Programme  OS1k IWRM and water allocation  abstract 403

Coordinating Policy Initiatives Between Governments in the Water Industry

Author(s): Brian Davidson, Biju George, Hector M Malano
Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, University of Melbourne, Australia-3010

Keyword(s): Governance, policy coordination, transboundary river basins

Article: abs403_article.pdf
Poster:
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Session: OS1k IWRM and water allocation
AbstractIn this paper the

possibilities of negotiating the coordination of water sharing between governments is investigated in general and

applied to the individual governments in the Krishna Basin in India. In this basin the water is shared between three

rival states, all who need more water and suffer from inter-sectorial competition. Compounding the problem is that

the flows of water along the basin are tied up in regulations and rules that were determined many years ago.

Improvements to flows could potentially benefit people in all three states. However, the individual governments need

to cooperate if this is to occur, something they so far have refused to do so. The question of whether coordination

between interdependent markets is worthwhile revolves around individual states deciding between taking a unilateral

approach or accepting a multilateral approach to policy settings on water. The model that is presented in this paper

attempts to resolve this question from an individual governments’ perspective.

The model developed in this

paper relies on understanding both the economic and diplomatic imperatives of the individual governments involved.

No government is going to act in concert with another if there is no measurable benefit to it from doing so.

Consequently, all governments need to gain something from coordinating water policy initiatives. In terms of an

economic outcome, any transfer in water between states that arises from coordinating water sharing rules, has the

potential to be beneficial to all states. However, a problem arises with some citizens within a state gaining, while

others within that same state lose from changing water allocation rules. These outcomes can be shown in terms of a

simple economic trade model, and provide the evidence for why individual governments are not keen on trading

water or on coordinating policies which change the flows of water between them. For this reason alone it is argued

that individual governments will not even enter into a negotiation process over water flows between states.

However, such a model is inadequate as it also needs to be recognised that governments do not always conduct

intergovernmental relationships with an economic goal in mind. To overcome this limitation, an International Theory

perspective is added to the economic trade model. In this model individual governments are assumed to act

according to one of three rules. They want to either:
• maintain hegemony between the competing desires of

other governments;
• selfishly maximise gains to their own constituents; or
• reform other governments.
It

was found that this model, an extended trade model that accounted for the individual motivations of governments,

might be useful in bringing the individual governments together to negotiate better water sharing and flow regulations,

as it tends not to be as narrow and unrealistic as a simple trade model.

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