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What Water are We Really Pumping? The Nature and Extent of Surface and Groundwater Substitutability in Australia and Implications for Water Management Policies

Sarah Ann Wheeler, Alec Zuo, John Kandulu

2020Applied Economic Perspectives and Policy14 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Little is known about the interdependence between surface and groundwater extractions and trade. Groundwater metered extraction was modelled at the bore level (n = 1,890) in the Goulburn‐Murray Irrigation District, Victoria, from 2007–08 to 2016–17 to understand its associations with hydrologic, location, climatic, and economic factors. Surface and groundwater extractions were found to be substitutes for each other, with groundwater extractions statistically significantly increasing when: (i) bores were closer to surface water watercourses, (ii) surface water allocations and rainfall were lower, and (iii) surface water temporary market prices and entitlement trade out‐of‐zone volumes were higher. Other key groundwater extraction influences included pumping costs and commodity prices.

Topics & Concepts

GroundwaterSurface waterEntitlement (fair division)CommodityExtraction (chemistry)Water extractionEnvironmental scienceIrrigationWater resource managementHydrology (agriculture)Natural resource economicsEconomicsEnvironmental engineeringGeologyMicroeconomicsEcologyChemistryBiologyChromatographyGeotechnical engineeringMarket economyWater resources management and optimizationWater-Energy-Food Nexus StudiesHydrology and Watershed Management Studies
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