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Groundwater management: The effect of water flows on welfare gains

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36 Scopus citations

Abstract

We construct a spatially explicit groundwater model that has multiple cells and finite hydraulic conductivity to estimate the gains from groundwater management and the factors driving those gains. We calibrate an 246-cell model to the parameters and geography of Kern County, California, and find that the welfare gain from management for the entire aquifer is significantly higher in the multi-cell model (27%) than in the bathtub model (13%) and that individual farmer gains can vary from 7% to 39% depending of their location and relative size of demand for water. We also find that when all farmers in the aquifer simultaneously behave strategically the aggregate gains from management are significantly smaller. However, individual farmers do not have the incentive to behave strategically even with finite hydraulic conductivity when other farmers behave myopically.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)31-40
Number of pages10
JournalEcological Economics
Volume95
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2013

Keywords

  • Common pool resource
  • Darcy's Law
  • Hydraulic conductivity
  • Numerical optimization
  • Strategic behavior

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