(Feb. 24, 2009, Aguanomics)

The battle is getting started:

The California Legislative Analyst’s Office recommends that the Legislature turn groundwater over to the state, which would remove local control

[snip]

[farmers] say they fear that the state would require water meters, find out how much water everyone’s using and charge for it.

Valente, vineyard and orchard manager for John Kautz Farms, says farmers assume that if you own a piece of property and you have water underneath it, you’re allowed to use that water.

While the Legislative Analyst’s proposal would increase state administrative costs to establish new programs, there would be long-term savings to public and private entities across the stateAs I have told numerous audiences, California and Texas agree on two things: No to gay marriage and No to statewide control and monitoring of groundwater.

Although I am not going to talk about gay marriage (except to say, yes please), I am going to repeat my complaint that unregulated and unknown groundwater withdrawals of groundwater are California’s BIGGEST water policy problem. Why? Because we cannot even price or market water if we do not know actual supply or demand.

Will the farmers’ worst fear (”we may have to pay for water”) come true? Probably not for the farmers who DO control ALL the rights to the aquifer they use. Farmers who share their aquifer with others MAY have to pay a price — if that’s the only way to slow down the currently unsustainable overdrafting (mining) of water supplies.

Bottom Line: The only way to sustainably manage a resource is to know how much of it you have and control access to it. Without these simple guarantees of property rights, a tragedy of the commons will result.

(Original Post Here)

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