Offsetting with salinity credits: An alternative to irrigation zoning Centre for Salinity Assessment & Management Tom Spencer and Tiho Ancev, Agricultural.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What is a Market? A market is the interaction of buyers and sellers for the purpose of making an exchange, which establishes a price for the goods or.
Advertisements

Chapter Price 6. Objectives: Students will learn… How the market establishes an equilibrium price How the equilibrium price balances supply & demand How.
Desert Knowledge Symposium 2008 Marnie Ireland Supervisor: Dr. Fay Rola-Rubzen Sustainable Freight Out Here?
Copyright © 2004 South-Western 19 A Macroeconomic Theory of the Open Economy.
Hal T. Interactions between Carbon Regulation & Renewable Energy Policies  Thoughtpiece: The CATF is in a position to consider program.
1 Chapter 14 Practice Quiz Environmental Economics.
Understanding the Concept of Present Value
14 A Macroeconomic Theory of the Open Economy. Open Economies An open economy is one that interacts freely with other economies around the world.
A Layman’s View of Carbon Reduction Policies. Overview History of climate change policy debate Projected impacts Australian Government’s response Opposition.
Equilibrium Market Prices DP Economics. The concept of the equilibrium price Equilibrium means a state of equality between demand and supply The equilibrium.
Foreign Exchange Risk. Foreign exchange risk is the risk that the value of an asset or liability will change because of a change in exchange rates. Because.
CONCEPTS of VALUE. FACTORS OF VALUE UTILITY –THE ABILITY OF A PRODUCT TO SATISFY HUMAN WANTS. RELATES TO THE DAMAND SIDE OF THE MARKET. SCARCITY –THE.
Unit 14 The Federal Reserve The Top Five Concepts
Framework for Assessing the Impact of Salinity on Productivity Amy Cheung University of New South Wales Workshop: “Policy Choices for Salinity Mitigation:
Modelling sustainable management of the Murray- Darling Basin John Quiggin Risk and Sustainable Management Group Schools of Economics and Political Science,
Chapter 7 Efficiency and Exchange. Markets are usually a good way to organize economic activity Markets don’t always provide socially efficient outcomes.
Dual Instruments or Needless Duplication? Evaluating the Combined Use of Environmental Flow and Salinity Targets Lisa Lee and Tiho Ancev, Agricultural.
Chapter 8 The Instruments of Trade Policy
The Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates
Chapter 6, Section 2.  When the supply or the demand curve shifts, a new equilibrium occurs.  Then, the market price and quantity sold move toward the.
LECTURE. FORMATION OF PRICE FOR THE COMPANIES PRODUCT Plan lectures 1. Price and types of prices 2. Classification prices 3. Pricing policy of the enterprise.
Evaluation of Economic, Land Use, and Land Use Emission Impacts of Substituting Non-GMO Crops for GMO in the US Farzad Taheripour Harry Mahaffey Wallace.
Industry Supply. Supply From A Competitive Industry u How are the supply decisions of the many individual firms in a competitive industry to be combined.
AUSTRALIA’S PLACE IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY EXCHANGE RATES AN OVERVIEW.
Medium-term prospects and impact assessment of the CAP reform EU - 15 & EU European Commission - Agriculture Directorate-General.
Farming and Irrigation Australia. Farming and Irrigation in Australia Irrigation is the process in which water is brought up to the land. The Irrigation.
Economics of the Environment and Natural Resources Tutor Roger Perman (Economics) Overview This module does not assume a prior background in economics.
1 Water & Salinity Markets R. Quentin Grafton Crawford School of Economics and Government Australian National University Presented.
An Analysis of the Pollutant Loads and Hydrological Condition for Water Quality Improvement for the Weihe River For implementing water resources management.
1 Economic Decisions and Systems 1-1 Satisfying Needs and Wants
Lessons and implications for agriculture and food Security in the region IFPRI-ADB POLICY FORUM 9-10 August 2007 Manila, Philippines Rapid Growth of Selected.
Von Thunen. Some Assumptions made by farmers on what they are going to farm: A farmer is worried about two costs: 1. Cost of the land and 2. Cost of transporting.
NS4301 Political Economy of Africa Summer Term 2015 Special Economic Zones (SEZs)
Essentials of economics – Ch 3
Department: Water Affairs and Forestry Water Research Commission Towards a WDCS PRESENTERS: Pieter Viljoen (DWAF) Dr. Judex Oberholzer (Urban-Econ) Assisted.
Trade and Protection vs Free Trade. Theory of Trade All countries have different combination of economic resources: land, labour and capital resources.
Real Estate Principles and Practices Chapter 16 Investment and Tax Aspects of Ownership © 2014 OnCourse Learning.
Instructor Sandeep Basnyat
Macro Chapter 14 Modern Macroeconomics and Monetary Policy.
Estimating and Comparing Costs and Benefits of Adaptation Projects in Africa – Project AF47: Technical Progress Mac Callaway AIACC African Workshop March.
Chapter 5: The Economics of Interest- Rate Fluctuations Chapter Objectives Describe, at the first level of analysis, the factors that cause changes in.
Social Welfare and Environmental Degradation Tradeoffs in Agriculture: The Case of Ecuador Eduardo Segarra, Professor Department of Agricultural and Applied.
DRAFT MURRAY DARLING BASIN PLAN. Where is the Murray–Darling Basin? Large system in south-eastern Australia 1 million km 2 1/7 area of Australia Contains.
Dr. Bettina Lange, Centre for Socio-Legal Studies, Oxford and Dr. Mark Shepheard, Law Faculty, McGill University.
Chapter 6: Demand, Supply, and Prices
CNANGES IN MARKET EQUILIBRIUM Economists say that a market will tend toward equilibrium. Why? There are two forces that can push a market into disequilibrium:
Programme priorities for Latin America and the Caribbean Josefina Stubbs Director of Latin America and the Caribbean, PMD April th Replenishment.
NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY SOUTH AFRICA’S WATER SITUATION AND STRATEGIES TO BALANCE SUPPLY AND DEMAND LOWER ORANGE WMA.
Essential Question: How do Supply and Demand work together to form a picture of the economy as a whole?
Econ 201 Ch. 8 Government Policy & Economic Welfare.
Ecologic.eu Brussels, 19 March 2009 Environmental & economic impact of water pricing and quotas in the agriculture sector What do we learn from practical.
Describe the features and characteristics of the Three Gorges Dam.
Read to Learn Describe the three basic economic questions each country must answer to make decisions about using their resources. Contrast the way a.
The Environment Institute Where ideas grow Chewing over the CEWH Mike Young Executive Director, The Environment Institute.
What are “demand” and “supply” and how do they work together to determine the prices of goods and services?
1 CDRI Research Workshop 29 January Related Project  Poverty Dynamic Studies (PDS), funded by the World Bank Objective of the project: Identify.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 9 The Instruments of Trade Policy.
A Macroeconomic Theory of the Open Economy Chapter 30.
Executive Economic Analysis
Implications of Alternative Crop Yield Assumptions on Land Management, Commodity Markets, and GHG Emissions Projections Justin S. Baker, Ph.D.1 with B.A.
Economic Decisions and Systems
Markets and Regulation: Alternative or Complements?
Supply, Demand, and Government Policies
Patrick Kormawa (WARDA, Cotonou) and Tunji Akande (NISER, Ibadan)
Patrick Kormawa (WARDA, Cotonou) and Tunji Akande (NISER, Ibadan)
Goal 7: Economics & Choices
Chapter 6 Demand, Supply, & Price.
MARKET EQUILIBRIUM.
Presentation transcript:

Offsetting with salinity credits: An alternative to irrigation zoning Centre for Salinity Assessment & Management Tom Spencer and Tiho Ancev, Agricultural and Resource Economics, Faculty of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources, The University of Sydney

Irrigation in the South Australian Riverland As is widely known, irrigation induced salinity is a serious problem in SA.

Economics Literature Quiggin 1988, 1991, The core of the problem are property rights. Heaney et al – coupling hydrologic and economic modelling; Gordon et al – asset fixity in relation to relocation of irrigation. Duke et al Experiments on water trading and salinity trading. Connor 2004 and Connor et al Market based policies towards irrigation induced salinity.

What are we adding? A theoretical model of salinity offsets. An empirical study including standalone zoning and offsets in the South Australian Riverland. Some interesting policy implications.

How to solve the irrigation induced salinity problem? Technical/engineering solutions: salt interception schemes/evaporation ponds, increasing water efficiency of irrigation, dilution flows, etc. Still prevalent, but physical and economic limitations are apparent.

Influence the location of irrigation Land areas are heterogenous in terms of characteristics relevant for salinity impact. Irrigation in one area causes more salinity impact than the same irrigation activity in another area. How can we induce a shift of irrigation activities towards “more suitable” areas?

The concept of zoning Define “high” and “low” salinity impact areas. Typically, orthogonal to the river channel, i.e. low impact zones further away from the river. The question is then, how to move irrigation from high to low impact zones.

Related to water trading What happens now when water can be traded, but property rights on salinity impacts are not yet established. Victorian salinity levies and trade restrictions. Incentives to locate in low salinity impact areas.

Newly adopted policy in South Australia Irrigation zoning. Fairly restrictive. Determine the high and low impact zones and only allow new irrigation to locate in low impact zones.

The zoning

The effects Would decrease salinity impact. But, is it least cost? Intuitively it is not. Rigid quantity regulation. No incentives. No account for heterogeneous operators.

An alternative: offsets Allow new irrigation development in the high salinity impact zone, provided it is offset by reducing salinity impact in another high impact zone. This gives rise to salinity credits. The developer will have to buy salinity reduction credits in order to proceed with the project in high impact zone. Adds flexibility and likely to be less costly.

Objectives Determine the costs of both the standalone irrigation zoning policy and the offset policy and compare them. Determine the effect of the salinity offset scheme on the location of new irrigation developments. Determine and compare the long term salinity impact of the alternative policies.

Theory Maximise profits from irrigation for the whole region under three policies: –Unregulated location of new irrigation activities. –Irrigation zoning. –Offsetting.

Key drivers/assumptions Cost of water delivery higher in the low impact zones. Salinity impact from upstream irrigation greater than salinity impact from downstream irrigation. Salinity credits obtained if ageing crops in high impact zones are not replanted.

Theoretical results Offset policy gives as high profit as the standalone irrigation zoning policy in any area. Salinity credits tend to be supplied by upstream areas. Salinity credits tend to be demanded by downstream areas.

Empirical study Divide the whole study area into 16 smaller areas. Each area (except two) has high and low impact zones.

Data Five crops: almonds, grapes, oranges, apricots, and potatoes. Water delivery costs were calculated based on distances and elevation of various analysis areas, costs of piping and costs of pumping. The salt load and salinity impact obtained from CSIRO.

Scenarios Programming model set up for three scenarios: –Unregulated location: free choice of where to locate; –Zoning: can only locate in high impact zones; –Offset: can locate in high or low impact zones, provided the impact in high impact zones is offset by reduction in another high impact zone.

Findings Annual cost ($) Present value of costs over 100 years ($ mill.) Net salinity impact (EC projected over 100 years) Unrestricted irrigation Standalone zoning482, Offsets374, The offset scheme is both less costly and in fact more effective in reducing salinity impact as compared to the standalone zoning. Equilibrium quantity of permits: 144 EC units. Equilibrium price of permits: $606.

Observed patterns Almonds favored under offset. Irrigation in downstream areas slightly favored by the offset. Main supplier of credits: grapes in Berri-Barmera.

Implications Location of irrigation enterprises in the “high” impact zones should be addressed in some way. Economics can be instrumental in the way we address it. Rather than having a rigid, standalone zoning policy, offsets could be introduced to allow more flexibility and lower cost. Maybe we need to shift the attention from the orthogonal approach to irrigation zoning.

Limitations and further research Data. Account for yield effects of salinity. Look at the water market. Include the salt interception schemes.