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Institutions for reoperating reservoirs in semi-arid regions facing climate change and competing societal water demands: insights from Colorado

Laura Turley, Christian Bréthaut, Géraldine Pflieger

2021Water International11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Reservoir reoperation is analysed from the perspective of institutions (rules) governing water resources. A new definition is provided, going beyond ‘modifying dam operations' found in the literature to instead focus on changes to the allocation of water stored and released from a reservoir. Through interviews and archival research, we assess 32 large reservoirs in the US state of Colorado. Using tools from institutional analysis, we find that reoperation is often the result of institutional ‘crafting' by reservoir managers and water users, that property rights strongly influence outcomes, and that well-designed policy can promote water sharing in otherwise rigid institutional settings.

Topics & Concepts

Climate changePerspective (graphical)Water resourcesProperty rightsState (computer science)Institutional changeFocus (optics)AridEnvironmental resource managementBusinessNatural resource economicsEnvironmental planningEnvironmental sciencePolitical scienceEconomicsComputer scienceGeologyPublic administrationLawArtificial intelligenceAlgorithmOceanographyBiologyPaleontologyOpticsEcologyPhysicsWater resources management and optimizationHydrology and Watershed Management StudiesFlood Risk Assessment and Management
Institutions for reoperating reservoirs in semi-arid regions facing climate change and competing societal water demands: insights from Colorado | Litcius