search (EMODPS)-model, the research optimizes water allocation by incorporating an equality objective alongside baseline efficiency goals. Results underscore that the trade-off between equality and efficiency is highly dependent on the chosen operationalization for equality. Moreover, for higher levels of equality, the Pareto front will shift drastically in terms of strength and direction of trade-offs. By unravelling the complexities of justice's integration into MOO-models, advances are made in the comprehension of how distributive justice can inform decision-making. Through the elaboration of justice formulations, a future is reachable where justice is not only considered but reached. Subject Distributive justiceMulti-Objective OptimizationWater allocationTrade-off Analysis To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:55f3a343-b46e-4eb2-9f16-a523ed6bf36b Part of collection Student theses Document type master thesis Rights © 2023 Farley Rimon Files PDF MSc_Thesis_Farley_Rimon_E ... cation.pdf 31.9 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:55f3a343-b46e-4eb2-9f16-a523ed6bf36b/datastream/OBJ/view