Programme OS6c Water markets and
water sharing approaches abstract 110
MONITORING THE IMPACTS OF WATER TRADING
SOME
METHODS AND RESULTS FROM AN AUSTRALIAN WATER MARKET
Author(s): Bjornlund Henning
Keyword(s): water markets, water trading, monitoring, Australia, impact assessment
Article:
Poster:
Session: OS6c Water markets and
water sharing approaches
Abstract Water markets are introduced in many jurisdictions as a key economic instrument to facilitate a
reallocation of existing water between competing users and to encourage water conservation. This is done to achieve
two objectives, to: i) avoid or defer investments in supply infrastructure and thereby reduce the associated financial,
political, social and environmental costs; and ii) reallocate exiting resources from inefficient low value users to
efficient high value users. It is anticipated that this will reduce the socioeconomic impact of reallocating water away
from existing users (irrigation) to meet increased demand from new or expanding users (the environment, recreation,
and urban).
However, the introduction of water trading has been widely opposed within irrigation communities
and among environmental advocates. The community concern is associated with the social and community impact
within the communities depending on irrigation as the economic engine to generate off-farm and on-farm jobs and
council revenue as well as the impact on individual irrigators. The environmental concern is associated with the
potential negative impact of trading water from one location to another and from one use to another. Proponents of
water markets argue that the socioeconomic benefits from trading water into new areas and uses by far outweigh the
potential cost of moving water out of existing areas and uses.
In response increased reliance is placed on
monitoring the impact of trading so that policies can be adapted over time to ensure environmentally, socially and
economically sustainable or acceptable outcomes within the context of the wider catchment community. Australia has
implemented aggressive policy reforms since the early 1990s. This reform process gained momentum in 2004 with a
National Water Initiative. This calls for more efficient and sophisticated water markets based on an unbundling of the
set of rights traditionally embedded in a water right, the creation of new secure water registers facilitating investor
confidence and certainty, and the removal of barriers to trade. As part of this process, as well as of the process of
developing water sharing plans to define environmental needs and share the water available for consumptive use
between competing users, the monitoring of the socioeconomic and environmental impacts of trading and new
allocation outcomes has been an integral requirement of implementing authorities. Much research has therefore gone
into designing processes to regularly monitor and report on the impact of theses policies.
This paper will
report on the outcome of one of these research projects. We have surveyed traders annually from 2003-06 within
the Goulburn-Murray Irrigation District in Victoria resulting in more than 1,200 returned questionnaires. A different
approach was used each year including electronic questionnaires, questionnaires send to all traders and
questionnaires send to a sample of traders to find the cheapest and fastest way of collecting data in a reliable manner.
We also compare results from each of the three years as well as comparing these three years to the results from a
similar survey conducted by the author in 2000 to try and establish a suitable time interval between each monitoring
and reporting activity.