Title: Central Valley Agricultural Issues Water
1Central Valley Agricultural IssuesWater
- The Lifeblood of Agriculture and the San Joaquin
Valley. - If people think the energy crisis was a crisis,
wait until we start having problems with water. - Management of our water resources is crucial
because jobs are closely linked to water in the
local economy.
2California Agriculture and Its Use of Water
- The Water Fact Book
- Produced by the California Water Coalition
3California Farmers and Water Allocation
- Agriculture is Californias most reliable
industry - Agriculture is the No. 1 renewable resource
industry. - An acre of farmland can use approximately the
same amount of water each year as an acre of
single family homes.
4- Average annual rainfall statewide produces 200
million acre-feet only 35 or 71 million
acre-feet runoff and not all of it can be
developed for urban or agricultural use. - In an average year, about 30 of Californias
urban and agricultural applied water is provided
by groundwater extraction.
5Water Use in California
Urban 11
Urban 15
Environment 46
Environment 46
Agriculture 43
Agriculture 39
6Sample Daily Menu
- Dinner
- Lasagna
- Pasta (4 oz.) 71.8
- Tomato sauce (6 oz.) 38.7
- Cheese (3 oz.) 168.0
- Ground beef (3 oz.) 82.5
- Garlic bread
- Bread (1 slice) 10.6
- Butter, 1 pat (.36 oz.) 45.7
- Salad
- Lettuce (1/2 cup) 1.5
- Tomato (2 oz.) 3.8
- Milk (8 fl. Oz.) 48.3
- Dinner Total 470.9
Breakfast Orange juice (8 fl. oz.)
49.1 One egg 62.7 One
toast and butter 56.3 1/4
cantaloupe 40.0 Breakfast Total
208.1
Lunch BBQ chicken sandwich
Chicken (4 oz.) 115.1 Wheat Bread
(2 slices) 21.2 Cheese (1
slice) 56.0 Tomato (1 oz.)
1.9 Lettuce (1/4 cup)
.7 BBQ sauce Catsup (1/2
oz.) 1.6 White sugar
4.7 Orange (4.6 oz.) 13.8
Water (12 fl. oz.) .2 Lunch Total
215.1
Gallons of water to produce Breakfast 208.1 Lunch
215.1 Dinner 470.9 Daily Total 894.1
7Irrigation Efficiency
- Runoff and percolation into groundwater make
water available for other uses. - Farmers use water-efficient and cost effective
irrigation management practices
(SurfaceSprinklerMicro-irrigation)
8- Water saving (conservation) through irrigation
improvements and crop selection cannot be
expanded indefinitely. Eventually, reductions in
agricultural water use can come about only by
reducing irrigated acreage.
9Cost of Water
- Water is essential for all economic development.
- Many industries use public water facilities.
- State tax revenues result from access to water
facilities. - Cities incur water costs unique to their systems.
10- Agricultural water is the first to be cut in
times of shortageCity water users have priority. - Increasing the cost of farmers water increases
food and fiber prices while putting some out of
business.
11Water Transfers
- Water transfers have been taking place for many
years. - Transfers and water conservation alone cannot
meet Californias growing water needs. - Transfers are a solution to a short-term shortage
of water.
12- Large-scale transfers of water from agriculture
could potentially devastate the economics of
agriculture-based communities. - Proposed Westside Land Retirementto take water
for other uses. - Transfers require a source of water. The lack of
adequate water supplies to meet all needs is
still the primary issue with transfer proposals.
13Crop Choices
- Farm crops represent over one-third of all State
agricultural outputCotton, Rice, along with
Alfalfa and Irrigated Pasture which support the
dairy industry. - Consumer demand, market value, soil and weather
factors are the best determinants of crop choices.
14- Some crops considered low value meet important
needsi.e. Grains, Rice, Irrigated Pasture,
Cotton Corn Silage. - Californias livestock and poultry industries
need more feed than California farmers can
provide.
15Agriculture Californias Economy
- California is the nations No. 1 Agricultural
exporter, exporting over 20 of what is produced
in the state. - California agricultural exports were valued at
over 6.6 billion in 2000.
16- The 27.3 billion contributed by Agriculture to
Californias economy is only the actual value of
all farm products generated by farming
activities. - San Joaquin Valley counties 2000 gross
agricultural revenue equaled 14.42 billion.
17- Agriculture has an overall economic impact of
over 100 billion by creating jobs for products
and services. Provides 1 out of every 10 jobs in
the State. - Approximately 30 of the land in California is
agricultural, heavily concentrated in rural
countiesSan Joaquin Valley
18- Loss of water to agriculture would dry up the
economics of these countiesa plentiful water
supply is economically important.
19What percentage of total employmentcomes from
agriculture labor andindustry employment?
- Colusa 28.0
- Glenn 18.2
- Kern 17.8
- Merced 13.6
- San Benito 11.0
- Santa Cruz 6.8
- Sutter/Yuba 12.1
- Fresno/Madera 17.1
- Imperial 34.3
- Kings 21.2
- Monterey 15.8
- San Joaquin 7.0
- Stanislaus 8.4
- Tulare 25.2
20Increasing Water Supply
- California must develop a more expansive water
storage system. - Expand reservoirs and develop new water
facilitiesLast major dam built in 1979 was New
Melones on the Stanislaus River.
21- Increase off-stream storage and water recharge.
- Obtain FundingFederal, State, Water Bond, other
sources to move forward with increasing the
usable water supply in California and San Joaquin
Valley
22Summary
- Farming is a capital-intensive business,
requiring large investments in land and
equipment. - To obtain credit necessary to finance these
inputs, farmers must ensure they have a crop to
sell every year. - Resources, like a dependable water supply, are
essential to this endeavor.
23- Declining water supply reliability for
Agriculture is a critical concern. - Declining water supply reliability for
Agriculture is a critical concern. - Without waterwe will not survive as an industry,
economy or population. - Agriculture ranks among the most crucial of our
State, County and Nations industries and yet,
its reliability and productivity are often taken
for granted.