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Irrigation water demand for the decision maker

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 October 2002

Christophe Bontemps
Affiliation:
INRA. Corresponding address: ESR-INRA Chemin de Borde Rouge, BP27, 31326 Casianet, Tolosan, France. Email: bontemps@toulouse.inra.fr
Stéphane Couture
Affiliation:
INRA. Corresponding address: ESR-INRA Chemin de Borde Rouge, BP27, 31326 Casianet, Tolosan, France. Email: bontemps@toulouse.inra.fr

Abstract

This paper deals with the problems of estimating irrigation water demand. We propose an original method of estimation in two steps. First, we develop a dynamic programming model in order to explain the optimal irrigation management plan. Based on a microeconomic approach describing the farmer's behavior, this economic model, introducing an agronomic model, and an algorithm of solution search, is used to compute a realistic database. Second, these data are used to estimate profit functions by a non-parametric method. The irrigation water demand function is estimated using a non-parametric derivation procedure.

An application to irrigation water demand is proposed in the southwestern area of France where conflicts appear frequently. The same results appear for different climates: for small quantities of water available, irrigation water demand seems to be quite inelastic. If one increases the total quantity of water available, the shape of the curve changes and the demand appears more elastic. The threshold price at which the changes in price-responsiveness appears, depends on weather conditions and range from 0.30 F/m3 in a wet year to 1.60 F/m3 in a dry year. These results are crucial information for the regulator in order to analyze the effects of a water regulation policy, based on prices. The impact of an increase in the water price will depend not only on the climate but also on the location of the initial and final prices on the demand function.

JEL classification: C14, C16, Q15

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2002 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

We would like to thank Pascal Favard for his faithful and helpful support and Céline Nauges for comments on an earlier draft. We also would like to thank all participants at the Symposium on Water Resource Management, in Nicosia, Cyprus (2000), for critical remarks.