Department of Water Resources
A daily compilation for DWR personnel of significant news articles and comment
January 24, 2008
1. Top Item
As supplies dry up, growers pass on farming and sell water
Associated Press – 1/24/08
By Garance Burke, staff writer
In a state where water has become an increasingly scarce commodity, a growing number of farmers are betting they can make more money selling their water supplies to thirsty cities and farms to the south than by growing crops.
The shortages this season — among the most intense of the last decade — are already shooting water prices skyward in many areas, and Los Angeles-area cities are begging for water and coaxing farmers to let their fields go to dust.
"It just makes dollars and sense right now," said Bruce Rolen, a third-generation farmer in Northern California's lush
Instead of sowing seeds in April, Rolen plans to leave his rice stubble for the birds and sell his irrigation water on the open market, where it could fetch up to three times the normal price.
"It's been a good decade since there's been this much interest in buying and selling water on the open market," said Jack King, national public affairs manager for the California Farm Bureau Federation. "We're prepared to see significant fallowing in several key parts of the state."
Water from Northern California rivers irrigates most of the country's winter vegetables and keeps faucets flowing in the
As Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and
Residents of
Near
And cities across
The high premium for water has been especially painful for those served by
Prices have jumped from the $50 per acre-foot typical in wet years to as much as $200 per acre-foot, a unit that measures the amount of water needed to cover an acre of land one foot deep, said Dean Reynolds, a scientist who oversees water transfers for the Department of Water Resources.
"We're moderately nervous," general manager Jeff Kightlinger said. "We haven't prepared ourselves should we run into really severe droughts, so we're trying to formulate that now."
Officials in the Southern California suburb of
That kind of desperation is pushing up demand for water from farmers further north, especially in the green rice fields north of
Some environmental groups say that isn't a viable long-term solution.
The problem should be fixed by retooling a decades-old formula that gives farmers a break on their contracted water, even in times of scarcity, they say.
"Essentially these farmers are getting water for a subsidized price and selling it to taxpayers at an elevated rate," said Renee Sharp, senior analyst with the Environmental Working Group, an Oakland-based nonprofit that tracks farm subsidies. "On the other hand, the more often water agencies are scrambling to buy water, the more they get interested in some creative solutions, like conservation."
So far, conservation efforts and a set of storms earlier this month have helped replenish dwindling reservoirs and stave off a need for rationing. But even Rolen, who expects to harvest a bumper crop next year after idling 100 acres of his rice fields, says selling water is only a temporary fix to the problem.
"The state is growing almost exponentially and we have never totally satisfied agricultural water needs in the
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2008/01/23/financial/f133811S29.DTL
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