The mismanagement of water resources at global level calls for a
reconsideration of the current water policies. The three approaches to
water policy instruments are water pricing, water markets, and
institutional instruments based on cooperation. The approach in Spain is
institutional cooperation, whereas the European Union promotes water
pricing to balance water supply and demand, and in Australia water
markets have been implemented to confront water scarcity and droughts.
This study compares these three types of policy instruments to address
drought in the Jucar Basin. The analysis indicates that the institutional
instrument based on cooperation and the water market instrument both
achieve similar results, demonstrating that the current institutional
approach is not inferior to water markets. Another important result is
that the water pricing instrument entails very substantial losses to
farmers, which implies that this alternative is politically unfeasible.
This result questions seriously the reliance of the Water Framework
Directive on the water pricing instrument in irrigation.