Minimization of Third-Party Injury in Multi-Party Water Right Transfers in Colorado
Abstract
In the western United States, prior appropriation is the dominant form of water rights.
In times of scarcity, the most senior water rights are given priority. Water right
transfers can increase economic efficiency by moving water toward higher value uses,
but the parties involved must prove that transfers do not reduce water availability
for third-party users. In this study, prior appropriation and water right transfers
were studied using the Upper Gunnison River Basin in Colorado as a test case. Streams
and diversion structures were combined into a simplified network object in the R language.
A flow allocation model was then developed to solve for the set of withdrawals and
streamflows consistent with mass balance constraints and prior appropriation. The first
objective of this work was to explore the drivers on water availability under prior
appropriation. Specifically considered were the effects of spatial and temporal hydrologic
variability, as well as the set of upstream and downstream priorities, on water availability
for a given water right holder. Additionally, the effects of these drivers on water
right transfers and third-party injuries were explored. Next, a number of case studies
were developed which showcase strategies for using carefully constructed water right
transfers for various ends. Multi-party overlapping water right transfers were considered
as a solution to the problem of third-party injury. Multi-party water right transfers
were also suggested as a means to reduce transaction costs in water right transfers.
Symmetric, bilateral water right transfers were considered as a way of transferring
hydrologic risk. Lastly, downstream water right transfers were suggested as a strategy
for increasing instream flows in vulnerable reaches. In addition to these heuristic
case studies, a web-based tool was developed which allows users to explore water rights
within the Upper Gunnison River Basin and test the effects of multi-party transfers
on third-parties and instream flows. I hope that this tool will be useful for water
managers, regulators, and educators who would like to develop a better understanding
of prior appropriation rules and the effects of water right transfers.
Type
Master's projectPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/14171Citation
Hamilton, Andrew L (2017). Minimization of Third-Party Injury in Multi-Party Water Right Transfers in Colorado.
Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/14171.Collections
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