Water Science and Technology (Dec 2023)

Water rights reform and water-saving irrigation: evidence from China

  • Hang Xu,
  • Rui Yang,
  • Jianfeng Song

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2166/wst.2023.385
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 88, no. 11
pp. 2779 – 2792

Abstract

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As a market-based water resource management, the water rights reform (WRR) will allocate water rights to water users and allow water users to trade water rights, which can realize the reallocation across water users. In this context, the adoption of water-saving irrigation (WSI) is an important technical form to adapt to the reform. Based on this, this paper studies the impacts of the WRR on WSI using the difference-in-differences (DID) strategy. The results show that the WRR could increase the land area for WSI by an average of 13.63%. The WRR could promote the expansion of high-efficiency irrigation mainly because the WRR could promote the expansion of spray and drip irrigation areas, and micro-irrigation land areas, which are high-efficiency water-saving irrigation technologies. In addition, the WRR also could improve agricultural production by increasing agricultural water productivity and planting area (including the sown area of grain crops and cash crops), but the WRR does not reduce agricultural water extraction. Therefore, the WRR could increase agricultural production without increasing agricultural water extraction. HIGHLIGHTS The water rights reform could increase the land area for water-saving irrigation by an average of 13.63%.; The water rights reform could promote the expansion of spray and drip irrigation areas, and micro-irrigation land areas.; The water rights reform could improve agricultural production by increasing agricultural water productivity and planting area.; The water rights reform could not reduce agricultural water extraction.;

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