Waters of the State

IF 0.6 4区 社会学 Q4 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
Joseph Regalia, Noah D. Hall
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The Southern Nevada Water Authority, the agency that provides Las Vegas with water, is in the process of building a massive water pipeline from the eastern-central part of Nevada to Las Vegas. This pipeline is a nearly-unprecedented feat of engineering and water distribution, and stands to move over 27 million gallons of water a year. Once completed, the pipeline will be one of the largest of its kind in human history. If the state of Nevada authorizes a state authority to go forward with this project, it would help solve a serious water supply problem for its largest population center at the expense of diminished water for existing rural users. Can the state freely reallocate water within its borders? More fundamentally, what powers and rights does the state have over water within its territorial boundaries with respect to its private citizens, neighboring states, and federal government? Nevada, by statute, has declared that “[t]he water of all sources of water supply within the boundaries of the State whether above or beneath the surface of the ground, belongs to the public.” As the waters of Nevada belong to the public, the state can regulate water use (police power), protect water resources for the public (public trust doctrine), and go to court on behalf of the public’s interest in water (parens patriae). These sovereign powers and rights give the state considerable control and even some duties over its water, but they do not amount to ownership. The state of Nevada is a sovereign with respect to its water, but not a property owner, and it can’t allocate, dispose, or protect its water as it would a state building or vehicle. But what if a similar proposal were floated in a different state facing water allocation challenges, such as Wyoming. Wyoming’s constitution provides: “The water of all natural streams, springs, lakes or other collections of still water, within the boundaries of the state, are hereby declared to be the property of the state.” This self-declaration of water ownership sounds like it gives the state fundamentally different rights over water. It suggests that the state has a proprietary power over all water within its territory. Perhaps the state could allocate and reallocate water to private users, denying water use at will. Further, if the water is simply state property, it can sell it off, hoard and store it for future speculative uses, or simply give it away when politically convenient. And if Wyoming owns the water within its borders, can it demand that its neighbors’ water use have no physical transboundary impacts, essentially drawing a property line through the water cycle?
州内水域
向拉斯维加斯供水的南内华达水务局正在修建一条从内华达州中东部到拉斯维加斯的大型输水管道。这条管道在工程和供水方面几乎是前所未有的壮举,每年可以输送2700多万加仑的水。一旦完工,这条管道将成为人类历史上最大的管道之一。如果内华达州授权州政府机构推进该项目,它将有助于解决其最大人口中心的严重供水问题,但代价是现有农村用户的用水减少。国家可以自由地重新分配其境内的水资源吗?更根本的是,国家对其领土范围内的水有什么权力和权利,相对于其公民、邻国和联邦政府?内华达州通过法规宣布:“本州境内所有水源的水,无论是地表以上还是地表以下,都属于公众所有。”由于内华达州的水域属于公众,国家可以规范用水(警察权力),为公众保护水资源(公共信托原则),并代表公众对水的利益(父母父权)向法院起诉。这些主权权力和权利赋予国家对其水的相当大的控制权,甚至一些义务,但它们并不等于所有权。内华达州对其水拥有主权,但不是财产所有者,它不能像对国家建筑或车辆那样分配、处置或保护其水。但是,如果类似的提议在另一个面临水资源分配挑战的州提出,比如怀俄明州,会怎么样呢?怀俄明州的宪法规定:“本州境内的所有天然溪流、泉水、湖泊或其他静水系的水,特此宣布为本州的财产。”这种水所有权的自我声明听起来像是赋予了国家对水的根本不同的权利。这表明国家对其领土内的所有水域拥有所有权。也许国家可以将水分配和重新分配给私人用户,随意拒绝用水。此外,如果水只是国家财产,政府可以将其出售、囤积和储存以供未来的投机用途,或者在政治上方便的时候将其送人。如果怀俄明州拥有其境内的水资源,它是否可以要求其邻国的用水不产生跨界影响,实质上是在水循环中划定一条财产线?
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Natural Resources Journal (NRJ) is published by the University of New Mexico School of Law and is an international, interdisciplinary forum devoted to the study of natural and environmental resources. The Journal is policy oriented, and seeks to overcome the isolation of scholars in various disciplines who are concerned with natural and environmental resources. Interdisciplinary collaboration in solving resource-related problems was a formative principle in the creation of the Journal and, for 50 years, the Journal has been guided by that principle. The NRJ''s contributors come from various disciplines, represent many countries, and provide many approaches to the complex issues raised by the need to balance resource development and environmental concerns. Natural Resources Journal is a member of the National Conference of Law Reviews, Inc.
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