ABSTRACT

Growing scarcity of freshwater worldwide brings to light the need for sound water resource modeling and policy analysis. While a solid foundation has been established for many specific water management problems, combining those methods and principles in a unified framework remains an ongoing challenge. This Handbook aims to expand the scope of efficient water use to include allocation of sources and quantities across uses and time, as well as integrating demand-management with supply-side substitutes. 

Socially efficient water use does not generally coincide with private decisions in the real world, however. Examples of mechanisms designed to incentivize efficient behavior are drawn from agricultural water use, municipal water regulation, and externalities linked to water resources. Water management is further complicated when information is costly and/or imperfect. Standard optimization frameworks are extended to allow for coordination costs, games and cooperation, and risk allocation. When operating efficiently, water markets are often viewed as a desirable means of allocation because a market price incentivizes users to move resources from low to high value activities. However, early attempts at water trading have run into many obstacles. Case studies from the United States, Australia, Europe, and Canada highlight the successes and remaining challenges of establishing efficient water markets.

part II|85 pages

Private behavior and regulatory design

part III|88 pages

Institutions and information

part IV|146 pages

Water markets and institutions around the world

chapter 16|28 pages

A California postcard

Lessons for a maturing water market

chapter 18|18 pages

Water trading in Australia

Understanding the role of policy and serendipity

chapter 19|11 pages

Tradeoffs

Fish, farmers, and energy on the Columbia

chapter 20|16 pages

Water sales, pecuniary externalities and local development

Chinatown revisited

chapter 22|18 pages

Implementing the European Water Framework Directive in Greece

An integrated socio-economic approach and remaining obstacles

chapter 23|16 pages

Water conservation and trading

Policy challenges in Alberta, Canada