Sharing a river: Potential performance of a water bank for reallocating irrigation water

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Author
Montilla-López, Nazaret M.
Gómez-Limón, José A.
Gutiérrez-Martín, Carlos
Publisher
ElsevierDate
2018Subject
Water banksModeling
Irrigated agriculture
Guadalquivir river basin
Spain
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This paper presents an ex-ante policy analysis of the implementation of a publicly run active water bankoperating at the basin level designed to temporarily reallocate water resources between farmers consid-ering different scenarios of reduced water availability (cyclical scarcity due to droughts). For this purpose,the Guadalquivir River Basin, located in southern Spain, is used as a case study. Fifteen representativefarm types were considered to simulate water trading through public tender for purchasing and sellingtemporary water rights. The model is built at the basin level to estimate the aggregate demand and sup-ply curves to establish expected exchange prices, volumes of water traded, enhancement in economicefficiency and improvement in rural development as measured by employment generation. The simula-tion results show that the proposed water bank encourages water transfers from 19% of the total waterused in the case of a moderate drought to almost 40% in the case of an extreme drought, significantlyreducing the economic and labor demand losses due to water shortages. The public water agency canrecover all of the incurred water bank operation costs by implementing a D 0.01/m3price differentialbetween purchase and sale prices without meaningfully affecting the performance of the water bank.Thus, we conclude that the implementation of this kind of water bank during droughts would be usefulin mitigating negative effects of droughts. Thus, policymakers are encouraged to create water banks asan effective instrument to cope with droughts.