Social tipping points in global groundwater management
Authored by Juan Carlos Castilla-Rho, Rodrigo Rojas, Martin S Andersen, Cameron Holley, Gregoire Mariethoz
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1038/s41562-017-0181-7
Sponsors:
Australian Research Council (ARC)
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://www.comses.net/codebases/5634/releases/1.0.0/
Abstract
Groundwater is critical to global food security, environmental flows,
and millions of rural livelihoods in the face of climate change.
Although a third of Earth's largest groundwater basins are being
depleted by irrigated agriculture, little is known about the conditions
that lead resource users to comply with conservation policies. Here we
developed an agent-based model of irrigated agriculture rooted in
principles of cooperation and collective action and grounded on the
World Values Survey Wave 6 (n = 90,350). Simulations of three major
aquifer systems facing unsustainable demands reveal tipping points where
social norms towards groundwater conservation shift abruptly with small
changes in cultural values and monitoring and enforcement provisions.
These tipping points are amplified by group size and best invoked by
engaging a minority of rule followers. Overall, we present a powerful
tool for evaluating the contingency of regulatory compliance upon
cultural, socioeconomic, institutional and physical conditions, and its
susceptibility to change beyond thresholds. Managing these thresholds
may help to avoid unsustainable groundwater development, reduce
enforcement costs, better account for cultural diversity in
transboundary aquifer management and increase community resilience to
changes in regional climate. Although we focus on groundwater, our
methods and findings apply broadly to other resource management issues.
Tags
Evolution
Norms
Water
commons
tax compliance
Challenges
Foundations
Indian punjab
Depletion