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According
to a recent report by the Family Farm Alliance, more storage
facilities and canals like this one are needed to help irrigated
agriculture overcome pressures from urbanization, conservation and
climate change. - Capital Press file |
Western farmers now face three major threats to their
water supply, a report from the Family Farm Alliance says.
Not only has irrigated agriculture become a "buffer zone" in
the competition for water between urban development and environmental
restoration but climate change is expected to diminish snowpacks, the
report said.
"Agriculture is being seen as a reservoir," said Dan Keppen,
executive director of the group.
Over the past three decades, water has increasingly been diverted to
satisfy the needs of growing metropolitan areas or used to boost flow in
rivers and streams, but storage reservoir projects have been at a
standstill, he said.
The result: Farmers are left with a shrinking portion of the pie. If
rising temperatures deplete snow packs, reduce groundwater recharge and
boost crop irrigation needs due to evapotranspiration, the pie itself
will contract.
As less water is stored in the snowpack and runs off earlier in the
season, it will be imperative to build more reservoirs to accrue that
supply for use later in the year, according to the report, "Water
Supply in a Changing Climate."
"You want to be able to capture that water," said Keppen.
Reduced usage will continue to play an important role, but it cannot be
the sole strategy for dealing with climate change and insufficient
water, according to the report.
"It is simply ludicrous to believe that conservation alone will
supply enough water for the tens of millions of new residents expected
to arrive in Western cities during the coming decades," the report
states.
Up until now, the preferred method has been to target agriculture by
leasing or buying out water rights, said Keppen. However, it's possible
to avoid unfairly impacting this important sector of the
So what's the hold up? Layers upon layers of bureaucracy, Keppen said.
The Bureau of Reclamation has identified 900 possible reservoir projects
across the country, but none have moved passed the feasibility study
stage and actually had shovels hit the dirt, he said.
"There are many storage sites out there waiting to be
developed," he said.
However, such proposals are typically stalled by seemingly endless
requirements under the National Environmental Policy Act, the Endangered
Species Act, and the Clean Water Act, Keppen said.
The problem is compounded because projects are often delayed for long
periods of time, he said. So when there's turnover in the agencies that
administer these laws, the applicants come under fresh scrutiny from new
employees, Keppen said.
"The goal line is constantly shifting," he said.
For example, Keppen cites the case of a rancher from
The actual construction took only three months, he said.
"The incredible maze of regulations makes it almost
impossible," Keppen said.
Keppen doesn't advocate overturning or "gutting" these laws so
as to make them ineffectual - but he does want to see them streamlined
so applicants know what to expect from the process.
"There needs to be a one-stop shop," he said.
Growers, irrigation districts or other entities should be informed
exactly what they will need to do to comply with requirements - and make
those expectations binding for the agencies involved, Keppen said. That
way, applicants feel as if they're heading toward a goal, rather than
running on a treadmill.
It will also be important to open up federal agencies' decisions and
policies to scientific scrutiny, which would help prevent environmental
laws from being used as political tools, he said.
"Peer review and the opportunity for local agencies (like
irrigation districts) to have a seat at the table with federal agencies
and biologists would be critical," Keppen said.
Environmental groups, on the other hand, take a skeptical view of the
Family Farm Alliance's suggestions.
Water storage does have a role to play, but any new development must be
careful not to repeat the mistakes of the past, which caused
environmental degradation, said John DeVoe, executive director of Water
Watch of Oregon.
"We can't simply shave off the top of our hydrograph and think it
has no impact on our rivers and their inhabitants," he said.
DeVoe doesn't oppose building new reservoirs, provided they are properly
sited.
"The devil's in the details," he said.
However, he also doesn't believe such projects should take precedence
over conservation - particularly since cities such as
"We need to evaluate the demand side of the water equation,"
DeVoe said, noting that conservation strategies can offset the effect of
increasing urban populations. "It's a myth that population growth
corresponds with increased demand for water, at least at the municipal
level."
Staff writer Mateusz Perkowski is based in
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