Law of the Rio Chama
Publication Date
2009
Document Type
Article
Abstract
In much of the American West water shortages are becoming an important concern. With increasing demands for water for municipal, industrial, and environmental uses, transfers of water from the currently predominant agricultural uses to these other uses should produce economic gains. Even though most commodity markets respond rapidly to price differentials and reduce those differentials over time, water transfers out of agriculture into higher value uses are not occurring very rapidly. The existence of multiple rights of exclusion unbundled from the rights of use under the prior appropriation doctrine in the American West creates an anticommons that has impeded water transactions. This article explains the tragedy of the anticommons, describes the various rights of exclusion that create an anticommons in western water markets, and concludes with case studies that illustrate the difficulty of water transfers.
Publisher
Willian & Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review
Recommended Citation
Bretsen, Stephen N. and Peter J. Hill. "Water Markets as a Tragedy of the Anticommons." (2009). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/uc_rio_chama/18