March 8, 2006
By HOLLY OWENS
H&N Staff Writer
About 71,000 acre-feet of water so far has been dedicated to the this year's
water bank, which utilizes water not used for irrigation to benefit endangered
and threatened fish in the Klamath River Basin.
The final configuration of the water bank, which will
include 100,000 acre feet, will be determined around April 1, according to Rae
Olsen, spokeswoman with the Klamath Basin Area Office of the Bureau of
Reclamation.
The Pilot Water Bank program is a way of accounting for water that will not be
used for irrigation this year. As part of the program, the Bureau of
Reclamation contracts with ranchers and farmers to use water that otherwise
would be used for pastures and crops. That water is used to benefit threatened
coho salmon in the Klamath River and endangered suckers in Upper Klamath Lake.
The water bank is required by a 2002 National Oceanic Atmospheric
Administration-Fisheries Biological Opinion on Klamath Reclamation Project
operations.
The cost for the program this year, thanks to favorable precipitation, is
estimated to drop to around $4 million, down from last year's cost of $7.4
million.
Water comes from several sources, including on- and off-Project storage,
dry-land operations and groundwater substitution. There are 207,000 acres of
irrigable land in the Klamath Project, and on average 400,000 acre feet of
water is delivered to project irrigators each irrigation season. To be
eligible, acreage submitted for the water bank must be in units of at least 20
contiguous acres and irrigated in 2003, 2004, or 2005, either with surface or
ground water. An acre foot of water is the amount of water needed to cover an
acre of ground with 12 inches of water.
In February, the Bureau received 193 applications.
About 25,000 acre-feet of water will be stored between
the Agency Lake Ranch, which the bureau owns, and the adjacent Barnes Ranch.
About 15,000 acre feet of water will be banked from national wildlife refuges
like Lower Klamath Lake. Bids from dry-land operation growers, both on and off
the Project, will save about 10,000 acre feet. The Klamath Basin Rangeland
Trust, in the Wood River Valley area, banked about 11,500 acre feet. About
10,000 acre feet are banked up from a new option this year - groundwater
substitution.
Applicants taking the ground water substitution option will alternate between
surface water irrigation and groundwater irrigation at the bureau's direction
during the irrigation season. Since the water bank is a pilot program, change
happens from year to year as the program is adjusted.
"We do make changes every year to increase the efficiency in terms of
water and money, as well as in terms of effectiveness," Olsen said.
Increasing reliance on ground water during recent dry
years has been drawing down the water table. This was addressed in a report
from the U.S. Geological Survey released in May. The report found that private
wells used for the water bank increased demand eightfold on the local ground
water. Wells dropped between 2 and 20 feet.
Adjustments in the water bank are taking that report into account.
"Our goal is to minimize groundwater use in wet
years, and an example is this year's ground water contract which will allow us
to purchase water only if and when we actually need it to meet flow
requirements," Olsen said.
The water year type is projected to be above average so far this year,
benefiting from regular precipitation and cool temperatures. The irrigation
season begins in early April.
Bids are in
The following bids were submitted in February for the 2006 Pilot Water Bank
through the Bureau of Reclamation.
Source: http://www.heraldandnews.com/articles/2006/03/08/news/local_news/local4.txt