Sold Down the River by Scott Hamilton - ISBN: 9781922458124
Paperback
Australia’s precious water: a disastrous plan, ruthless markets, and environmental damage.

Sold Down the River

How Robber Barons and Wall Street Traders Cornered Australia’s Water Market

$31.09

  • Paperback

    336 pages

  • Release Date

    31 August 2021

Check Delivery Options

Summary

The Murray–Darling Basin is Australia’s greatest environmental asset. The story of water in Australia is written into its ancient rivers, creeks and wetlands. It’s home to more than forty Indigenous nations, and it covers an area bigger than France. It is the beating heart of our regions and sustains 40 per cent of our food production.

In 2012 Australia signed up to the Murray–Darling Basin Plan, a scheme designed to create a market for the Basin’s water and to safeguard the environme…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781922458124
ISBN-10:1922458120
Author:Scott Hamilton, Stuart Kells
Publisher:The Text Publishing Company
Imprint:The Text Publishing Company
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:336
Release Date:31 August 2021
Weight:410g
Dimensions:25mm x 154mm x 234mm
A-Format
B-Format
C-Format
Sold Down the River by Scott Hamilton - ISBN: 9781922458124
154 × 234 mm
A4
mm / in
What They're Saying

Critics Review

Once upon a time, Australian farmers traded thousands of megalitres of water for something as simple as a slab of beer. Then the economic mood changed. The 1980s brought political leaders such as Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan, spruiking the invisible hand of the free market. By the early 2000s, Australian water was transformed into an aggressively traded financial product. In Sold Down the River, authors Scott Hamilton and Stuart Kells outline in straightforward, accessible detail the story behind this little-known aspect of Australian history. Early water policy in Australia, influenced by the work of Alfred Deakin, deemed that water should not be monopolised or exploited by individuals. Water was to be allocated fairly through bureaucratic systems. This consensus changed in 2004 with the National Water Initiative, allowing water to be traded separately from land. Enter the sophisticated traders of the financial markets, with their fast computers, superior knowledge and market manipulation. By 2018, the Register of Foreign Ownership of Water Entitlements showed that 10 percent of all water assets were held by foreign entities. The great tragedy of this ‘hydrological casino’ is that Australian farmers don’t have a hope of competing in such an asymmetrical market. Opening the trade in water was supposed to make its allocation more efficient, but as Hamilton and Kells show, it has created a whole host of perverse outcomes. With its mix of anger and urgency, this book is essential reading on an arcane subject that Australians should know more about. Chris Saliba is the co-owner of North Melbourne Books and a freelance reviewer.

About The Author

Scott Hamilton

Scott Hamilton

Scott Hamilton is an expert in natural resource management and climate change. A member of the Energy Transition Hub at the University of Melbourne, he writes regularly for The Mandarin and other publications.

Stuart Kells

Author and historian Stuart Kells is adjunct professor at La Trobe Business School. He has twice won the prestigious Ashurst Business Literature Prize.

Returns

This item is eligible for free returns within 30 days of delivery. See our returns policy for further details.