Lin Crase Markets, Property Rights and Managing the Environmental Water Reserve.

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Lin Crase Lin Crase Markets, Property Rights and Managing the Environmental Water Reserve

Transcript of Lin Crase Markets, Property Rights and Managing the Environmental Water Reserve.

Page 1: Lin Crase Markets, Property Rights and Managing the Environmental Water Reserve.

Lin CraseLin Crase

Markets, Property Rights and Managing the Environmental Water Reserve

Page 2: Lin Crase Markets, Property Rights and Managing the Environmental Water Reserve.

Living with Reality

• Basin Plan will set SDLs • PC estimates more than 2500Gl may be held by

Commonwealth• > 20% of all extractive entitlements according to

Australian Farm Institute• Guide points to 27-37% as volumetric ambition• Buyback to bridge any gap

Page 3: Lin Crase Markets, Property Rights and Managing the Environmental Water Reserve.

Some Starters

• Commonwealth Environmental Water Reserve will represent a significant portion of MDB water resources

• Major management challenges

• Are the rights right?

Page 4: Lin Crase Markets, Property Rights and Managing the Environmental Water Reserve.

How does the Commonwealth presently manage environmental water?

• An example, TLM

• Complex hierarchical and inter-jurisdictional requirements

Page 5: Lin Crase Markets, Property Rights and Managing the Environmental Water Reserve.
Page 6: Lin Crase Markets, Property Rights and Managing the Environmental Water Reserve.
Page 7: Lin Crase Markets, Property Rights and Managing the Environmental Water Reserve.

At the Site Level

• Barmah-Millewa Forest:

Page 8: Lin Crase Markets, Property Rights and Managing the Environmental Water Reserve.

Looks simple, but it’s not

• Coordination committee

• Technical Advisory Committee

• Consultation Reference Group

• Project Officer

Page 9: Lin Crase Markets, Property Rights and Managing the Environmental Water Reserve.

So if environmental water managers are given scope to work in market what does it look like?

Page 10: Lin Crase Markets, Property Rights and Managing the Environmental Water Reserve.

Water rights and markets

• Present focus is on volume with limited attention to delivery characteristics– Access (permanent) markets– Allocation (temporary) markets

• Others– Use– Works and network– Quality

Page 11: Lin Crase Markets, Property Rights and Managing the Environmental Water Reserve.

How it works in reality

• Dam managers

–Allocation announcements

–Use of temporary trade to redress imbalance between announcements and

• Opportunity costs

• Risk preferences

Page 12: Lin Crase Markets, Property Rights and Managing the Environmental Water Reserve.

Carryover

• An inter-seasonal right

• Attenuated relative to other rights

Page 13: Lin Crase Markets, Property Rights and Managing the Environmental Water Reserve.

What does the environmental water manager want?• More water in stream

• More variability

• More early season flow

Page 14: Lin Crase Markets, Property Rights and Managing the Environmental Water Reserve.

What does the environmental water manager want?• More water in stream

– Volume will do this, up to a point

• More variability– Carryover is weaker right

• More early season flow– Allocations don’t favour this– Temporary trade?– Important empirical question

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Concluding remarks

• Environmental water holder will control significant volumes

• Volumes have limitations when considered against environmental preferences

• Temporary market versus modifying rights• Potential for other products to ease pain of

adjustment– Need science to estimate trade-offs between

volumetric and other dimensions

Page 16: Lin Crase Markets, Property Rights and Managing the Environmental Water Reserve.

Thank You