Environmental, Water & Energy Links of Interest

BlueSky Blog (that is, me) is in full-on volunteer mode for the San Francisco Wisdom 2.0 conference through the weekend. So I thought I would collate a few of the most interesting stories on environment, water, and energy issues around the world. If you are a regular visitor and haven’t yet signed up for BlueSky Updates it’s easy, painless, and you can always unsubscribe. Sign up here. Enjoy!!

If Marines and surfers get in a fight, who wins?
The answer might surprise you.

Count carefully. You don't want to lose that subsidy.

Count carefully. You don’t want to lose that subsidy.

Fishy news emerging from Europe
Paying people to fish in overfished fisheries leads to low stocks. EU might change that.

Global water scarcity
Warning: A graphic image!

Environmental protesters in the US
drawing “lines in the sand” against the Keystone XL Pipeline…

…should be thankful they can do so
without getting killed, as is happening in Brazil, Cambodia, the Philippines, and places beyond.

French do it in the dark
because their government mandates it.

And the Dutch beef up their natural dykes
because they like efficiency.

The Chinese change
the balance of environmental risks by requiring some companies to buy environmental insurance.

Well said.

Well said.

I’ll let the Maori
Have the last word.

Links of Interest

BlueSky Blog (that is, me) is going offline through December 10th. So I thought I would collate a few of the most interesting stories on marine, water, and energy issues around the world. I look forward to returning to regularly blogging after December 10th. If you are a regular visitor and haven’t yet signed up for BlueSky Updates it’s easy, painless, and you can always unsubscribe. Sign up here.

New Zealanders diss new organisms
members of the public can propose specific new organisms to be made “not new”.

Financing that dam removal you’ve been dreaming about
Grants are now available for stream barrier removal projects that help restore riverine ecosystems, enhance public safety and community resilience, and have clear and identifiable benefits to diadromous fish populations
. Fish can identify benefits?

Water You Warring About?
As if Israel and Palestine fighting over land isn’t enough…and,
Foreign Affairs weighs in on Why Climate Change Has Not Led to Conflict (log in required).

Goby a lawnmower

Fijian Coral Has On-Call Landscaping Service
gobies, inch-long gemlike creatures, report to the affected areas of the corals and nibble the aberrant seaweed back into place
.

Neighbors learn to share
U.S. and Mexico have reached an agreement on how to share water from the Colorado River.

Another intern goes to Washington
And learns about the future of hydropower in North American tidal and wave energy.

The People’s Republic of California Prices Carbon
NYT (unerringly) errs in calling it “A free-market auction…

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Oregon’s Big Waves & Small Fish

Tall, dark cliffs with deep evergreen trees flank one of northern Oregon’s most popular surf spots. Last weekend large waves pounded their way into this bay leaving many of the hopeful surfers frustrated at not penetrating past the walls of whitewater to where they might actually catch a wave. After surfing there on Saturday, I ventured with two other guys into Oregon’s Coastal Range to fish for some of the legendary sea-run cutthroat. Only one of us (nope, not me) succeeded in getting fish of any size. True to the adage, neither fishing nor surfing are called catching for a reason.

A similar observation might pertain to Oregon’s statewide goal of becoming the “global fast follower” for wave energy development. (Scotland currently enjoys being the “global leader” of ocean energy development.) For the better part of a decade, Oregon has attempted to entice wave developers into its territorial seas through money, a “Territorial Sea Plan“–to be voted on this year–the Oregon Wave Energy Trust, and the Northwest National Marine Energy Center. Even Oregon’s current governor follows his predecessor’s policy of supporting wave energy development.

And why not? If Oregonians succeed in wave energy development it could create jobs, reenergize coastal towns, diversify Oregon’s historically natural resource dependent economy, enhance energy security, and reduce the need for hydrocarbon-based electricity production.

There’s more where he came from.

But those interested in creating Oregon’s wave energy developments are finding out why it’s not called “catching.” Nick Edwards, a commercial fisherman from Coos Bay, Oregon, and OWET Board member, powerfully explained some of those reasons at the OWET 2012 conference last week. Nick’s most salient message:

Does the commercial fishing industry, a proven contributor to Oregon’s economy get thrown under the bus for an unproven technology on the Oregon Coast?

The full text of Nick’s speech is well worth reading. Nick, along with Pete Stauffer, a Surfrider Foundation representative, and Kaety Hildenbrand, represented to the OWET conference attendees some of the various interests who are already using the ocean waters that Oregon eyes for wave energy development. These users are unlike walls of whitewater because they are sentient, strategic, and will adjust to what is coming at them. And while fish are sentient, these users are unlike fish in that they are on equal footing with the other humans are interested in pursuing activities in Oregon’s coastal waters. So long as OWET, Oregon’s government, and ocean energy developers proceed on a collaborative, coequal basis with the other ocean users then their chances of succeeding as a global fast follower have a higher likelihood.

The Fishy Cost of Water

California’s lawmakers punted on voting for an $11 billion water bond that would have funded projects like water storage, Bay-Delta sustainability, groundwater clean-up, and advanced water treatment and recycling. The bond also included special funding for interpretive centers, and other pet projects. With politicians pulling levers on water management and funding it is worth pondering whether public management of water is the most efficient and effective model? A lesson from ocean fisheries suggest otherwise.

Over the past two decades fishery managers in California, New Zealand, and elsewhere have implemented Individual Fishing Quotas (IFQs) to great effect. An IFQ is a privately-held, marketable right to a certain amount of fish, set through scientific monitoring, in a specific fishery. The IFQ owner can sell or lease the right, fish the right, or retire the right for conservation. IFQs allow commercial fishing fleets to haul their catch while drastically reducing the gladiator combat they engaged in before IFQs. Evidence shows that where properly implemented IFQs have dramatically improved fisheries and fishing industry efficiencies.

IFQ critics, including commercial fishers, argue that fish should not be “owned,” that only the richest will be able to afford IFQs, and that IFQs are subject to monopolistic effects. In response to the criticisms, folks at places like Environmental Defense Fund, an NGO, design limits on IFQs and lobby to impose them.

Happy with her share

If IFQs can reduce fishing fleet conflicts while enhancing fishery health, could they also work on a local scale for freshwater allocation? Water, like fish, is a common resource that does not respect political boundaries, but is the subject of significant political conflict and occasionally physical ones. If water were allocated via market mechanisms it would need a niftier acronym than IFQ. Let’s arbitrarily call an individual quantum of water a Freshwater Individual Share (FISh). Like IFQs, a FISh would function best with a scientifically-defined limit on how much of the target watershed or water body is open to market allocation, some of which would be open only to locals, and shares can be perpetually retired for conservation purposes.

FISh have at least three advantages over the prevailing government water monopoly. One, they would encourage private negotiations rather than wasteful lobbying of governmental bodies and knee jerk litigation that often entrenches acrimony and stubbornness. Second, FISh shareholders will have an incentive to maintain the quality of the water source because they aren’t assured a specific identifiable “stock” of water but a measurable flow from it. Third, FISh would more accurately quantify the value of the water source than what happens under the commons regime. (Interpretive center anyone?) High prices would motivate rationing when flows runs low.

Freshwater markets do have a mixed history around the world, but often because they were poorly conceived and implemented. And critics are certain to argue that water is a common good and thus should be solely managed by the government. Yet IFQ programs, which the government continues to enforce and manage in terms of catch limits, show that well-designed individual ownership over common resources actually restores the health of the resource while reducing human conflict over it. As freshwater quality and quantity diminishes, the dispersed, unquantified costs of common management increases. Wouldn’t it be better to know the true cost of water than just punt it down the road?

California’s Water Power Problem

Attention to the water-energy nexus usually focuses on water’s role in power production whether for solar thermal energy, hydraulic fracturing, or nuclear power. California’s epic plumbing project makes the role of power in water use a juicier topic.

Nineteen percent of all energy consumed in California goes to water-related uses, according to agency and news sources. That includes electricity produced in California, as well as imported fuels. The biggest share of the 19% goes to domestic use (28%). The extraction, pumping, transfer, and distribution of California’s water comes a close second at 22% of that overall 19%. This does not include irrigation. California devotes 10,300 gigawatt hours (GWH) annually to just moving water. (Total annual use is 265,000 GWH.)

Not easily pushed aground

Seventy-five percent of the water Californians use comes from the northern third of the state. Most of the rest comes from Owens Valley and the Colorado River. KQED has a nifty diagram laying out the wheres and hows of California’s plumbing project.

In a related article Sense & Sustainability has about water scarcity, the author argues:

If [water] demand is increasing and supply is stagnant, how do we avoid surpassing what our natural resources can bear?

We have to start by understand[ing] our own water usage.

Just as many individuals have altered their energy behavior, we should now begin finding efficiencies to reduce water consumption in our daily routines — reduce the water flow while washing dishes or turn off the faucet while brushing your teeth.

Her prescription prompted my good friend and former law professor, Geoff Manne, to remark, “The only problem is that, like politics, water is (largely) local.”

Water and politics may start locally, but when California uses 1/25th of its energy budget to migrate billions of gallons both the water and politics bloom beyond their “naturally” occuring boundaries. Thus the power California uses to slake the insatiable southern demand inexorably increases the power struggles among conservationists, agriculture, and urbanites. From that perspective, the 19% estimate is low because it does not include the significant energy these folks put in to protecting their slice of the sluiced substance.

Water Pressure: How Businesses Can Reduce Water Risks

Dyeing for a drink?

With the quantity and quality of water diminishing globally (here, here, and, from a conservative think-tank, here) the likelihood of conflict grows. For global manufacturers that means increased environmental risks. To reduce their risks some companies, like blue-jean king Levi Strauss & Company, have started reducing their water consumption through stone-washing jeans with, well, stones, but not water. Considering the average pair of jeans uses roughly 900 gallons of water from cotton boll to garbage bin, there appears to be plenty of room to reduce water use. The problem facing global manufacturers is significant enough that the United Nations set up an entire program to help industry recognize their impact on and susceptibility to fresh, reliable water supplies. Current signatories include Nike, Coca-Cola, Danone, Nestle, and Levi Strauss. (To see which companies are delinquent, click here (spoiler: none of the aforementioned are delinquent).)
With the growing environmental risk of reduced water quality and quantity, what are some tools responsible businesses can use to limit their exposure to that risk, enhance local access to fresh, reliable water sources, and maintain commercial competitiveness? The UN’s CEO Water Mandate program is a good place to start. It offers tools for businesses to assess their water risk, to research on the link between water and climate change, and to see what other businesses are doing. Another useful tool that recently came into being is the Ceres Aqua Gauge. While mainly focused on giving investors a way “to assess, scorecard and compare companies on their management of water risk,” it would be a bold manufacturer that did not think it wise to see what their investors see regarding water risk. Finally, World Resources Institute recently launched Aqueduct to map water risks from the local to the global. Aqueduct smartly creates an overall water risk number by looking at three different categories: water quality, water quantity, and political risk (regulations and reputation).

Well of life

Smart manufacturers understand the value of water notwithstanding that in so many parts of the world it is poorly priced, if at all. At one point that paradox of value might have held water. But growing population, climate, industrial, and agricultural pressures increase the value of fresh, reliable water. Better to find ways to reduce water-associated risks than to find out what measures desperate people are willing to take to protect an absolute necessity.