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Ecologic.eu Brussels, 19 March 2009 Environmental & economic impact of water pricing and quotas in the agriculture sector What do we learn from practical.

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Presentation on theme: "Ecologic.eu Brussels, 19 March 2009 Environmental & economic impact of water pricing and quotas in the agriculture sector What do we learn from practical."— Presentation transcript:

1 ecologic.eu Brussels, 19 March 2009 Environmental & economic impact of water pricing and quotas in the agriculture sector What do we learn from practical case studies? Thomas Dworak Ecologic Institute- Vienna

2 ecologic.eu The context Increasing concerns in Europe about drought events and water scarcity Article 9 WFD Communication by the Commission on Water Scarcity and Droughts adopted in July 2007  Getting the price right, shift land use planning to reduce the imbalance between supply and demand…. However, questions remains in particular: Effectiveness of these two policy scenarios Expected socio-economic and environmental impacts Brussels, 19 March 2009

3 ecologic.eu Investigating these issues as follow-up to the communication To address the issues of potential socio-economic and environmental impacts of.. water demand management options in particular (1) application of quotas and (2) water pricing The focus of the analysis Five case studies (Cyprus, Tisza Danube interstice, South-East England, Guadalquivir, Boutonne) Main focus on agriculture Brussels, 19 March 2009

4 ecologic.eu Presenting selected results of the study to answer.... Q.1 – Which target for water abstraction? Q.2 – Which water price increase? Q.3 – Economic impacts for abstractors of reduction in abstraction? Q.4 – Which impact on land use & cropping pattern? Q.5 – Order of magnitude of costs avoided? Q.6 – Additional benefits? Q.7 – Main sources of uncertainties? Brussels, 19 March 2009

5 ecologic.eu Q.1 – which reduction in abstraction for ecological improvements? It depends… on local characteristics! Selected results: Boutonne: -80% in water abstraction leads to the restablishment of ecological flows Guadalquivir: a limited reduction (5%) is sufficient to reach minimum flows – but is this good water status? In Cyprus: regional differences ranging from 0% to 75% for restauring groundwater balance Tisza: Almost no impact as climate change is the main driver (up to 4m lower GW levels) Brussels, 19 March 2009

6 ecologic.eu Q.2 – Which increase in water price? Significant increases in water prices required to reach sufficient reduction in water abstraction…..as today’s irrigation prices are very low in many areas! Current price for water in the agricultural sector Reduction 1Reduction 2Reduction 3 Boutonne river basin~0.2 €/m³. 50% 0.45 €/m³. 80% 0.525 €/m³ Guadalquivir river basin ~0.03 €/m³-0.09€/m 3 36% 0.06€/m³--0.35€/m³- 50% 0.07€/m³--0.33€/m³- No irrigation 0.034€/m 3 -0.72€/m 3 Cyprus~0.17 €/m³. 50% 0,5 €/m 3 groundwater 0,83€/m 3 surface water Danube/Tisza interstice 0,08 €/m 3 50% 0,23 €/m 3 75% 0,266€/m3

7 ecologic.eu Q.3 – Economic impacts for the farmers? Expected… clearly yes! In practice, it depends… type of agricultural products farming systems availability of alternatives compensation in place economic losses resulting from a given reduction in water abstraction are higher for the water pricing scenario as compared to the equivalent quota scenario.  financial flows out of the farm sector that result from water prices

8 ecologic.eu Q.3 – Economic impacts for the farmers? Selected results on quotas: Boutonne: 80% reduction of water consumption in the summer  reduction in farm gross margin of 2.68 M€ per year or 7,8% of the actual total gross margin. In Cyprus: 50% reduction of groundwater and surface water abstractions  12% reduction in gross margin. 30% reduction  4%. Guadalquivir: 50% reduction in irrigation abstraction  reduction of GVA by 28%. Danube-Tisza interstize: 25% reduction in water abstraction  loss of total gross margin for the agricultural sector of 1,2 M€ per year (- 0,85%). 50% reduction  3,2 M€ (-2,27%). Brussels, 19 March 2009

9 ecologic.eu Q.3 – Economic impacts for the farmers? Selected results on pricing: Cyprus: water price (tax) 1 €/m 3 (50% reduction)  drop in farm gross margin of around 83 M€ (-14%), but 56 M€ is recovered by the government Boutonne: water pricing 0.525 €/m 3 (80% reduction)  drop in total farm gross margin of 20.1% or 6.89 M€ per year. Fuente Palmera: 0,31€/m 3 (50% reduction in irrigation water abstraction)  reduction in farmer’s net margin by 60%. Tisza Danube Interstize: 0,233 €/m 3 (50% reduction)  4,82% decrease in total farm gross margin (reduction by 6.9 M€/year) Brussels, 19 March 2009

10 ecologic.eu Q.4 – Which impact on land use & cropping pattern? Quotas/increases in water price lead to reduction in: irrigated areas areas under crops with high water requirements and low profitability (in €/m 3 ) Selected results Cyprus: critus replaced by vegetables and potatoes Spain: cultivation of maize (low value crop) abandoned and water concentrated on higher value crops, then reduction in profitable crops (cotton) Boutonne: shift to (irrigated) winter crops and rainfed agri. Tisza: irrigated area for potatoes and maize is expected to decrease

11 ecologic.eu Q.5 – Order of magnitude of costs avoided? Selected results Guadalquivir: avoiding alternative water supply (storage, desalination…) at annual cost of 56 M€ Boutonne: avoiding the building of water storage for total investment costs of 36 M€ Cyprus: avoiding increase in capacity of desalination plants and building new plants (e.g. extension of Dhekelia Plant from 40 000 to 60 000 m3/day by 2009 at € 0.78/m3 => ~ 5 M€/an) Hungary: re-examining the Danube-Tisza canal at total investment costs of 2 B€… Thus, significant financial resources saved that can be re-mobilised for supporting agriculture? Brussels, 19 March 2009

12 ecologic.eu Q.6 – Additional benefits? Wide range of additional benefits Direct: ecology, water-related tourism, fishing, shellfish production, industrial activity Indirect: related economic sectors (e.g. in the Charente area, more than 20 000 jobs related to shellfish production with around 10% being accounted for as depending of the Boutonne river water) But also additional costs – for example, loss in poplar production in the Boutonne river basin Brussels, 19 March 2009

13 ecologic.eu Q.7 – Main sources of uncertainties? Increases in prices of agricultural products The growing importance of « local markets » Climate change The combined control & enforcement of both surface water and groundwater abstraction Farmers irrational behaviour Accounting for differences in certainty in water supply … Brussels, 19 March 2009

14 ecologic.eu In conclusion (1) Changes in water pricing or quotas can lead to significant reduction in water abstraction This leads to economic losses for the irrigation sector – but more limited in relative terms than the reduction in water abstraction It saves financial resources that can be mobilised to support re-structuring the agriculture sector Brussels, 19 March 2009

15 ecologic.eu In conclusion (2) Providing a signal is not the only objective of water pricing – cost-recovery, financial sustainability of irrigation infrastructure Additional work is required to find best solutions for implementation of quotas or pricing policies Brussels, 19 March 2009

16 ecologic.eu Thank you for listening! Thomas Dworak Ecologic Institute - Vienna, Auhofstrasse 4/7, AT-1130 Vienna thomas.dworak@ecologic.eu, www.ecologic.eu Brussels, 19 March 2009


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