Your search found 11 records
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: PER Record No: H03709)
2 Dudley, N. J.. 1988. Volume sharing of reservoir water. Water Resources Research, 24(5):641-648.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: PER Record No: H03710)
3 Dudley, N. J.. 1988. A single decision maker approach to irrigation reservoir and farm management decision making. Water Resources Research, 24(5):633-640.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: PER Record No: H03711)
4 Dudley, N. J.; Hearn, A. B. 1993. El Nino effects hurt Namoi irrigated cotton growers, but they can do little to ease the pain. Agricultural Systems, 42(1&2):103-126.
(Location: IWMI-SA Call no: PER Record No: H012399)
5 Dudley, N. J.; Hearn, A. B. 1993. Systems modeling to integrate river valley water supply and irrigation decision making under uncertainty. Agricultural Systems, 42(1&2):3-23.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: PER Record No: H012397)
6 Dudley, N. J.; Scott, B. W. 1993. Integrating irrigation water demand, supply, and delivery management in a stochastic environment. Water Resources Research, 29(9):3093-3101.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: PER Record No: H013551)
Previously developed suites of models integrate irrigation water supply and demand management for simplified surface reservoir supply systems. A central stochastic dynamic programming model is supported by simulation models, including a soil water-plant growth model. This modeling is extended herein to include decisions about timing and quantity of reservoir water releases into the delivery system, resulting in the integration of supply, demand, and delivery management. Irrigators have rights to percentages of reservoir capacity, reservoir inflows, and downstream tributary flows. Natural rivers are the supply channels in the study area. Large on-farm water storage exist for storing regulated and unregulated river flows available to the irrigators. Farms can be many days flow from the reservoir, requiring orders for reservoir releases to be lodged before the arrival of a previous order. The probability of unregulated flows from tributaries downstream of the reservoir further complicates ordering decisions. Abandonment of irrigated area to rain-fed status occurs at two levels, forced abandonment if insufficient water is available at the farm when the irrigation-trigger soil water deficit is reached, and planned abandonment to save water for possible later use. The need for forced abandonment is determined by simulation models; planned abandonment decisions are derived by stochastic dynamic programming. Results show annual net revenue means and standard deviations as functions of different capacities of the on-farm storages and water supplies from either regulated or unregulated flows, or both.
7 Dudley, N. J.; Musgrave, W. F. 1993. Economics of irrigation water allocation under uncertain conditions. In Biswas, A. K.; Jellali, M.; Stout, G. E. (Eds.), Water for sustainable development in the twenty-first century. Delhi, India: OUP. pp.126-137.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G000 BIS Record No: H014401)
8 Dudley, N. J.. 1993. Integrating offstream and instream water use management with capacity sharing. In Tingsanchali, T. (Ed.), Proceedings of the International Conference on Environmentally Sound Water Resources Utilization, Bangkok, Thailand, 8-11 November 1993. Vol.2. Bangkok, Thailand: AIT. pp.III-1-8.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G000 TIN Record No: H015817)
9 Dudley, N. J.. 1993. Sustainability of international water resource allocation agreements through capacity sharing. In Stout, G. E.; Al-Weshah, R. A. (Eds.), Proceedings of the International Symposium on Water Resources in the Middle East: Policy and institutional aspects, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois, USA, October 24-27, 1993. Urbana, IL, USA: IWRA. pp.129-136.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 GG30 STO Record No: H020303)
10 Dudley, N. J.. 1994. Environment-irrigation trade-offs and risks. In Haimes, Y. Y.; Moser, D. A.; Stakhiv, E. Z. (Eds.), Risk-based decision making in water resources VI: Proceedings of the Sixth Conference sponsored by the Engineering Foundation, Santa Barbara, California, October 31 - November 5, 1993. New York, NY, USA: ASCE. pp.280-294.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 658.4 G000 HAI Record No: H019248)
11 Dudley, N. J.. 1992. Water allocation by markets, common property and capacity sharing: Companions or competitors. Natural Resources Journal, 32:757-778.
(Location: IWMI-SA Call no: P 2829, 333.91 G178 DUD -- SA 102 Record No: H013121)
Capacity sharing is a new way of defining and allocating rights to flowing and stored surface water in a river valley. It is as if each user of water, or group of users, has their own small reservoir on their own small stream to manage independently from others. Hence it provides a very sound basis for the market allocation of private property rights, about which there has been a recent surge in the literature, especially with respect to the western United States. A similar surge, although spread more widely both in its geographic emphasis and across academic disciplines, is in the literature on common property approaches to resource management. Whereas the common property approach may work well for small water resource systems, it is inappropriate for the management of large systems. However, because capacity sharing minimizes the interdependence of behavior between users of system water, it provides a very good basis for dividing up such large systems among a number of independent, multi-purpose groups each operating their sub-system as a common property resource. Similarly, capacity sharing allows a harmonious mix of private property and common property resource management of the sub-systems within river valley systems.
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