Inflo eNewsletter
Feature paper
This month’s feature paper is from Mike Young and Jim McColl entitled Defining Tradable Water Entitlements and Allocations: A Robust System, which was published in the Canadian Water Resources Journal in 2005. Contact Mike if you wish to receive a full copy of the paper.
Abstract:
Robust systems are characterized by a capacity to recover gracefully from the whole range of exceptional inputs and situations in a given environment. They have a connotation of elegance.
This paper will highlight the importance of separating the different elements of any tradable property entitlement and allocation system into its component parts. The result is a constellation of institutional arrangements that can be expected to last, to withstand the test of time.
Often, considerable reform is required to put in place robust systems. Using examples from Australia, this paper will highlight the importance of sequencing implementation of the reforms necessary to put robust systems in place.
Robustness is achieved by using three instruments rather than one instrument to allocate water and control use, and coupling these three instruments with three separate planning instruments.
Young, M.D. and McColl, J.C. (2005). Defining tradable water entitlements and allocations: a robust system. Canadian Water Resources Journal. 30, 65-72.
13 Feb 2006