Case Studies
Mar 26, 2019

Potential Implications of Groundwater Trading and Reformed Water Rights in Diamond Valley, Nevada

Publication: Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management
Volume 145, Issue 6

Abstract

This paper presents an ex ante analysis of a novel groundwater management reform being considered by irrigators in the Diamond Valley, Nevada. Groundwater extraction for irrigation in the valley has considerably exceeded the natural recharge rate since the 1960s. The area was recently declared a critical management area (CMA) by the State Engineer of Nevada, which will trigger curtailment of water rights unless other action halts unsustainable abstraction. We examined the likely impacts of a number of potential institutional structures that could be implemented as part of groundwater reform in the Diamond Valley. The major reform is a conversion from a priority-based curtailment of existing water rights to a shares-based system of gradually decreasing basinwide pumping allocations, an approach that offers some economic benefits to the region. The beneficial reforms, namely creation of a common market in which to trade rights and an ability to gradually, rather than suddenly, curtail rights, can be built into the existing priority-based rights structure. However, the conversion of rights to shares offers limited additional basinwide benefits, and mainly affects farmer profits through the redistribution of some profit from senior rights holders to junior rights holders. The redistributional nature of the institutional reform, paired with limited broader gains, may make it difficult to reach legal agreement regarding changes to established priority-based water rights institutions.

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Go to Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management
Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management
Volume 145Issue 6June 2019

History

Received: Dec 27, 2017
Accepted: Aug 7, 2018
Published online: Mar 26, 2019
Published in print: Jun 1, 2019
Discussion open until: Aug 26, 2019

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Harrison Zeff [email protected]
Postdoctoral Researcher, Institute for the Environment, Dept. of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Kernville, CA 93238 (corresponding author). Email: [email protected]
David Kaczan
Senior Research Fellow, School of Commerce, Univ. of South Australia, Washington, DC 20433.
Gregory W. Characklis, M.ASCE
Professor, Institute for the Environment, Dept. of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599.
Marc Jeuland
Associate Professor, Sanford School of Public Policy, Duke Univ., Durham, NC 27708; Adjunct Senior Research Fellow, Institute of Water Policy, National Univ. of Singapore, Singapore.
Brian Murray
Director, Nicholas School of the Environment, Environmental Economics Program, Duke Univ., Durham, NC 27708.
Katie Locklier
Researcher, Nicholas School of the Environment, Duke Univ., Durham, NC 27708.

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