Water and Food: Agricultural Flows and Water Markets | Related |
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Worldwide, our freshwater resources are depleting. Many even argue that we have reached the point of crisis. Some people claim the end of abundant water means the beginning of food shortage. But that’s not necessarily going to happen. Food shortages and water shortages are both caused by prices that are too low or policies that block trade from surplus to deficit areas. We need to retool institutions that govern water supply and use, that were designed in a context when water was abundant. This is the recording of TheWaterChannel webinar on September 28, 2011, where David Zetland (Wageningen University) discussed physical and institutional dimensions affecting agricultural water flows, farmers’ irrigation and crop decisions, distortions caused by faulty policies and how water markets can be harnessed to manage scarcity. Among (many) other things, David discussed:
1) How to make it profitable for farmers be more efficient with their water use Webinar-related resources are on http://webinar.thewaterchannel.tv/
More info: http://endofabundance.com/ Category: Agriculture
Tags: water, markets, economics, policies, institutions, rights, scarcity, all in auctions, fish, webinar, TWCProduction, aguanomics
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Thanks for your presentation and sharing your knowledge.
As you may have noticed much of the questions and concerns were directed on the unsuitability of water markets in our complex and diverse world. As a proud IWE-Wageningen graduate, I believe that we have to be careful when we recommend solutions in a generaized way to be applied and replicated all over the world.
I think there are some holes in the applicability of water markets when it comes to those collective-commmunity water contexts, when there ARE already internal solutions to manage water in a efficient and coordinated way with no need of a market. The complications come in developing countries, where groups are starkingly heterogenous and have different capacities and accesses. In this world, I think we have to be very careful with water markets otherwise we will be perpetuating Inequality and poverty way more.
Thanks!
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