The Groundwater Project

Cross-Border Impacts Related to Transboundary Aquifers: Characterizing Legal Responsibility and Liability

Book Cover for Cross-Border Impacts Related to Transboundary Aquifers: Characterizing Legal Responsibility and Liability
Publication year: 2024
Number of pages: 110

978‑1‑77470‑065‑5
https://doi.org/10.21083/978-1-77470-065-5

Citation: Eckstein, G., & Eckstein, Y. (2024). Cross-border impacts related to transboundary aquifers: Characterizing legal responsibility and liability. The Groundwater Project. https://doi.org/10.21083/978-1-77470-065-5.

Authors:

Gabriel Eckstein: Texas A&M University School of Law, USA
Yoram Eckstein: Kent State University, USA

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Last Update: 18 July 2024
Released: 31 January 2024

Description

Groundwater recognizes none of the political boundaries that humanity has drawn on maps.  As a result, when groundwater traverses borders and frontiers it raises questions of responsibility and liability pertaining to the use, management, exploitation, and administration of cross-border aquifers. This occurs both at the international level where two or more sovereign nations, as well as at the domestic level where two or more subnational political units, overlay a common aquifer. The law applicable to transboundary groundwater resources at both levels of governance is presently quite primitive and lacking. Moreover, the relationship of groundwater law to surface water law is often non-existent.

This book provides a foundation for the development of such norms.  It explores circumstances under which the use, management, exploitation, and administration of a transboundary aquifer might cause harm to a neighboring political unit and, thereby, result in legal responsibility and/or liability.  It assesses cause and effect relationships with reference to conceptual models of transboundary aquifers developed by Eckstein & Eckstein (2005).  Notions of gaining and losing stream relationships, recharging and non-recharging aquifers, groundwater flow direction, the impact of groundwater pumping, anthropogenic contamination, and other concepts are utilized to describe scenarios in which harm could traverse a political boundary. The book then translates that analysis into notions of responsibility and liability that are more common in the legal realm.

Contents

1 INTRODUCTION

2 THE QUANDARY OF MIXING GROUNDWATER AND LAW

3 LAW GOVERNING AQUIFERS THAT TRAVERSE POLITICAL BOUNDARIES

4 CHARACTERIZING RESPONSIBILITY AND LIABILITY FOR CROSS BORDER IMPACTS

4.1 Model A: Unconfined Transboundary Aquifer Hydrologically Linked to a Contiguous Transboundary River

4.2 Model B: Unconfined Transboundary Aquifer Hydrologically Linked to a Successive Transboundary River

4.3 Model C: Unconfined Transboundary Aquifer Hydrologically Linked to a Domestic River

4.4 Model D: Unconfined Domestic Aquifer Hydrologically Linked to a Transboundary River

4.5 Model E: Confined Transboundary Aquifer with a Recharge Zone in Only One Riparian Jurisdiction

4.6 Model F: Non-Recharging Transboundary Aquifer

5 ADDITIONAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR DETERMINING RESPONSIBILITY AND LIABILITY

6 WRAP UP

7 EXERCISES

Exercise 1 The Unconfined Leo Aquifer

Exercise 2 The River Zini and Yarrow Aquifer

8 REFERENCES

9 EXERCISE SOLUTIONS

10 ABOUT THE AUTHORS

Interview with the Author