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Water Transfers: Paying Farmers to Conserve Water

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IID and San Diego County Water Agency (SDCWA), 1998 and 2003 ... Purchase option to buy water in future at a specified price (future option) Exercise option (call) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Water Transfers: Paying Farmers to Conserve Water


1
Water TransfersPaying Farmers to Conserve Water
  • ECI 155
  • David Rosenberg

2
Outline
  • Economic theory
  • Transfer contracts
  • Example transfers
  • Imperial Irrigation District (IID) and
    Metropolitan Water District of Southern
    California (MWD), 1988
  • IID and San Diego County Water Agency (SDCWA),
    1998 and 2003
  • IID, MWD and Coachella Valley Water District
    (CVWD), 2003

3
Economic theory
  • Transfers require a functioning market
  • Quantifiable, enforceable, and exchangeable
    rights
  • Willing buyers and sellers
  • All parties can access full information
  • No impacts to third parties (externalities)
  • Conditions rarely exist
  • Mitigate in one way or another to allow transfers

4
Types of Contracts
  • Short-term use (limited transfer)
  • Purchase option to buy water in future at a
    specified price (future option)
  • Exercise option (call)
  • Purchase water right (permanent transfer)

5
How the contracts work
  • Urban users pay agricultural users to implement
    conservation actions
  • Urban users take delivery of conserved (and
    foregone) water
  • Urban users also pay costs to mitigate impacts
    and wheel water

6
Examples
  • Imperial Irrigation District (IID) and
    Metropolitan Water District of Southern
    California (MWD), 1988
  • IID and San Diego County Water Agency (SDCWA),
    1998 and 2003
  • IID, MWD and Coachella Valley Water District
    (CVWD), 2003

7
Major Water Infrastructure in Southern California
California
Nevada
Colorado River (5,420 Mm3/yr to California)
Colorado River Aqueduct
Arizona
Parker Dam
1. Coachella Valley Water District 2. Imperial
Irrigation District
1.
MWD Service Area
2.
Imperial Dam
All American Canal
SDCWA Service Area
Mexico
8
Historical Timeline
  • 1911. I.I.D. formed
  • 1920. I.I.D deliveries irrigate more than
    202,000 ha (senor, non-quantified water rights on
    Colorado River)
  • 1930. MWD builds Parker Dam and Colorado River
    Aqueduct (junior, quantified water rights on
    Colorado River)
  • 1942. Boulder Canyon Act authorizes construction
    of Imperial Dam, All American Canal and Coachella
    Canal
  • 1956 1980s. Limited canal and laterals lining
  • Through 1990s. California consumes surplus
    Colorado River water (up to 6,400 Mm3/year) not
    used by Arizona, Nevada, Utah, and Colorado
  • Late 1990s. U.S Department of Interior to reduce
    California use of Colorado River waters down to
    historical allocation of 5,400 Mm3/year

9
Contract Parties
  • Seller
  • Imperial Irrigation District (IID)
  • 3,820 Mm3/yr historical use of Colorado River
  • 186,100 Ha irrigated
  • US 1 billion in agricultural revenues (5,480/ha
    or 0.27/m3 water applied)
  • Cattle
  • Field crops (alfalfa, lettuce, carrots, sugar
    beets, cantaloupes, onions)
  • Permanent crops (citrus, fruits, nuts, etc.)
  • 73 mm/yr rainfall
  • 5,600 farm delivery gates
  • Water sold to farmers for 0.013/m3

10
Contract Parties
  • Buyers
  • Metropolitan Water District of Southern
    California (MWD)
  • Wholesale water provider to 120 local agencies
    and districts
  • More than 18 million persons served
  • Water sold from 0.24 to 0.41 per m3
  • San Diego County Water Agency (SDCWA)
  • Wholesale water provider to 23 member agencies
  • 3 million persons served
  • 790 Mm3/yr demands
  • 85 of supply imported from MWD

11
Contract 1IID MWD, 1988
  • MWD pays IID 233 million
  • IID conserves 129 Mm3/yr and makes available to
    MWD
  • 35-year contract duration
  • Cost 0.08 - 0.17/m3/yr (depending on interest
    rate)
  • Conservation achieved from
  • Concrete canal lining
  • Building regulatory reservoirs
  • 12-hour deliveries
  • Installing non-leak farm gates
  • System automation
  • Installing lateral intercepts
  • Installing irrigation and on-farm water
    management infrastructure

12
Contract 2IID SDCWA, 1998
  • SDCWA pays IID 295 million through 2011
  • IID conserves 245 Mm3/yr and makes avail. to
    SDCWA
  • 75-year contract duration
  • Cost 0.04 - 0.11/m3/yr (depending on interest
    rate)
  • Conservation achieved from
  • Lining All-American and Coachella Canals with
    concrete
  • Fallowing 12,100 Ha of land (6.5 )

13
Impacts of contract for San Diego County Water
Agency water supplies
Supplies in 2020
Supplies in 2003 (Demand 774 Mm3/yr)
(Projected Demand 994 Mm3/yr)
Source SDCWA (2004). http//www.sdcwa.org/about/s
dcwa-overview-2003.pdf
14
Contract 3IID, MWD, Coachella Valley Water
District, 2003
  • Part of Quantification Settlement Agreement for
    Colorado River waters
  • Coachella Valley Water District pays IID to
    conserve water
  • MWD retains first refusal right for conserved
    water that CVWD does not take from IID
  • MWD has option to buy 5, 10, and 12 Mm3 of water
    in 2008, 2009, 2010 that CVWD does not take
    delivery on from IID.
  • Purchase price 0.10/m3

15
Mitigating effects of exporting water
  • MWD pays 20 mill for lost jobs
  • Short-term (single year) fallowing rather than
    long-term
  • Limits on fallowing-based transfers (20 of total
    land in production)
  • Up-keep requirements on fallowed land (crop
    rotations)
  • Reinvest payments for on-farm improvements (local
    economic stimulus), e.g.,
  • Buy better equipment
  • Upgrade Irrigation technology
  • Laser-level land

16
Key Points
  • Agricultural water users often get low cost water
    and have little incentive to conserve
  • Urban users are willing to pay more for water
  • Ag / Urban contracts can provide
  • , water system improvements, and stable incomes
    to agricultural users
  • Reliable water supply (for a price), diversified
    sources, and drought security to urban users
  • Conservation actions involve land fallowing,
    canal lining, irrigation and other on-farm
    improvements
  • Can simultaneously settle other conflicting
    issues
  • Water rights, environmental impacts, law suits,
    etc.
  • Local limited-term transfers preferred
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