Least-Cost Land Use Changes for Targeted Salt-Load and Water-Yield Impacts in South-Eastern Australia

Agricultural Water Management 97 (6): 811-823, DOI: 10.1016/j.agwat.2009.12.015

Posted: 24 Sep 2012

See all articles by Thomas L. Nordblom

Thomas L. Nordblom

Graham Centre for Agricultural Innovation (Charles Sturt University)

Brendan Christy

Primary Industries Research Victoria

John Finlayson

Charles Sturt University - Graham Centre for Agricultural Innovation

Anna Roberts

Primary Industries Research Victoria

Date Written: 2010

Abstract

This study reports an analysis of the economics of options for strategic land-use change to attain future catchment level target combinations of salt load and water yield. Farm level survey information on land use, productivity, prices and costs of production were integrated with spatially specific soil, rainfall, topography, hydrology and salinity results of the simulation model CAT (Catchment Analysis Tool). This information was used to populate a two stage economic optimization model in which subcatchment economic results were combined for catchment level analyses. This study is the first to exploit CAT results in an economic framework and the first in which economic results are mapped using CAT. The 64,000 ha Bet Bet Catchment in Victoria, Australia, once deemed among the highest priority areas in the Murray Darling Basin for dryland salinity reduction, is the focus of this study. The calculated current net present value (NPV) of agricultural production in the catchment is AU$ 78 million while providing 42 GL of water yield annually for use downstream with a salt load of 22,600 t. Results show that salt loads may be reduced to 18,600 t (reduction of 4000 t) through expansion of tree plantations and lucerne production, reducing water yield to 31 GL (11 GL reduction) and NPV to AU$ 63 million (AU$ 15 million reduction). Water yields could be increased from current levels by 2 GL while maintaining current salt loads. Alternatively, catchment NPV could be increased by approximately AU$ 7 million with little or no reduction in water yield; but there may be reasons (small farm size) why this is unlikely. For this catchment, the maximum reduction in salt load appears insufficient to justify public investment in tree planting and perennial pasture establishment, particularly when the reduced NPV and reduced water yields are taken into account. The results for this catchment do not support regulation of land use for the sake of lowering river salinity. However, the capacity of tree plantations to reduce water yields may support a regulation requiring purchase of water entitlements from downstream entitlement holders for new plantations. Despite millions of dollars of past public investment, it is now clear that Bet Bet Catchment was never one where land-use changes could benefit downstream water users. The approach described in this paper enables catchment management authorities to weigh costs of land-use change against downstream benefits and natural resource management (NRM) options elsewhere.

Keywords: Land-use, Economic optimisation, Salinity, Environmental service, Hydrology, Simulation, Farm survey, Forest plantation, Trees, Annual crops, Annual pasture, Perennial pasture, Math programming, Murray-Darling Basin

Suggested Citation

Nordblom, Thomas L. and Christy, Brendan and Finlayson, John and Roberts, Anna, Least-Cost Land Use Changes for Targeted Salt-Load and Water-Yield Impacts in South-Eastern Australia (2010). Agricultural Water Management 97 (6): 811-823, DOI: 10.1016/j.agwat.2009.12.015 , Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2151080

Thomas L. Nordblom (Contact Author)

Graham Centre for Agricultural Innovation (Charles Sturt University) ( email )

Albert Pugsley Place
Wagga Wagga, NSW 2650
Australia
+61419290428 (Phone)

HOME PAGE: http://www.csu.edu.au/research/grahamcentre/our-people/members2/tom-nordblom

Brendan Christy

Primary Industries Research Victoria ( email )

PO Box 500
Rutherglen
Melbourne, Victoria 8002
Australia

John Finlayson

Charles Sturt University - Graham Centre for Agricultural Innovation ( email )

EH Graham Centre (CSU+NSW DPI)
Pine Gully Road
Wagga Wagga, 2650
Australia

Anna Roberts

Primary Industries Research Victoria ( email )

PO Box 500
Rutherglen
Melbourne, Victoria 8002
Australia

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