Final Report on TWDB Project

Final Report on TWDB Project
Author: Bruce A. McCarl
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 1997
Genre: Water transfer
ISBN:

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Water Transfers in the West

Water Transfers in the West
Author: National Research Council
Publisher: National Academies Press
Total Pages: 321
Release: 1992-02-01
Genre: Science
ISBN: 0309045282

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The American West faces many challenges, but none is more important than the challenge of managing its water. This book examines the role that water transfers can play in allocating the region's scarce water resources. It focuses on the variety of third parties, including Native Americans, Hispanic communities, rural communities, and the environment, that can sometimes be harmed when water is moved. The committee presents recommendations to guide states, tribes, and federal agencies toward better regulation. Seven in-depth case studies are presented: Nevada's Carson-Truckee basin, the Colorado Front Range, northern New Mexico, Washington's Yakima River basin, central Arizona, and the Central and Imperial valleys in California. Water Transfers in the West presents background and current information on factors that have encouraged water transfers, typical types of transfers, and their potential negative effects. The book highlights the benefits that water transfers can bring but notes the need for more third-party representation in the processes used to evaluate planned transfers.

Markets for Water

Markets for Water
Author: K. William Easter
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 306
Release: 2007-08-20
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0585320888

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Markets for Water: Potential and Performance dispels many of the myths surrounding water markets and gives readers a comprehensive picture of the way that markets have developed in different parts of the world. It is possible, for example, for a water market to fail, and for the transaction costs in water markets to be excessive. Too often water trading is banned because the water resources have been developed with public funds and the water agencies do not want to lose control over water. There is also a concern that poor farmers or households will be disadvantaged by water trading. These concerns about public resources and the poor are not very different from those that have been voiced in the past about land sales. The problem is that in many cases the poor already have limited access to resources, but this limit is not due to water trading. In fact, water trading is likely to expand the access to water for many small-scale farmers. Markets for Water: Potential and Performance provides an analytical framework for water market establishment. It develops the necessary conditions for water markets and illustrates how they can improve both water management and economic efficiency. Finally, the book gives readers an up-to-date picture of what we have learned about water markets in a wide range of countries, from the US to Chile and India.

Water Transfers for a Changing Climate

Water Transfers for a Changing Climate
Author: Mark Stephen Squillace
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2012
Genre:
ISBN:

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The prior appropriation doctrine provides for the allocation of most surface water rights in the Western United States. It is rightly praised for overcoming the uncertainty that plagued the riparian doctrine, which historically dominated water allocation law in the Eastern and Midwestern United States. When water users are confident about the security of their water rights, as they are in prior appropriation doctrine states, they are more willing to invest in projects that demand a reliable water supply. Unfortunately, the very certainty that protects water users under prior appropriation law can stifle efforts to reallocate that water as times and needs for water resources change. Water use for irrigation best illustrates the problem. Irrigated agriculture accounts for well over 80% of the freshwater resources used in the West. But even as agriculture has become less important to the economic health of Western states, and even as Western cities and water demands to serve those cities have grown, moving water from agricultural to urban use has proved very challenging. To be sure, it happens, but transferring water has proved far more difficult, more time-consuming, and more expensive than it needs to be. Ironically, this has led many cities to opt for even more expensive, and often more environmentally-destructive water projects. What becomes apparent from analyzing this situation is that while prior appropriation is well-designed to create property rights in water, those rights are too often defined in ways that make them less fungible and thus less susceptible to easy marketing. Fixing this problem has become especially urgent given new stressors on our water supplies that result from climate change. This article offers concrete solutions to promote the development of robust water markets. It begins with a review of the history and law water transfers in the Western United States. It then considers two case studies that help illustrate the opportunities and obstacles to the efficient movement of water. One case study considers the Northern Colorado Water Conservancy District and its innovative mechanism for transferring water from its Colorado-Big Thompson Project; the other looks at a still evolving proposal often described as the “Super Ditch,” that seeks to move water from agricultural to urban use without requiring farmers to relinquish control over their water rights. The article then derives lessons from these and other examples and concludes with a series of practical and creative ways for reforming Western water law to help ensure that water gets to where it is needed most efficiently.

Policy and Strategic Behaviour in Water Resource Management

Policy and Strategic Behaviour in Water Resource Management
Author: Ariel Dinar
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 365
Release: 2012-05-16
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 1136559590

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Water resource management throughout the world is a very complicated issue, involving various aspects and dimensions and a well-coordinated set of policies. A well-designed water policy is a multi-faceted concerted intervention, which could be specific to just one set of political and physical socio-economic conditions. A framework to analyse the interaction between policy design and implementation can assist in improving both of these in various physical, economic and political situations. This book focuses on the interaction between policy making and strategic behaviour of policy makers, water users and other stakeholders, and how policy analysis and other analytical tools from the field of game theory and negotiation can improve policy design. The book presents analysis by high-level policy makers and policy analysts from various countries, to share experience regarding specific policy issues that are relevant to almost any country in the world, but may have been addressed differently in each country.

Water Resources Planning and Management

Water Resources Planning and Management
Author: R. Quentin Grafton
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 801
Release: 2011-02-17
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1139496492

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Water is an increasingly critical issue at the forefront of global policy change, management and planning. There are growing concerns about water as a renewable resource, its availability for a wide range of users, aquatic ecosystem health, and global issues relating to climate change, water security, water trading and water ethics. This handbook provides the most comprehensive reference ever published on water resource issues. It brings together multiple disciplines to understand and help resolve problems of water quality and scarcity from a global perspective. Its case studies and 'foundation' chapters will be greatly valued by students, researchers and professionals involved in water resources, hydrology, governance and public policy, law, economics, geography and environmental studies.

Evaluating Water Transfers in Irrigation Districts

Evaluating Water Transfers in Irrigation Districts
Author: Narishwar Ghimire
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2013
Genre:
ISBN:

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The participation of irrigation districts (IDs) in surface water transfers from agriculture-to-municipal uses is studied by examining IDs' economic and political behavior, comparing their performance with non-districts (non-IDs), and analyzing the role of economic and demographic heterogeneities in water transfers. Economic modeling, econometric, and analytical techniques are used to investigate these issues. An economic model is developed to investigate how the collective-type institutional structure of IDs in the presence of local interdependencies (between internal water delivery and external water transfers) and increasing returns to scale in the internal water delivery causes reduction in marginal benefit of water transfers and the optimal transfers. The model is also used to investigate how the involvement of the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation in IDs causes more water uses in agriculture availing less for external transfers. The conjunction of multiple uses and exclusion rights without ownership rights in IDs' water and vote-maximizing political structure of IDs are found to create disincentive for water conservation and transfers. Water transfer responses of IDs and non-IDs are empirically investigated by using a Quasi Maximum Likelihood Estimation (QMLE) technique. Based on the analysis of 38 years of time series water transfer data, IDs are found to be less responsive in water transfers relative to non-IDs in terms of water right-weighted transfers. It is found that water scarcity, private housing permits, and nonfarm establishments are positively associated with water transfers. The marginal effect of water scarcity on water transfer is stronger for non-IDs than for IDs. Impacts of economic and demographic heterogeneities on water transfer behavior of IDs are investigated using unbalanced panel data econometric techniques. Water right holdings and population in nearby cities of IDs are found to be significantly correlated with water transfer behaviors of IDs. Larger IDs with higher water right holdings and higher population centers in nearby cities are found to be more responsive to water transfers. The findings complement previous studies that commend public attention for policy redesign including institutional changes to motivate IDs to increase their water transfer activity. The electronic version of this dissertation is accessible from http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/149537