Shopping for Water: How the Market Can Mitigate Water Shortages in the American West

Shopping for Water: How the Market Can Mitigate Water Shortages in the American West

Shopping for Water: How the Market Can Mitigate Water Shortages in the American West

Shopping for Water: How the Market Can Mitigate Water Shortages in the American West

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Overview

The American West has a long tradition of conflict over water. But after fifteen years of drought across the region, it is no longer simply conflict: it is crisis. In the face of unprecedented declines in reservoir storage and groundwater reserves throughout the West, Shopping for Water focuses on a set of policies that could contribute to a lasting solution: using market forces to facilitate the movement of water resources and to mitigate the risk of water shortages.

Shopping for Water begins by reviewing key dimensions of this problem: the challenges of population and economic growth, the environmental stresses from overuse of common water resources, the risk of increasing water-supply volatility, and the historical disjunction that has developed between and among rural and urban water users regarding the amount we consume and the price we pay for water. The authors then turn to five proposals to encourage the broader establishment and use of market institutions to encourage reallocation of water resources and to provide new tools for risk mitigation. Each of the five proposals offers a means of building resilience into our water management systems.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781610916745
Publisher: Island Press
Publication date: 10/20/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 40
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Peter Culp is a partner in the Phoenix office of Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP, an international law firm, where he practices in the areas of water, natural resources, and environmental law.
Robert Glennon is Regents’ Professor and Morris K. Udall Professor of Law and Public Policy in the Rogers College of Law at the University of Arizona. He is the author of Water Follies: Groundwater Pumping and the Fate of America’s Fresh Waters and Unquenchable: America’s Water Crisis and What to Do about It.
Gary Libecap is professor of Corporate Environmental Management at the Bren School of Environmental Science and Management and Department of Economics, University of California, Santa Barbara. He also is a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
The Hamilton Project at the Brookings Institution offers a strategic vision and produces innovative policy proposals on how to create a growing economy that benefits more Americans.
The Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment is working toward a future in which societies meet people’s needs for water, food, health and other vital services while protecting and nurturing the planet.

Table of Contents

Abstract
 
Chapter 1. Introduction 5
Chapter 2. The Western Water Crisis: Long Time Brewing, Now On The Boil
Chapter 3. Reforming Western Water Law And Policy
Chapter 4. Questions And Concerns
Chapter 5. Conclusion
 
Authors And Acknowledgements
Endnotes
References
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