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Abstract
As the greatest rainwater users among all vegetative land covers, tree plantations have been
employed strategically to mitigate salinity and water-logging problems. However, large-scale
commercial tree plantations in high rainfall areas reduce fresh water inflows to river
systems supporting downstream communities, agricultural industries and wetland
environmental assets. A bio-economic model was used to estimate economic demand for
water by future upstream plantations in a sub-catchment (the 2.8 million ha Macquarie
valley in NSW) of the Murray-Darling Basin, Australia. Given four tree-product values,
impacts were simulated under two settings: without and with the requirement that
permanent water entitlements be purchased from downstream entitlement holders before
establishing a tree plantation. Without this requirement, gains in economic surplus from
expanding tree plantations exceeded economic losses by downstream irrigators, and stock
and domestic water users, but resulted in reductions of up to 154 GL (gigalitres) in annual
flows to wetland environments. With this requirement, smaller gains in upstream economic
surplus, added to downstream gains, could total $330 million while preserving
environmental flows. Extending downstream water markets to new upstream tree
plantations, to equilibrate marginal values across water uses, helps ensure water
entitlements are not diminished without compensation. Outcomes include better economic-efficiency,
social-equity and environmental-sustainability.