Affiliation:
1. School of Economics Guizhou University Guiyang China
2. Center for Development and Applied Studies in Marxist Economics Guizhou University Guiyang China
3. Canadian Museum of Nature Ottawa Ontario Canada
4. School of Economics and Management Yanshan University Qinhuangdao China
Abstract
AbstractThe virtual water strategy (VWS) is an effective tool to balance regional water resource endowments and guarantee water supply security. However, because of self‐interested games around VWS (human decision bias), there is a need for methods to maintain reliable cooperation between governments, virtual water (VW) enterprises and research institutions. This study builds a multi‐agent evolutionary game model to analyse the relationship of players and their impacts on VWS through changing decision mechanisms and the paths to enhance their confidence in cooperation. Considering differences in initial willingness to cooperate and changing factors affecting payoffs, an evolutionary game can produce changing stable equilibriums or stable cooperations, even if some players are reluctant to cooperate. Therefore, to promote the development of VWS, a multistep support mechanism can be built for the VW industry, which fosters model enterprises and optimizes the cooperation framework to stimulate research innovations at scientific institutions.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China