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River Murray Water Supply Where is your future headed?. Prof. Mike Young Research Chair, Water Economics and Management The University of Adelaide “Water, wine and horticulture: A Scholefield Robinson Horticultural Services Seminar” Chifley Hotel, 18 th September 2007.
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River Murray Water SupplyWhere is your future headed? Prof. Mike Young Research Chair, Water Economics and ManagementThe University of Adelaide “Water, wine and horticulture: A Scholefield Robinson Horticultural Services Seminar”Chifley Hotel, 18th September 2007
Sydney - 25% - 75%
If it gets drier • Less rain • means • much less water
Lal Lal, Victoria in-flow Levels Average pre 1997 27,400 ML Average post 1997 11,600 ML Inflow to Lal Lal Reservoir (ML) Year (financial year ending)
21 years Total Murray-Darling Basin inflows Annual flows (year ending June) showing forecast for 2006/07 Source: Craik, MDBC
Lake Alexandrina Level -0.5 m
Problems • Over-allocation • When too much is allocated to users and not enough to the environment and for system maintenance & operation • Over-entitlement • When more is allocated than exists • Interception • Activities that by reducing river flow debase reliability • Inefficient storage management • When too much or too little is left in storage and in the system itself • Administrative inefficiency • When transactions take too long to complete • When there is un-necessary duplication • When there are barriers to adjustment
Over-allocation and over-entitlement • A dredge was put in the Murray Mouth in October 2002 – before the drought! Nature’s solution to this problem is to debase the reliability of your entitlement. Governments can purchase entitlements and either • Cancel them when over-entitlement is the problem • Re-assign them to the environment when over-allocation is the problem • Can change fixed volume entitlements into shares
Flow interception • Flow reducing activities • Increased forestry • More farm dams • More groundwater development • Increased irrigation efficiency • More lined channels and more piped water • More salinity interception • Two Risks • Climate change • Bushfires
Language • SA is unbundling its holding and taking licence system • Entitlements • A share of the amount allocated for use in any year • Allocations • The amount that is allocated for use or for trade
Risk management reforms • Guaranteed allocations • Once made, they can not be reduced without compensation • Access to the system’s dams • Carry forward with adjustment for evaporation • A tradeable share of the cap as a maximum delivery entitlement
Entitlement reliability reform • Transfer SA entitlements to a common register with NSW and Vic • No state differences between SA, Vic or NSW entitlements • A formal allocation for River maintenance and operation • A guaranteed flow to the sea and no guaranteed flow over the SA boarder • Entitlements defined as shares of the available water in two reliability pools in each part of the system • High security adjusted for long run trend • General security varies with seasons
Trading reforms • Internet-based access to your water account • Guaranteed register integrity • Instantaneous trading of allocations • Announcement timing synchronised across the Basin • Low-cost and speedy entitlement trading • Two days maximum time • Less than $60 per trade • Electronic mortgage clearance and settlement • Unbundled entitlements, allocations and use approvals
Adjusting to a new regime • The system has been seriously over-allocated for some time • Adjustment styles • Impede • Facilitate • Expedite • Avoid any program that impedes structural adjustment • With much less water there must be less irrigation and fewer environmental assets • Sacrifice on both sides will be necessary
Environmental water reform • Hold entitlements in a trust at arms length from any decision making about seasonal allocations and trading rules • Support counter-cyclic trading • Source water using off-market mechanisms
Ending Over-allocation & Over-entitlement • Options • Continue to debase your entitlement • Bring all flow reducing activities into the allocation regime • Voluntary acquisition • A market-assisted step change • Paid 2 years in advance for a percentage reduction in your entitlement • Paid above market value => Just terms • Waive all water trading charges for two years • Pay all exit fees • For income tax purposes defined as compulsory acquisition
What you can do • Manage your own risk • Determine the breakeven price at which it pays to sell rather than use water • Review your assets carefully • Expect minimal allocations for the next few years • Invest in water entitlements in NSW and Victoria • Carry forward water if you can • Invest in river water entitlements that are outside irrigation districts and, hence, exempt from exit fees • Trade allocations in but think twice before trading entitlements into a district
Subscribe to our Droplets at www.myoung.net.au Contact: Prof Mike Young Water Economics and Management Email: Mike.Young@adelaide.edu.au Phone: +61-8-8303.5279Mobile: +61-408-488.538 www.myoung.net.au