Water the environment and California’s agriculture
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Transcript Water the environment and California’s agriculture
Water, the Environment,
and California’s Agriculture
David Zilberman
UC Berkeley
Presented at the
Cal-Med Sonoma Workshop
October 25, 2007
Water in California (Rough Numbers)
Annual water supply, 32-35 million acres (MA)
Surface water supply,18-21 million acre feet (MAF)
Groundwater,14 MAF
A person consumes 1/3 AF; 36 million people, 12 MHA
Agricultural land, 26 MA
38% in farming = 9.88 MA
75% irrigated = 7.41 MA
Water per acre average year, 2.5-2.8 AF
Water use varies by crop
1.5 AF/A wheat-7AF/A rice alfalfa
Fruits 2.5 MA require 3.2 AF/ac = 8 MAF total
Veggies 2 MA with double cropping 1 MA require 3
AF/ac = 3 MAF
Heterogeneity Revenues Vary by Crop
High value crops-keepers
Flowers $10-30K/AF; golf courses 3-30K
Strawberries $9-20K/AF; fresh tomatoes $3-5/AF
Citrus $2-4/AF
Almond $500-$800/AF
Marginal value crops may be replaced by biofuels
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Cotton $200-$400/AF Marginal
Wheat $75-100/AF
Rice &30-40/AF
May be inferior to biofuels
Top ag priority assure 11 MAF for fruits and veggies,
then expand those high value crops
Modern Water Technologies
Highest value crops (strawberries, grapes) use
advanced irrigation with chemigation
Increase yield
Save some water and much chemicals
Slow adoption of modern irrigation in field crops.
Slow adoption of optimize scheduling.
Studies show there is capital water substitution:
Improved applications over time (better scheduling) during
season increase yield and save some water.
Improved application over space (precision) can save much
water and chemicals.
Impacts vary by location-land quality slope
Indications that biotech ( a taboo) may provide drought
tolerance and water saving.
Animal, Ag, and Water
Meats and milk are large sectors.
Cattle, sheep, etc., are grazed on rain-fed areas.
Poultry relies heavily on imported feed, probably will stay.
Recreational horses will pay their way.
Dairy consumes locally grown feed
Enhances value of alfalfa and other feed products
Water shortage may make make these feed products less
competitive and reduce the industry.
Animal waste problems also pose a challenge.
The dimension and design of waste disposal regulation
and facilities are research challenge
Need to balance cost of abatement, disposal,
environmental damage, and value of production and also
design politically feasible policies.
Conflicting Visions—Vulnerable
Infrastructure and Incremental Changes
Conflicting visions
Growth to 50 or 60m requiring 5-8 MHA
Desire to restore fisheries and streams
Dynamic farming sector identifying new opportunities
Vulnerable infrastructure
The decaying delta built on peat
Climate change threats (rising sea levels, earlier snowmelt)
Incremental changes allow systems to stumble
Water bank - CVPIA
San Diego - imperial trade
Low prices of water for ag, most of the time
Gradual improvement of water use efficiency on farm
Physical Reality Is Less of a Problem than
Water and Other Policies
1. Prior appropriation and other water rights that
restrict water trading
Even with CVPIA, long-term trading is disallowed
Restriction on water movement- there is a
potential to transfer water from east to west in
addition to north to south
Results
Under-investment in water conservation among
farmers with prior appropriation cannot sell
Uncertain water rights leading to underinvestment
in conservation and high value crops among junior
right owners
Physical Reality Is Less of a
Problem than Policies
2. Restriction on construction of canals and conveyance
facilities- even when they pass benefit cost test
The peripheral canal seems doomed
Water can not be moved to where it is most valuable
3. Regulation and de-facto ban on use of purified water
for drinking and irrigationResult- reduction of water supply
4. Subsidized electricity rate for farms-for many years
No monitoring of aquifers in some areas
Results- sea water intrusion- heavy restrictions
Under investment in conservation Excessive depletion
Paralyzed Water System
Water regulations are weapons in development wars
Limited water rights: main constraint of development
They may be neglected due to budgetary constraints
They reflect myopia and lack of trust of scientific
predictions ( Katrina…), by policymakers, and voters
But crisis triggers change
Droughts of 1977-79 and 1988-92 introduced conservation
The 1988-92 drought led to water bank and CVPIA
New threats:
High energy cost - desalinization is costly
The delta levies will crumble - it is an issue of time
Climate change events are likely to occur
Elements of Reform
Benefit costs-based project assessment (may
need new projects)
Set the price right or introduce tradable permits
Price = mar extraction + mar externality + marginal
conveyance + user cost
Control pollution - by market-based incentives
Pest Control
Relatively, Cal ag does not suffer much from pest
That make organics appealing
Relatively high rates of adoption of IPM and biocontrol and reliance on consultants
Pesticides registration requirements led to introduction
of wireless use reporting system and increase in
automation- porter is right
Frost in winter barrier to pest movement
Climate change = more pest - Pierce’s disease
How to deal with dying bees - payment for
preservation of wild bees
Methyl bromide really valuable - 20/80 rule applies
Should be taxed not banned
Consumers’ Pest-Control Preferences
20%+ of consumers will pay 15% for pesticide-free
food
30% will pay nothing
But 10% of them will vote for banning pesticides
Food safety pesticides risks are miniscule
Worker safety are much higher
Environmental health is a problem
Organic and other pesticide-free solutions are “purer”
not healthier - base for product differentiation.
Med ag is about taste, quality, and value added (not
hunger prevention).
We sell lifestyle as well as food; golf is ag.
Environmental Drivers
Endangered species + litigation affect
development.
Reduce attempts to build on undeveloped hills;
instead replace farmland with housing.
The “taking” provides incentives to kill
endangered species not to protect them
Concern about climate change should lead to
adaptation = not withdrawn from technology