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Introduction. Sustainable groundwater management rare prior to 1980s Aquifer over-development eventually seen as a threatPoor understanding of aquifers cannot stop us from actionTrading can enhance management of groundwater Surface water trading has dominated reforms to dateThis must change. Dr
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1. OPTIMISING SUSTAINABLE USE OF GROUNDWATER:A Challenge for Science and Water Markets John Brumley & Tamara Boyd
School of Civil and Chemical Engineering
RMIT University
2. Introduction Sustainable groundwater management rare prior to 1980s
Aquifer over-development eventually seen as a threat
Poor understanding of aquifers cannot stop us from action
Trading can enhance management of groundwater
Surface water trading has dominated reforms to date
This must change
3. Drivers of Australian Water Reform Growing water deficit
Enhanced allocation of current resources needed
Deregulation of the water industry
Focus shifted from resource development to management
Brundtland Report, Agenda 21, National Strategy for ESD
CoAG’s 1994 Water Reform Framework
4. CoAG Water Reform National policy for reform of rural and urban water industries
Explicitly linking fiscal and environmental objectives
Jurisdictional differences in implementation
Water pricing based on full cost recovery
Comprehensive water allocations, separated from land
Allocations for the environment and water trading
5. Ensuing Groundwater Program ARMCANZ groundwater policy discussion paper
Objective: sustainable use of the resource
Better integration of surface and groundwater
Development of groundwater management plans
Groundwater arrangements not subject to assessment payments
Yet consistent, coordinated action must prevail
6. Sustainable Yield Total allocations should not exceed sustainable yield: the groundwater extraction regime, measured over a specified planning time frame, that allows acceptable levels of impact and protects the higher value uses that have a dependency on the water
Conceptually difficult to implement
Methodology varies greatly between and within countries
Aquifer characteristics or ‘default’ % of recharge
7. Issues Limiting extraction to recharge doesn’t control externalitites
Interference & environmental degradation
Groundwater mining may be policy
Las Vegas Valley, SA/Vic Border, Latrobe Valley
Intentional overallocation acceptable only when:
Publicly accepted strategic benefit
Resource is efficiently used and tightly managed
Resource may be overallocated but underused
8. Consequences of Excessive Withdrawal Reversible Interference:
Pumping lifts/costs increase
Well yields decrease
Springflow/baseflow reduction
Effect on phreatophytic vegetation
Irreversible Deterioration:
Saline water intrusion/upconing
Ingress of polluted waters
Aquifer compaction/yield reduction
Land subsidence (Foster, 1999)
9. Australia’s Groundwater Markets Impediments include:
Deficiency in reliable data
Less portable nature of groundwater
Potential impacts from groundwater transfers
Few embargoed areas, consequently ‘thin’ markets
Activation of dormant licences
Use of zoning to control transfers
10. Conclusion Trade can optimise economic benefits of groundwater use
Hydrogeological and environmental checks must be met
Groundwater must keep pace with surface water reform
Considerable work to be done, including:
Community/user education
Data attainment & interpretation
Understanding environmental allocations