“Prudent water resource planning should consider the long-term impacts of global climate change and how this could affect Hawaii’s water supplies....”

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Presentation transcript:

“Prudent water resource planning should consider the long-term impacts of global climate change and how this could affect Hawaii’s water supplies....” State of Hawai‘i Commission on Water Resource Management, 2008 “Investing in the protection of fresh water sources must be the highest priority for Hawaii’s public leaders and the Department of Land and Natural Resources.” Gov. Neil Abercrombie, 2011

What Is “Adaptation”? (1) Do laws, policies, and procedures account for climate trends, variability, and uncertainty? (2) In the future, will we have the flexibility to act on new information from climate scientists? (3) Do we routinely consider how the future climate may affect the outcomes of decisions, and use that understanding to make more informed decisions?

Four Adaptive Elements Adaptation recognizes uncertainty, and addresses it with these elements: 1 Forward-looking 2 Flexible 3 Integrated 4 Iterative

Hawai‘i Constitution Public Trust Doctrine Precautionary Principle Water Code and Water Commission Haw. Water Plan County Bds. Water Supply Land Use Regulation and Planning Haw. Dep’t Agric. Haw. Dep’t of Health Watershed Protection Recycling and Conservation Individual, Business, and Gov’t Water Users

Sample Adaptive Mandates “ Protect ” water resources for the benefit of “ present and future generations.” “Establish procedures for regulating all uses of Hawaii’s water resources.” “ Must conform to changing needs and conditions.” “ Continuing study ” of salt-water intrusion. IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated 1234

Implementation Tools? The Water Commission is empowered to “consider, protect, and advance public rights at every stage of the planning and decisionmaking process.” Hawai‘i Constitution Public Trust Doctrine Precautionary Principle Water Code and Water Commission IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated 1234

Policy & Planning Tools Hawai‘i Water Plan (1) Climate scenario planning (2) Update regularly (5-year interval / 40- year planning horizon) (3) Integrate land use planning with water availability (e.g. Maui WAP) (4) O‘ahu watershed management planning (5) Conservation and recycling plans IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated 1

Climate scenario planning 2 IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated

Regular updates IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated

Adaptive Land Use Planning IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated Aquifer SY (mgd) Max. Projected Demand (Gen. Plan) (mgd) Max. Projected Demand (Zoning) (mgd) W Mauna Kea Kohala SW Mauna Loa NW Mauna Loa Hualalai

Adaptive Land Use Planning IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated 1234 “No subdivision shall be approved, unless... the director shall provide written verification of a long term, reliable supply of water.” Maui Water Availability Policy M.C.C. §

Integrated Watershed Management IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated 1234 Honolulu Water Use and Development Plan 4

Conservation & Recycling Plans IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated E.g. Melbourne Permanent Water Saving Rules

Conservation & Recycling Plans 5

Regulatory Tools (6) Climate-conscious “clearly sustainable yield” and instream flow standards (7) Enforce water use monitoring and reporting (8) Expand designated water management areas (9) Adaptive permitting, e.g. water use, well-construction, stream diversion

Climate-Conscious Sustainable Yield and Instream Flow IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated “Maximum Sustainable Yield” “Clearly Sustainable Yield” vs.

- 36% did not properly identify the location of the water source or end use - 13% overpumping - 12% not investigated “because of a complete lack of response from permit holders” (1 federal agency, 3 state agencies, 4 county departments, 19 corporations) - 37% lacked an approved flowmeter IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated 1234 Enforce Monitoring & Reporting Requirements Use Reporting: 67% Non-compliance 7

Irrespective of “how many or how few of the criteria are applicable, the Commission shall designate an area as a WMA ‘when it can be reasonably determined...that the water resources in an area may be threatened by existing or proposed withdrawals or diversions of water.’” IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated 1234 Expand Designated Water Management Areas Hawai‘i Supreme Court: 8

IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated 1234 Adaptive Permitting For example: -Gauges as a standard permit condition? -Compliance inspections and fee? -“Living permit” model? -Deep monitor wells? 9 U.S.G.S. 2010

Market-Based Tools (10) Green building / Hawai‘i Energy Plan model (11) Tie Water Commission fees more closely to the cost of regulation (12) Public goods charge / property tax model

Promote Water- Conscious Infrastructure 10 IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated 1234

Water Commission Fees 11 IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated 1234 Flat $25 application fee Tiered fees, tied to quantity of water impacted, and cost of watershed protection necessary to protect the resource vs.

Public Goods Charge 12 IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated 1234 U.C. Berkeley / California PUC

Let’s get started...

Hawai‘i Constitution “ Protect ” water resources for the benefit of “ present and future generations.” “Establish procedures for regulating all uses of Hawaii’s water resources.” IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated

“The policy of comprehensive resource planning [is] intrinsic to the public trust concept.” “Applies to all water resources without exception or distinction.” 1 “Requires planning and decisionmaking from a global, long-term perspective.” “ Must conform to changing needs and conditions.” Public Trust Doctrine IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated

Precautionary Principle “[W]here there are present or potential threats of serious damage, lack of full scientific certainty should not be a basis for postponing effective measures to prevent environmental degradation. Awaiting certainty will often allow for only reactive, not preventative, regulatory action.” “ Regulators such as the Commission must be accorded flexibility [to take]regulatory action to prevent harm, even if the regulator is less than certain that harm is otherwise inevitable.” IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated

“ Program of comprehensive water resources planning to address the problems of supply and conservation of water.” (a)Promote “ maximum beneficial use.” (b)Ensure adequate “ preservation and enhancement ” of water resources. Water Code “ Continuing study ” of salt-water intrusion IterativeForward-looking Flexible Integrated