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ADOPTING REALISTIC
PRICES
Chapter 7. Raising Water Productivity
Lester R. Brown, Plan B: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a
Civilization in Trouble (W.W. Norton & Co., NY: 2003).
Water pricing policies today are remnants
of another age, a time when water was abundant, when there was more
water than we could possibly use. During the first six decades of
the last century, growth in irrigation came from surface water projects,
consisting of dams and large networks of gravity-fed canals. Irrigation
water from these large, publicly funded projects was often heavily
subsidized, provided as a basic service. Because water was so cheap,
there was no incentive to use it efficiently.
In some situations, such as in parts of East and Southeast Asia,
water is abundant and there is no need to charge for it. But for
most of humanity, that age of water abundance is now history. As
the world moves into an era of scarcity, the challenge for governments
is to take the politically unpopular step of adopting prices for
water that reflect its value. Charging for water encourages greater
efficiency by all users, including the adoption of more-efficient
irrigation practices, the use of more water-efficient industrial
processes, and the purchase of more water-efficient household appliances.
Pricing water to encourage efficiency can also be a threat to low-income
users, however. In response to this, South Africa introduced lifeline
rates, whereby each household receives a fixed amount of water for
basic needs at a low price. When water use exceeds this level, the
price escalates. This helps ensure that basic needs are met while
discouraging the wasteful use of water.4
Some countries saw the value of raising water prices early on. The
government of Morocco, with 30 million people living in a semiarid
environment, made a huge investment in harvesting its limited rainfall,
building 88 large dams, raising storage capacity from 2.3 billion
cubic meters of water in 1967 to 14 billion in 1997. But even with
this sixfold expansion, Morocco was still facing water shortages,
so in 1980 it doubled the price of water nationwide, encouraging
efficiency. The effect of price rises on water use varies widely,
but as a general matter a 10-percent rise in the price of irrigation
water reduces water use by 1-2 percent. For residential and industrial
use, the drop is usually higherranging
from 3 to 7 percent.5
China has moved in a similar direction in recent years. With 500
of its 700 largest cities facing water shortages, with water tables
falling almost everywhere, and with rivers running dry, China decided
in 2001 to raise the price of water. The goal was to have water
prices more accurately reflect value. Raising water prices in a
country with a history of free water was politically difficult,
much like raising gasoline prices in the United States.6
Some countries facing acute water scarcity are metering groundwater
use. Jordan, a country with only 285 cubic meters of water per person
per yearone
of the lowest in the worldhas
installed meters on both new and existing irrigation wells. When
the amount of water pumped exceeds that specified in the well permit,
owners pay a stiff penalty. Although compliance is not automatic
and is often met with resistance, it is widely recognized within
the community that the failure to comply will deplete aquifers and
undermine local farm economies.7
Australia inherited water institutions designed by Europeans, institutions
that were more suitable for water-rich countries than for arid Australia.
These were replaced by a system of riparian rights with licensing
systems that specified how much water could be withdrawn, introduced
meters to measure withdrawals, and charged for the amount of water
used.8
Unfortunately, India moved in the opposite direction in 1997, when
the government of Punjab decreed that the state utility should provide
free electricity to farmers for irrigation. This populist move in
India's breadbasket state lasted three years. Washington Post
reporter John Lancaster wrote, "With no incentive to curb power
use, farmers expanded the acreage devoted to water-intensive crops,
especially rice, and ran their pumps indiscriminantly, seriously
depleting groundwater reserves." In late 2000, when the state electricity
utility was on the brink of bankruptcy, it was instructed to start
billing farmers for electricity, a move that should raise Punjab's
water productivity and slow the fall of water tables.9
Other governments in South Asia, while not so flagrant as the government
of Punjab, have nonetheless subsidized the use of both electricity
and diesel fuel to irrigators. This, coupled with cheap credit for
financing the purchase of pumps and motors, has encouraged the overpumping
and wasteful use of water, creating a false sense of food security.10
Because surface water is usually available only through large government
projects, it is easier to charge for it than for groundwater. But
the basic principles for managing the two water sources responsibly
are essentially the same: provide economic incentives to use water
efficiently and involve local water users' associations in the allocation
of the water. Surface water typically belongs to the state and groundwater
to the person who owns the land under which it is located. Even
though individual farmers drill wells on their land, the pumps can
be metered and farmers can be charged for the water. Local acceptance
of this approach depends on convincing farmers to work together
to stabilize the aquifer for everyone's long-term benefit.
Some countries have introduced tradable water rights so that individuals
who have rights to surface water or who own wells can sell their
water. This practice, common in the western United States, enables
water to move freely to higher value uses, which essentially means
the sale of water rights by farmers or local irrigation associations
to cities. In India and Pakistan, small landholders often make the
large investment needed for an irrigation well and then sell water
to neighboring farmers.11
ENDNOTES:
4. Barbara Schereiner and Dhesigen
Naidoo, Department of Water Affairs and Forestry of South Africa,
Water as an Instrument for Social Development in South Africa (Pretoria,
South Africa), 10 December 1999, at www.dwaf.gov.za/communications/departmentalspeeches/2002/waterasan
instrumentfor social dev.doc.
5. Population from United Nations, op. cit. note 2; Mohamed Ait
Kadi, "Irrigation Water Pricing Policy in Morocco's Large Scale
Irrigation Projects," paper prepared for the Ajadir Conference on
Irrigation Policies: Micro and Macro Economic Considerations, Ajadir,
Morocco, 15-17 June 2002, pp. 6, 9; Mark W. Rosegrant, Ximing Cai,
and Sarah A. Cline, World Water and Food to 2025 (Washington, DC:
International Food Policy Research Institute, 2002), p. 141.
6. Water shortage in Chinese cities from R. Maria Saleth and Arial
Dinar, Water Challenge and Institutional Response: A Cross-Country
Perspective (Washington, DC: World Bank, 1999), p. 26; Liang Chao,
"Officials: Water Price to Increase," China Daily, 21 February 2001.
7. Tom Gardner-Outlaw and Robert Engelman, Sustaining Water, Easing
Scarcity: A Second Update (Washington, DC: Population Action International,
1997).
8. Saleth and Dinar, op. cit. note 6, p. 23.
9. John Lancaster, "Incomplete Reforms Hobble Economic Growth in
India," Washington Post, 6 November 2002.
10. Ibid.
11. Noel Gollehon and William Quinby, "Irrigation in the American
West: Area, Water and Economic Activity," Water Resources Development,
vol. 16, no.2 (2000), pp. 187-95; India and Pakistan in K. William
Easter and Robert R. Hearne, Decentralizing Water Resource Management:
Economic Incentives, Accountability, and Assurance, Policy Research
Working Paper 129 (Washington, DC: World Bank, November 1993), p.
13.
Copyright
© 2003 Earth Policy Institute
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