Abstract
Abstract. Many canals were built during the 19th century to satisfy multiple uses, which have since highly changed, calling into questions about their function. This article assumes that these old hydraulic works can help the territories to adapt, if reforms of their hydraulic, economic and institutional management are carried out at the same time. It illustrates this assumption and its consequences with the Neste Canal (in South France). The evolution of the multiple uses and the decrease in the flows derived over the last 70 years are described conducting to a structural imbalance of its economic model. Its future depends on the political recognition of its contribution to the minimum water flows of the rivers of Gascony, the introduction of a payment for this ecological function, and changes in the hydraulic regulation system to satisfy this last function previously managed as a hydraulic constraint.
Reference12 articles.
1. CACG: Le système Neste. Une concession d'Etat vitale pour un territoire de 8400 km2. Présentation et cartographie, Communication document, 11 pp., 2018.
2. Crifasi, R. R.: Reflections in a Stock Pond: Are Anthropogenically Derived Freshwater Ecosystems Natural, Artificial, or Something Else?, Environ. Manage., 36, 625–639, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00267-004-0147-1, 2005.
3. Davies, B. R., Thoms, M., and Meador, M.: An assessment of the ecological impacts of inter-basin water transfers, and their threats to river basin integrity and conservation, Aquat. Conserv., 2, 325–349, 1992.
4. Fernandez, S. and Trottier, J.: Chapitre 9. La longue construction du débit d'objectif d'étiage: l'odyssée d'une métamorphose (la gestion des cours d'eau du bassin Adour-Garonne), edited by: Papy, F., Nouveaux rapports à la nature dans les campagnes, 153–167, https://doi.org/10.3917/quae.papy.2012.01.0153, 2012.
5. Gao, T., Liu, H., Sun, Y., and Zhang, E.: Sustaining environmental flows in water-deficient rivers via inter-basin hydropower transfer, Hydrol. Process., 35, e14027, https://doi.org/10.1002/hyp.14027, 2021.