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Samuel Benin

Samuel Benin is the Acting Director for Africa in the Development Strategies and Governance Unit. He conducts research on national strategies and public investment for accelerating food systems transformation in Africa and provides analytical support to the African Union’s CAADP Biennial Review.

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IFPRI currently has more than 600 employees working in over 80 countries with a wide range of local, national, and international partners.

Australia’s Murray-Darling Basin shows why the ‘social cost of water’ concept won’t work

Open Access | CC-BY-4.0

Water over banks of river, tree at center

By Sarah Ann Wheeler and Claudia Ringler

Access to safe, clean water is a basic human right. But water scarcity or barriers to access can cause conflict within and between countries.

Fights over water can be expected to intensify as the world warms, evaporation increases and rainfall becomes less predictable. So we’ll need to work even harder to resolve disputes and share this precious resource.

Earlier this year, for the first time in almost half a century, the United Nations held a conference squarely focused on water (Figures 1, 2). Thousands of water experts gathered in New York for three days in March to chart a way forward.

We were among the delegates. Since then, we have discussed and debated ideas that surfaced at this international meeting. Some were worthwhile, but others were wrong. In particular, we challenge the concept of a global “social cost of water.”

Figure 1

What is a global social cost of water?

One of the big ideas that came up at the conference was the need for a “new economics of water as a common good”, which includes the “social cost of water.”

Elaborating on his idea in the journal Nature, Swedish scientist Johan Rockström and colleagues wrote:

[Researchers] must assess the ‘social cost of water’, akin to the ‘social cost of carbon’, which considers the costs to society of loss and damage caused by water extremes and not meeting the basic provision of water for human needs.

The social cost of carbon is an estimate, in dollars, of the economic damages that would result from emitting one additional metric ton of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. It’s a decision-making tool used by governments, especially in the United States, for cost-benefit analysis of climate policy.

The social cost of water concept proposes valuing all types of water, including water vapor in the atmosphere that later falls as rain. This means attempting to put a dollar value on moisture flowing across borders, and implicitly creating world water markets. According to this logic, if most of Nigeria’s rain comes from forests in central Africa, then Nigeria should be prepared to pay central African nations to maintain the source of this moisture generation.

Figure 2

What is the UN Water Conference?

And how can YOU get involved in #WaterAction?

Ahead of Wednesday’s conference opening, here are five things you should know. ⬇️https://t.co/yxBdU2tTbI

— United Nations (@UN) March 21, 2023

Australia’s Murray-Darling Basin: A case in point

The value of water in the basin consists of benefits and costs. Some benefits include:

  • Direct use of water to grow crops or irrigate pasture
  • Recreational use such as boating and water sports
  • Indirect use including the benefits to health and well-being from living alongside a natural water body
  • Future use values, knowing there is sufficient water to sustain healthy ecosystems and rivers in years to come
  • Future generational, existence and cultural values such as non-use values associated with the ancient Brewarrina fish traps.

Costs include harm to mental health associated with a lack of water during drought. At the other extreme, there’s the cost of too much water causing floods, property damage and loss of life, or salinity harming viticulture in the Riverland.

This shows the social value of water is incredibly difficult to measure even within one area such as the basin, let alone trying to enforce a global water market.

What should instead happen next?

We think the best way to address the water crisis is to focus on local management and institutions, plan carefully and implement a wide range of policies. These include:

  • Using economic methods and tools to assess and implement local water policies where feasible
  • Removing subsidies that incentivize water exploitation
  • Establishing sustainable extraction limits
  • Strengthening water institutions to allow measurement, monitoring and enforcement of water use
  • Promoting water justice and sharing.

This is a big task. Misdirection down blind alleys is a distraction that the world cannot afford.

Sarah Ann Wheeler is a Professor of Water Economics at the University of Adelaide, Australia; Claudia Ringler is Director of IFPRI’s Natural Resources and Resilience Unit and co-lead of the CGIAR NEXUS Gains initiative. This post first appeared on The Conversation. Opinions are the authors’.

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