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WORKSHOP ON CLIMATE RELATED WATER CONSTRAINTS

WORKSHOP ON CLIMATE RELATED WATER CONSTRAINTS. IMPLICATIONS ACROSS NORTH AMERICAN BOUNDARIES Mexico City, D.F. March 6, 2009. Water Management During Climate Change. David J. Eaton, Ph.D. Bess Harris Jones Centennial Professor of Natural Resource Policy Studies

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WORKSHOP ON CLIMATE RELATED WATER CONSTRAINTS

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  1. WORKSHOP ON CLIMATE RELATED WATER CONSTRAINTS IMPLICATIONS ACROSS NORTH AMERICAN BOUNDARIES Mexico City, D.F. March 6, 2009

  2. Water Management During Climate Change • David J. Eaton, Ph.D. • Bess Harris Jones Centennial Professor of Natural Resource Policy Studies • Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs • The University of Texas at Austin • Austin, TX 78713-8925 • eaton@mail.utexas.edu

  3. Overview • Climate change and water availability • Generic options for management changes with respect to climate change • Trans-boundary water management in North America – existing rules • Implications of climate change for water management across North American boundaries • Water management across political boundaries, as if science and people mattered

  4. Climate Change and Water • Climate change could lead to • More water • Less water • No change in amount of water • Shift in timing of water • Increased variablity of water Problem: less certainty of water availability

  5. Responses to Water Uncertainty • Create and share new water • Share less water • Change the rules?

  6. Create new water • Reservoirs: Amistad and Falcon • Conservation and reuse: Rio Grande, El Paso • Desalination: El Paso

  7. Share Less Water • War, peace, negotiation will not resolve water instability • Prevent disputes by sharing uncertainly

  8. Climate Change Management Options • New operating rules for reservoir storage (position analysis) • New operating rules for droughts (position analysis) • Voluntary sharing of reduced withdrawals • Inter-basin water transfers (rights; water loans) • Intra-basin water transfers (rights; water loans)

  9. Trans-boundary Water Management in North America EXISTING RULES: • Mexico-US • Canada-US

  10. Treaties for Water Management • Trans-boundary water management in North America is empowered and limited by treaties • Treaties govern water allocation and water quality for surface and ground waters between sovereign states • States, provinces, regional institutions and local government have limited roles • Treaties are not likely to be modified

  11. Mexico-US Water Treaties • 1906 Rio Grande/Rio Bravo • Water allocation at El Paso/Jarez • 1944 Mexico-US border rivers • Water allocation in the Colorado river basin • Water allocation in the Rio Grande/Rio Bravo basin • Water quality in border rivers • Silence on groundwater allocation and quality

  12. Canada-US Water Treaty • 1909 Treaty • Open as to content • Management by basin

  13. Water Management Practice: Mexico-US • Surface water allocation • Surface water quality • Groundwater allocation and quality • Water infrastructure investment

  14. Mexico-US Surface Water Allocation • Each party insists on its water allocation under the treaty • There is insufficient water in the basins to meet the water allocations, let alone the water needs of the people • Each side declares ‘unusual drought’ on a regular basis to avoid releases under droughts • Regular circumstance of insufficient water • Water conflicts resolved by rain, not institutions • Each side cooperating in new water investment • Example: new water supply investment improving water availability to poor along Mexico-Texas Border ($1.5 billion since 1994)

  15. Mexico-US Surface Water Quality Management • IBWC/CILA responsible for water quality along the border • No joint standards; coordinated unilateral action • Each Mexico-US sewerage or wastewater treatment project has its own ‘standard’ • Mexico/US agreed to invest jointly in border water quality under NAFTA • $1.5 billion in water supply, water quality, water conservation along Mexico-Texas border • Improvements in water quality where investment is made

  16. Mexico-US Groundwater Management • Treaties are silent as to groundwater • Two sides have not sought to establish rules for groundwater allocation or quality management • Two sides give no indication of interest in establishing rules • US groundwater rules differ by state • Result: unilateral action • Result: groundwater mining and degradation of groundwater quality

  17. Implications of Climate Change for Water Management in North America (1) • It is unlikely that there could be a change in treaty agreements • Two sides can and will cooperate to improve conditions for surface water supply and surface water quality (e.g. IBWC/CILA Minutes) • Cooperation takes the form of investment which can and does deliver results • Groundwater not likely to be addressed unless local communities or states bring parties along

  18. Examples of Mexico-US Local or State Involvement in Bi-national Water Issues • Informal water group in Juarez-El Paso • Laredo-Nuevo Laredo treatment plant • Border 2012 efforts • BECC/NAD Bank investments • Ten state effort

  19. Implications of Climate Change for Water Management in North America (2) • Water management under climate change will be the same as water management • Likely option: coordinated unilateral action and coordinated investment • Possible option: unilateral action without insight into unintended consequences • Possible option: local or regional efforts to manage own water resources by co-opting national governments

  20. Process of Water Dispute Prevention • Transparent and accessible water data and models • Training in water management models • Narrative elicitation to develop goals and measures • Multi-party drought management simulations • Voluntary pre-emptive solutions • Exhaustive, responsive, verbatim, public participation

  21. Narrative :The Idea Telling a story is an efficient, effective, equitable and rapid way to identify problems and solutions in a river basin

  22. Narrative as Language Every human society tells stories The structure of narrative is common among people Stories of different people often have much in common

  23. A ‘Future’ Water Hypothesis People from different places with different lives, distinct priorities and strong preferences tell stories that have much in common

  24. Narrative and Dispute Research A narrative approach can identify appropriate, consensus, and smart management steps for river basin management People may disagree on who is at fault or what goals exist, but can agree on some actions to take

  25. Water Narrative Elements -1 What are the water problems in the Basin? What are the causes of these problems? What could be consequences of failure to address these problems? What actions could help prevent or reduce the harm from problems?

  26. Water Narrative Elements - 2 What barriers to actions exist that need to be overcome? What aids to action exist that can help? What are the metrics to measure success or failure after action? What is the ideal future after actions are implemented?

  27. Examples of Dispute Prevention GMA-9 groundwater in Texas: desired future conditions over 50 years Inter-basin water transfer from Colorado River basin to Brazos River basin - with exporting basin gaining water and income Water management in the South Saskatchewan basin in Alberta Mexico-US experience Palestinian-Israeli joint narrative

  28. Groundwater Flow in Model Cell

  29. Summary of GMA 9 Stakeholder Narratives

  30. Current Problems Some dry wells Some dry springs Some contaminated water supplies Urban encroachment

  31. Causes of Water Problems Population growth Limited water resources Drought Legal interpretations on use of groundwater Limited authority of district

  32. Consequences if No Action More dry wells More dry springs More water contamination Litigation

  33. Possible Actions Cooperation Responsible development Market incentives Public education Alternative sources and conservation Infrastructure investment

  34. Barriers to Action Limited resources: money, data, staff, education Mistrust Costly alternatives Resistance to change Resistance to regulation

  35. Ideal Outcomes Assured water availability for domestic use Spring flows Maintenance of groundwater levels

  36. Groundwater Management Area 9-Major Aquifers

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