Adapting to water restrictions: Intensive versus extensive adaptation over time differentiated by water right seniority

Author:

Earnhart Dietrich1,Hendricks Nathan P.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Economics University of Kansas Lawrence Kansas USA

2. Department of Agricultural Economics Kansas State University Manhattan Kansas USA

Abstract

AbstractThis study explores farmers' adjustments to their water use when faced with water restrictions, distinguishing between intensive and extensive adjustments and examining adaptation over time. Specifically, the study uses a difference‐in‐differences framework to explore the effect of a groundwater restriction on irrigation management strategies. In 1992, the Kansas Department of Agriculture created an Intensive Groundwater Use Control Area to improve streamflow in Walnut Creek, which feeds water to a highly important migration point on the mid‐continent flyway. The program allocates permission to extract groundwater in 5‐year allotments. The stringency of the program's restriction depends on the seniority of the water right. We find significant reductions in water use along the intensive margin for senior water rights and along both the intensive and extensive margins for junior water rights. The results indicate significant reductions in water use that imply negative welfare impacts on farmers. We also find evidence of dynamically optimal behavior within each 5‐year allotment period.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Louisiana Board of Regents

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Economics and Econometrics,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)

Reference74 articles.

1. Marketing the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act: Applying Economics to Solve California's Groundwater Problems;Aladjem David;ABA Natural Resources & Environment,2015

2. American Association for the Advancement of Science.2019.“Kansas Farmers Minimize Water Use as the Southern Great Plains Become More Arid.”How We Respond: Community Responses to Climate Change. Available at:https://howwerespond.aaas.org/community‐spotlight/kansas‐farmers‐minimize‐water‐use‐as‐the‐southern‐great‐plains‐become‐more‐arid/

3. Property Rights in Fisheries: How Much Can Individual Transferable Quotas Accomplish?

4. Do Environmental Markets Improve on Open Access? Evidence from California Groundwater Rights

5. Property rights and groundwater management in the High Plains Aquifer

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