| Literature DB >> 34642386 |
Fahimeh Mirzaei-Nodoushan1, Omid Bozorg-Haddad2, Vijay P Singh3, Hugo A Loáiciga4.
Abstract
Transboundary river basins give rise to complex water-sharing decision making that can be analyzed as a game in the sense of dynamic game theory, as done in this work. The sharing of transboundary water resources depends on the long-term shifting interactions between upstream and downstream countries, which has received limited research attention in the past. The water-sharing strategy of a riparian country depends on the strategies of other countries over time. This paper presents an evolutionary game method to analyze the long-term water-sharing strategies of countries encompassing transboundary river basins over time. The method analyzes the evolutionary strategies of riparian countries and investigates evolutionary stable strategies (ESSs) considering the payoff matrix. The evolutionary game method is applied to a river basin shared by three countries assuming two types of benefits and one type of cost to countries as decision variables of a game that reflects water use, economic and political gains, and socio-economic losses of countries. Numerical examples illustrate the strategies resulting from the evolutionary game processes and the role of several parameters on the interaction between riparian countries. The countries' strategies are analyzed for several levels of benefits and costs, and the convergence of the strategies to a stable point is assessed. Results demonstrate the role that the upstream country's potential benefits and the cost of conflict (i.e., non-cooperation) to other countries has on reaching a stable point in the game. This work's results show the potential benefit to the upstream country under cooperative strategy must exceed its benefits from water use under non-cooperative strategy to gain the full stable cooperation of downstream countries. This work provides a method to resolve water-sharing strategies by countries sharing transboundary river basins and to evaluate the implications of cooperation or non-cooperation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34642386 PMCID: PMC8511225 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-99655-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic of the transboundary river and riparian countries with their shifting interactions.
Benefits and costs.
| Player | Parameter | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Country 1 | Probabilities of Country 1 cooperating or not cooperating, respectively | |
| Water benefit for Country 1 | ||
| Potential benefit due to cooperation of Country 1 | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 2 due to non-cooperation of Country 1 when Country 2 and 3 are cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 3 due to non-cooperation of Country 1 when Country 2 and 3 are cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 2 due to non-cooperation of Country 1 when Country 2 is cooperative and Country 3 is not cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 3 due to non-cooperation of Country 1 when Country 2 is cooperative and Country 3 is not cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 2 due to non-cooperation of Country 1 when Country 2 is not cooperative and Country 3 is cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 3 due to non-cooperation of Country 1 when Country 2 is not cooperative and Country 3 is cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 2 due to non-cooperation of Country 1 when Country 2 and 3 are not cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 3 due to non-cooperation of Country 1 when Country 2 and 3 are not cooperative | ||
| Country 2 | Probabilities of Country 2 cooperating or not cooperating, respectively | |
| Water benefit for Country 2 | ||
| Potential benefit due to cooperation of Country 2 | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 1 due to non-cooperation of Country 2 when Country 1 and 3 are cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 3 due to non-cooperation of Country 2 when Country 1 and 3 are cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 1 due to non-cooperation of Country 2 when Country 1 is cooperative and Country 3 is not cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 3 due to non-cooperation of Country 2 when Country 1 is cooperative and Country 3 is not cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 1 due to non-cooperation of Country 2 when Country 1 is not cooperative and Country 3 is cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 3 due to non-cooperation of Country 2 when Country 1 is not cooperative and Country 3 is cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 1 due to non-cooperation of Country 2 when Country 1 and 3 are not cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 3 due to non-cooperation of Country 2 when Country 1 and 3 are not cooperative | ||
| Country 3 | Probabilities of Country 3 cooperating or not cooperating, respectively | |
| Water benefit for Country 3 | ||
| Potential benefit due to cooperation of Country 3 | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 1 due to non-cooperation of Country 3 when Country 1 and 2 are cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 2 due to non-cooperation of Country 3 when Country 1 and 2 are cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 1 due to non-cooperation of Country 3 when Country 1 is cooperating and Country 2 is not cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 2 due to non-cooperation of Country 3 when Country 1 is cooperating and Country 2 is not cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 1 due to non-cooperation of Country 3 when Country 1 is not cooperative and Country 2 is cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 2 due to non-cooperation of Country 3 when Country 1 is not cooperative and Country 2 is cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 1 due to non-cooperation of Country 3 when Country 1 and 2 are not cooperative | ||
| Cost inflicted on Country 2 due to non-cooperation of Country 3 when Country 1 and 2 are not cooperative |
Payoff matrix under cooperation or non-cooperation.
| Country 1 | Country 2 | Country 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cooperation ( | Non-cooperation ( | ||
| Cooperation ( | Cooperation ( | ( | ( |
| Non-cooperation ( | ( | ( | |
| Non-cooperation ( | Cooperation ( | ( | ( |
| Non-cooperation ( | ( | ( | |
and , represents the probabilities of country (= 1, 2, 3) acting cooperatively or non-cooperatively, respectively. Notice that = 1.
Analysis of equilibrium points by the eigenvalues of the Jacobian matrix J.
| Condition | Equilibrium point | Sign of eigenvalues | Stability status |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | (0, 0, 0) | (?, ?, ?) | Uncertain stable point |
| 2 | (1, 0, 0) | (?, ?, ?) | Uncertain stable point |
| 3 | (0, 1, 0) | (?, ?, ?) | Uncertain stable point |
| 4 | (0, 0, 1) | (?, ?, ?) | Uncertain stable point |
| 5 | (1, 1, 0) | (?, ?, +) | Unstable point |
| 6 | (1, 0, 1) | (?, + , ?) | Unstable point |
| 7 | (0, 1, 1) | (?, ?, ?) | Uncertain stable point |
| 8 | (1, 1, 1) | (?, −, −) | Uncertain stable point |
“ + ” means positive sign of eigenvalue; “ − ” means negative sign of eigenvalue; “?” means uncertain sign of eigenvalue.
Assumed values for the replication dynamics equations’ benefits and costs.
| Parameters | Values | Parameters | Values | Parameters | Values | Parameters | Values |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20 | 15 | 18 | 12 | ||||
| 10 | 15 | 18 | 12 | ||||
| 10 | 16 | 19 | 13 | ||||
| 11 | 16 | 19 | 13 | ||||
| 15 | 17 | 20 | 14 | ||||
| 18 | 17 | 20 | 14 | ||||
| 18 | 21 | 15 | |||||
| 18 | 21 | 15 |
Figure 2Evolutionary process of the three countries’ strategies (i.e., probabilities of cooperation) with respect to initial values.
Figure 3Evolutionary process of probability with respect to initial and values.
Figure 4Evolutionary process of probability with respect to initial and values.
Figure 5Evolutionary process of probability wit respect to initial and values.
Figure 6The effect of E change on the evolutionary strategies and convergence of strategies to the point (1,1,1).
Figure 7The effect of C11, C13 and C36 changes on the evolutionary strategies and convergence of strategies to the point (0,0,1).
Figure 8The effect of C11, C13 and C36 changes on the evolutionary strategies and convergence strategies to the point (0,1,0).