Sydney Water: Pricing for Sustainability
R. Quentin Grafton and
Tom Kompas
International and Development Economics Working Papers from International and Development Economics
Abstract:
We examine how scarcity pricing can be used to assist with urban water demand management in Sydney in low rainfall periods using an estimated aggregate daily water demand function. Modelling shows that current water supplies and water prices are inadequate to prevent Sydney reaching critically low water storage levels should there be a low rainfall period similar to what occurred in 2001-2005. Simulations indicate that, in low rainfall periods, the water price needed to balance supply and demand exceeds the marginal cost of supplying desalinised water. The policy implication is that even with expected increases in supply (groundwater withdrawals, recycling), Sydney water prices must be substantially raised over their current levels, preferably at predefined water storage trigger levels, in response to low rainfall periods.
Pages: 30 pages
Date: 2006
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-agr
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Working Paper: Sydney Water: Pricing for Sustainability (2006) 
Working Paper: Sydney Water: Pricing for Sustainability (2006) 
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