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Water Issues

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100 million gallons per year, per acre of farmland. Accounts for 40% of fresh water withdrawals ... Big gun system. Side-roll Wheel-move. Improved center pivots ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Water Issues


1
Water Issues
  • Sally Lay
  • Jason Jensen
  • S. Kumagai
  • Wesley Watson

2
Water Topics
  • Water Policy
  • Ramifications of Irrigation
  • Impacts from pollution and use
  • Irrigation Systems

3
General water usage
  • General water use
  • The average cost for water supplied to a home in
    the U.S. is about two dollars per 1,000/gal which
    equals 5 gallons for a penny.
  • About 1 percent of the earths water is suitable
    for drinking.
  • The average resident uses 100,000 gal/yr

4
  • Safe drinking water act The SDWA authorized the
  • Wellhead Protection Program in 1986 to protect
    supplies of ground water used as public drinking
    water from contamination by chemicals and other
    hazards, including pesticides, nutrients, and
    other agricultural chemicals.

5
  • The program is based on the concept that
    land-use controls and other preventive measures
    can protect groundwater. As of December 1998, 45
    States have EPA-approved wellhead protection
    programs. The 1996 amendments to the SDWA have
    potential, though indirect, implications for
    agricultural producers

6
Policy
  • Environmental Quality Incentive Program
  • Conservation Technical Assistance
  • Conservation Compliance
  • Conservation Reserve Program

7
  • Buffer Initiative
  • Wetlands Reserve Program
  • Small Watershed Program
  • Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program

8
  • Nonpoint source Program
  • National Estuary Program
  • Clean Lakes Program
  • Coastal Zone management Act

9
Policy
  • Wellhead Protection Program
  • Comprehensive State Ground Water Protection
    Program
  • Safe drinking Water Act

10
Policy
  • Great Lakes Program
  • Chesapeake Bay Program
  • Gulf Of Mexico Program
  • Lake Champlain Basin Program

11
  • Water withdraws for public distribution systems
    increased by 48 percent from 1980-1995, which
    might be due to population increase of 50 percent
    and a shift to arid and warmer climates.

12
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13
Several approaches for protecting water quality
have been developed at the Federal and State
levels. These approaches use a variety of
incentive mechanisms for reducing pollution
discharges. Pollution from factories and other
point sources is controlled through regulations
and penalties. In contrast, policies and programs
for reducing pollution from agriculture and other
nonpoint sources are mostly based on voluntary
approaches providing education, technical, and
cost-sharing assistance.
14
Federal Water Quality ProgramsAffecting
Agriculture in 1996EPA-Administered Programs
  • Clean Water Act Programs
  • Clean Lakes Program (Section 314)
  • Nonpoint Source Program (Section 319)
  • National Estuary Program (Section 320)
  • National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
  • (Section 402)
  • Coastal Nonpoint Pollution Control Programs
  • Regional Programs
  • Safe Water Drinking Act
  • Pesticide Programs
  • Comprehensive State Ground-Water Protection
    Program

15
EPA Programs Affecting Agriculture
  • While Federal water quality laws tend to
    focus on point sources, they do not ignore
    nonpoint sources. The primary Federal law, the
    Clean Water Act (CWA), addresses both point and
    nonpoint source pollution. Point sources are
    controlled through enforceable mechanisms.
    Pollution from point sources is subject to
  • technology-based controls, which consist of
    uniform, EPA-established standards of treatment
    that apply to certain industries and municipal
    sewage treatment facilities, and
  • water quality-based controls where
    technology-based controls are not adequate to
    meet State water quality standards.

16
USDA-Administered Programs
  • Agricultural Conservation Program (ACP)
  • Water Quality Incentives Projects (WQIP)
  • Integrated Crop Management (ICM) Practice
  • Conservation Technical Assistance (CTA) Program
  • Colorado River Salinity Control Program (CRSCP)
  • Water Quality Program (WQP)
  • Research and development
  • Education, technical, and financial assistance
  • Data base development and evaluation

17
  • Farm Bill Programs (1985 and 1990)
  • Conservation Compliance
  • Conservation Reserve Program (CRP)
  • Wetland Reserve Program (WRT)
  • Integrated Farm Management Program
  • Pesticide Record-Keeping
  • Great Plains Conservation Program
  • Small Watershed Program
  • Resource Conservation and Development Program

18
Lessons Learned from USDA Water Quality Programs
  • Experience with programs such as the Model
    Implementation Program, Rural Clean Waters
    Program, and the Water Quality Program suggest
    some important factors that can enhance the
    performance of USDA efforts to protect water
    quality.
  • Voluntary programs are likely to be most
    successful in areas where farmers recognize that
    agriculture contributes to severe local pollution
    problems such as groundwater impairment.

19
  • Voluntary programs are likely to be successful
    when recommended practices generate higher
    returns.
  • Cost-effectiveness is enhanced when program
    activities are targeted to watersheds where
    agriculture is the primary source of water
    quality impairment.
  • Flexible cost-share programs to encourage
    producers to adopt certain management practices
    are more efficient than those with fixed rates
    and limited lists of supported practices

20
  • Local research on the economic and physical
    performance of recommended practices can improve
    adoption rates of those practices.
  • Interaction with non-USDA agencies,
    organizations, and local businesses within a
    watershed is important.
  • More attention to and resources for water quality
    monitoring and project evaluation could help
    determine the cost effectiveness of alternative
    practices and assist in the development of
    targeting strategies for program improvement.
  • Source Ribaudo, 1998.

21
Irrigation
  • Annual renewable supplies in surface streams and
    aquifers total roughly 1,500 mil acre-feet per
    year
  • One quarter is withdrawn for use in homes, farms,
    and industry
  • 7 percent is actually used
  • Agriculture is largest water use
  • Irrigated agriculture contributes almost half the
    total value of crop sales on just 16 percent of
    total cropland harvested.

22
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23
Irrigation
  • Farm and ranch irrigation survey is the sole data
    source for acres irrigated by source of water
    that also collects additional information, such
    as costs.
  • A groundwater-irrigated farm on average will have
    more than three wells, with other 9 percent of
    the farms having 10 or more wells.
  • On average more than 13 million households use
    private wells for their water supply.

24
Cost of water
  • On average the cost of on-farm surface water is
    likely the lowest.
  • Off-farm water is supplied to more then 83,000
    farm nationwide, 2/3 of these acres are
    concentrated in 6 states (CA. WA. WY.CO. MT. ID.)
    Based on acreage not water service.

25
Irrigation
  • This system has little financial incentive to
    conserve because charges are assessed
    independently of the amount of the water
    allotment used.
  • The price irrigators pay for water is usually
    associated with the expense of developing and
    providing the resource and may not reflect the
    full social cost of its use.

26
Irrigation cost
  • An alternative to this approach could be set
    administratively, however this would require
    precise adjustments in water prices. Coupled with
    localized nature of the hydrologic systems and
    the externalities associated with water use and
    reuse would make this method unsound.

27
Clean Water Act
  • Water quality in terms of designated beneficial
    uses with numeric and narrative criteria that
    support each use
  • Physical
  • Chemical
  • Biological
  • Allows States and tribes to set their own water
    quality

28
Clean Water Act
  • Discharges of toxic pollutions have been reduced
    billons pounds per year
  • Reductions in pollutions have improved the health
    of aquatic ecosystem
  • BUT!!
  • There are still many area where is polluted
  • From Agricultural lands and other nonpoint source
    States

29
Agricultural Implications for Policy
  • How water quality changes with time, and to study
    how human activities and natural factors affect
    water quality
  • Agricultural land
  • Stream
  • Ex Mississippi river
  • Ground water

30
Agricultural Pollution and Economic Impacts
  • Sediment Damage
  • Disturbing the soil through tillage and
    cultivation and leaving it without vegetative
    cover may increase the rate of soil erosion
  • The largest contamination of surface water
  • Causes various damage to water resources and to
    water uses

31
Agricultural Pollution and Economic Impacts
  • Nutrient Damage
  • N and P can cause quality problems
  • Nitrate
  • Phosphate
  • Pesticide Damage (pests, fungus, and disease)
  • Harm freshwater and marine organisms

32
Agricultural Pollution and Economic Impacts
  • Mineral Damage
  • Dissolved salt and other minerals
  • Increase water treatment cost
  • Force development of alternative water supplies
  • Reduce the life span
  • Pathogen Damage
  • Animal waste can cause several disease

33
Value of Clean Water
  • Economic value of changes of water quality is
    important
  • Reduce pollution from agricultural production
  • Few studies have looked at the costs of water
    pollution and the benefit of pollution reduction
  • It costs tens of billions dollars!!

34
Irrigation Water Management
  • Irrigation Accounts for 34 of the water usage
  • Irrigated Crop Production
  • Maintain farm profitability
  • Reduce the impact of irrigated water quality
  • Enhancing producer net returns

35
Irrigation
  • Agriculture uses the most water through the
    practice of irrigation
  • 100 million gallons per year, per acre of
    farmland
  • Accounts for 40 of fresh water withdrawals

36
Irrigation Application Systems
  • Gravity-Flow Systems
  • Distribute water across the field.
  • Open ditches
  • Aboveground pipe
  • Underground pipe
  • Water runs one-eighth to one-half mile.
  • Pipeline conveyance systems
  • Reduces the amount of water lost to non-crop
    vegetation

37
Irrigation Application Systems
  • Pressurized Application Systems and Practices
  • Pipeline conveyance
  • Center pivot
  • Linear or Lateral-move
  • Hand-move
  • Solid set
  • Big gun system
  • Side-roll Wheel-move

38
Improved Systems and Practices
  • Improved center pivots and lateral-move
  • Low-energy precision application (LEPA)
  • Low-flow irrigation systems

39
Center-pivot Technology
  • Low-pressure center-pivot
  • Linear-move
  • Low-energy precision application

40
Summation
  • There is no one easy answer to the problems that
    plague water quality and use.
  • The best solution is for the individual to better
    inform themselves and others about programs,
    problems, and possible solutions.
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