Coming to grips with the National
Water Initiative.
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Before he worked at ANU and
the Murray-Darling Basin Commission, Daniel Connell
was a producer with the Natural History Unit at the
ABC.
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The question of who controls the Murray-Darling Basin has been
thrust to the fore this year. The Federal Government has brokered
a deal with most of the eastern states to take control of this
vital system of gullies, streams and rivers, which stretches
over 3,370km and supplies 70 per cent of the nation’s
irrigation. The future of the Basin will be determined in a
large part by the National Water Initiative, which was adopted
in 2004 as way of balancing the needs of the environment with
those of consumers, agriculture and industry. Dr Daniel Connell,
a research fellow at the Crawford School of Economics and Government,
spent nearly two decades working as a journalist and oral historian
in the region, including eight years at the Murray-Darling Basin
Commission. He’s also the author of Water politics
in the Murray-Darling Basin, published by Federation Press.
In this essay he explores some of the challenges involved in
regulating hydrological systems.
During the protracted discussions that preceded agreement on
the National Water Initiative (NWI), a senior Commonwealth Government
cabinet minister described the experience as similar to wrestling
with smoke. The NWI should be seen as a new episode in an old
story, not a settled policy. It’s an ideological battlefield
where the terrain has been rearranged, but upon which conflict
between old foes convinced that the struggle to control Australian
water management is still to be won will continue.
Water policy has long been a difficult policy area for Australian
governments. Fuelling the water policy crisis is the fact that
the predictive capacity of traditional science continues to
be limited. Trends and general biophysical processes can be
documented at the larger scale. Yet it’s often difficult
to identify the links between particular actions and specific
consequences with enough certainty to inspire confidence in
managers, the courts and the people who will be affected by
their decisions.
It’s hard to develop robust criteria for determining
whether particular water policy issues should be treated as
public or private. The economic system still has a low capacity
to penalise those who are responsible for negative environmental
impacts or to reward those who incur extra costs by adopting
more sustainable management practices. Despite the growing interest
in the so-called triple bottom line approach, accounting systems
are ineffective in capturing the environmental and social costs
and benefits involved. The legal system is frequently unable
to penalise those responsible for negative environmental impacts,
and the potential benefactors of remedial action often can’t
be identified clearly enough to target the collection of costs.
It’s proved very difficult to properly take account of
the nature of water as a multi-use resource. There’s strong
pressure to treat water entitlements as a commodity that can
be owned and managed like land, but this leads to great confusion.
A comparison between the two reveals profound differences. Land
stays in one place and its physical dimensions can be defined.
Water, however, is like air, which is recycled from people to
plants to other people and so on.
A specific water molecule could typically progress from the
atmosphere to a stream where it provides an environment for
plants and animals. At different moments the same water could
support sports, sustain a crop, become groundwater seepage that
carries salt onto the property of a neighbour, or be part of
a return flow to the streams that drain the landscape. Eventually
it could reach an estuary, where the level of flow into the
sea has dramatic effects on fish breeding and the economic viability
of coastal towns. One of the questions for contemporary society
and water policy makers is to what degree is it appropriate
to give some of the users involved in this progression, but
not others, property rights to the water they so briefly control?
Implementation of major policies without consideration of their
environmental implications is commonplace. Take the Commonwealth
Government’s deregulation of the dairy industry in the
late 1990s and early 2000s. That restructuring closed a large
number of rain-fed dairies along the east seaboard and led to
a substantial expansion of the industry in northern Victoria
and southern New South Wales along the River Murray, where the
main source of water is diversions for irrigation. This happened
without any environmental assessment as to whether it was appropriate
to increase the demand for irrigation water in a catchment that
was already over-allocated.
One of the odd features of the debate about the future of Australian
water management is that almost no one puts forward an explicit
in-principle defence of unsustainable management – but
so many take that approach in practice. When it’s presented,
the case for unsustainable management is usually just a list
of social and economic benefits that are threatened by efforts
to achieve sustainability, with no acknowledgement that capacity
to maintain them will be eroded by continued degradation. In
practice there is widespread rejection of the proposition that
environmental sustainability is a necessary foundation for economic
activities in the long term. The release of the NWI highlights
this disjunction and sets the scene for a divisive struggle
about the fundamental assumptions underpinning water management
in Australia.
The logic of long-term policy development creates strong pressure
to conclude that, at some point, the process of degradation
and depletion of the resource upon which so much is based should
be halted. The requirement to achieve environmental sustainability
first is central to the NWI, but much of the public discussion
assumes that the primary question should be how much water currently
used for production can be spared to achieve environmental sustainability?
The controversy over the relatively small reductions proposed
for the Living Murray Initiative, a program meant to supply
environmental water to six icon sites along the River Murray,
indicates that the usual answer is ‘not much’.
The NWI puts forward an ambitious plan to restructure water
management and promote economic growth within a strong regulatory
framework. The aim is to improve and protect the environmental
condition of both surface and sub-surface hydrological systems.
Approved in June 2004, the NWI is attempting to create rights
within a public policy framework. This is occurring in a context
where the relationship between governments, public water authorities
and private water users, principally irrigators, is changing
after more than a century of relative stability. For many decades
the interests of governments and water users were very similar.
Governments used water as a tool to promote the growth of communities.
There was little concern about environmental issues. Even though
water entitlements were vaguely defined from a legal perspective,
the reliability of supply was relatively high in light of the
biophysical circumstances. Variations were usually the result
of administrative decisions made in response to droughts. The
affected communities accepted such decisions as sensible and
necessary. In more recent times this congruence of interests
has broken down.
The growth in diversions in the second half of the 20th century
has caused serious environmental problems and intensified competition
between the increasing numbers of water users. The NWI attempts
to resolve this conflict by requiring that all systems be, or
be restored to, environmental sustainability before perpetual
rights are allocated. The risk is that the process of establishing
an environmentally sustainable regime will not be sufficiently
rigorous to regain the volumes of water and flexibility needed
to achieve that condition. Given the political strength of demands
for greater legal recognition of a wide range of different types
of water entitlements, and the unanswered questions that persist
about who can represent and protect the environment, there is
a real danger that water property rights will be locked in at
too high a proportion of total flow. If that happens, riverine
environments will continue to decline and resource security
will be further eroded.
The treatment of climate variability and change in the NWI is
an indication of the difficulties faced by policy makers when
attempting to balance the competing demands for water entitlement
certainty against what is needed for environmental sustainability.
Paragraph 49 of the NWI provides for a two-stage process, which
attempts to balance environmental sustainability against the
diverters’ understandable desire for legally protected
certainty. It stipulates that the level of water required in-stream
to protect environmental sustainability is to be determined
between 2004 and 2014. After that time further reductions will
result in compensation if they are the product of policy changes
and are larger than three percent over 10 years.
This arrangement might seem favourable to the environment, but
it appears to abandon the capacity to adjust the size of the
consumptive pool from year to year as a result of climate variability.
To be able to decide if and when the three percent threshold
is crossed, triggering the requirement for compensation, a stable
volumetric definition of the size of the consumptive pool will
be needed. Without a definable base line it will not be possible
to calculate the three percent. Such a definition is also implied
by the lack of discussion of the possibility that the size of
the consumptive pool will vary from year to year in those sections
of the NWI that deal with water plans and perpetual entitlements.
This inflexibility is a particular concern in that it appears
to reduce the capacity to deal with the shocks that will come
from climate change.
On the other hand, paragraph 48 of the NWI states that:
Water access entitlements holders are to bear the risks of any
reduction or less reliable water allocation, under their water
access entitlement, arising from reductions to the consumptive
pool as a result of
(1) seasonal or long term changes in climate: and
(2) periodic natural events such as bushfires and drought.
There are substantial unresolved tensions here. One of the main
purposes of dams and river regulation has been to provide protection
against climate variability. Supplying more water in drought
years has always been part of the rationale for dam building.
To apply paragraph 48 will involve a fundamental policy change.
But if Australia is to have a viable irrigation industry in
the future when there is predicted to be substantial reductions
in inflows as a result of climate change, we will need to reduce
water allocations at a rate that matches the rapidity of the
shift in climatic conditions, and not merely at a pace that
is socially acceptable.
The complexity of the water management issues in the NWI is
also evident in the difficulties involved in defining environmental
sustainability and the ways in which it will be protected. While
there are some sections that indicate a broad conception of
what is involved in environmental sustainability, other parts
tend to suggest that balancing inflows and outflows will be
enough to achieve that condition. Issues such as maintaining
or restoring a more natural pattern of seasonal flow or protecting
the interrelationship between streams and their flood plains
are touched on only very lightly. Concern for water quality,
including salinisation, is also more implied than stated in
the NWI.
According to the NWI, comprehensive water plans will resolve
all the tensions created by the conflicting demands on water
managers. This focuses attention on the institutions that will
prepare and enforce them. In most states the long-established
state government water management agencies have largely been
dismantled and replaced by regional catchment authorities. In
many cases these authorities are new and untested. Yet the subject
of institutional development is rarely mentioned in the NWI
beyond the very limited matter of measures to facilitate water
trading.
Then there is the skills shortage. Management of hydrological
systems is much more complex than it was only a few decades
ago. This will require new approaches to monitoring, research,
decision-making and compliance that are far more sophisticated
than those currently in place. But where will we get enough
people with the skills needed to undertake these tasks? Lack
of skilled personnel to manage Australia’s highly modified
hydrological systems could well prove the greatest source of
risk to the NWI and Australian water management in the medium
term.
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ANU Reporter
Autumn 2007
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