210 likes | 352 Views
The Murray-Darling Basin Mike Young Executive Director, The Environment Institute. Murray-Darling Basin. Directly supports 3 million people Feeds approximately 20 million people Significant environmental values 14% of Australia (size of Spain & France)
E N D
The Murray-Darling Basin Mike Young Executive Director, The Environment Institute
Murray-Darling Basin • Directly supports 3 million people • Feeds approximately 20 million people • Significant environmental values • 14% of Australia (size of Spain & France) • Australia’s three longest rivers • 40% Australia’s farmers • Agricultural exports earn $9b/year • Gross value of agricultural production $15b (40% Australia) • Irrigation: $5.5b (15%) • Home to 34 major Indigenous groups
Change? (CSIRO Water Availability – 2008)
Single Title to Land with a Water Licence National CompetitionPolicy 1993/94Plus Cap Water Land Tradable Right Price Entitlement Sharesin Perpetuity Use licences with limits & obligations Bank-like Allocations Water Rights Reform & unbundling National Water Initiative2004
Water Reform Trading opened up Scarcity and Trading Source: Murray Darling Basin Commission, 2007
Return to investment in entitlement systems & trading After Bjornlund & Rossini 2007
A robust sharing system Flood water Entitlements Entitlements Environment Environment with a fully-specified share Volume of water available Shared Water Now buying back water for the MDB environment $3.1 billion Water needed to ensure conveyance
The Guide to the Plan • Conveyance to and through Mouth 9 in 10 yrs • Prepared to lose 25% of red gum forests • Most benefits from 3,000 GL to 4,000 GL local are within region where reduction occurs • States must comply with SDLs even if Commonwealth fails to buy enough water • Now have agreement to align by 2019
Guide principles and concepts • Hydrological integrity • Most interception is included in the SDL algebra • Equitable risk sharing with Environment • Conveyance reserve specified separately • Environment gets an entitlement for freshes and some overbank work • Maximum subsidiarity • Uniform definition of SDL across the Basin built around a 114 year average less 3% allowance for adverse climate change • But CEWH takes a centralised view of the world .... • Robust planning as the “premier” control instrument • Entitlement and allocation system sits under the plan • Could reverse this approach
SDL proposals * If only this component is reduced Surface water: 14
The LTA SDL • Long Term • Hides climate change signal • Average • Mean not mode or median • Sustainable • Not defined as a limit Don’t compromise key environment or productive base • Diversion • Not allocated • Not “used” • Limit • Not a share of inflows • Not a seasonal resource allocation
“Take” not “net use” environmentally sustainable level of take for a water resource means the level at which water can be taken from that water resource which, if exceeded, would compromise: (a) key environmental assets of the water resource; or (b) key ecosystem functions of the water resource; or (c) the productive base of the water resource; or (d) key environmental outcomes for the water resource. • Management of “take” not amount “allocated” for taking • Little concept of optimal storage management
Conveyance Reserve • Conveyance water is water in the River Murray System required to deliver water to meet critical human water needs as far downstream as Wellington in South Australia. • Not to barrages • No requirement to have a minimum annual flow to the sea
Elements of a way forward • A much more regional approach • Commit to a fully specified “entitlement” system rather than a “planning” system • Define conveyance water needed throughout the system • Define the maximum amount that may be allocated in any irrigation season as the amount held when every “user” including interceptors has 100% allocation • Define a target portfolio of entitlements for the environment in each district • Continue with a market-driven approach • buy entitlements at higher and less callous prices • Establish community development funds and place money in proportion to money spent on buy backs and scale of the buy back • Establish regional environmental trusts to hold and manage entitlements. • Move forward step by step, monitoring, adjusting learning as we go
An adaptive approach to the definition of SDLs • For water body i and under the powers given to the Authority through section 23(2) (c), a register will be established to record the Sustainable Diversion Limit (SDL t,i) that applies to that body at any point in time. • This register is designed to enable SDL’s to be increased as local communities, regional authorities and States find more efficient ways to deliver environmental objectives. • All benefits flow to the region where innovative solutions are found. • Adaptive management will always be possible. • Under the arrangements proposed in the Guide the Basin Plan, once and an SDL is set, there is no incentive for anyone to invest in environmental works and measures. • After 2012, the main way to adjust an SDL is to use the “compulsory acquisition like” arrangements set out in sections 75 and 76 of the Act. • This adaptive approach set out above overcomes these these impediments and dramatically increases the opportunity to prepare a Basin Plan that will withstand the test of time.
Funding adjustment • $3.1b Buy back programs • $5.8b Infrastructure upgrade • $8.9b in Total • 15,120 irrigators • $588,624 per irrigator
www.adelaide.edu.au/environment www.myoung.net.au