Increasing Water Supplier Leverage on Land Use John D. Wiener University of Colorado Institute of Behavioral Science Modification of Presentation to Universities Council on.

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Transcript Increasing Water Supplier Leverage on Land Use John D. Wiener University of Colorado Institute of Behavioral Science Modification of Presentation to Universities Council on.

Increasing Water Supplier
Leverage on Land Use
John D. Wiener
University of Colorado Institute of Behavioral Science
Modification of Presentation to Universities Council on Water Resources
19 June 2014, Boston
[email protected]
www.colorado.edu/ibs/eb/wiener
Note: references and some additional discussion are provided in
“speaker’s notes” sections.
Disclaimer! – jumpy talk to take advantage…
• Extraordinary conference – and the USDA Ag track is excellent too! ALREADY:
• Thanks, Dr Honeycutt! -- 70% of Agricultural Land in the US is private, so
changes, adaptation, resilience will be voluntary! (See also NRC 2010)
• Thanks, Dr. Lettenmaier and Dr. Hirsch – Planning in Uncertainty With Trends
• Thanks, Dr. Vigerstol of TNC – we need more than we can buy but academics
can help specify the basis for COLLABORATIVE and SELF-INTERESTED DEALS
• Thanks, Dr. Huber-Lee and Dr. Lall: We NEED to be aware of the BIG picture –
this is a water conference, but agriculture gets more than 80% of consumptive
use in Western US , and more than 90% globally – “the last oasis” (Postel 1992)
Forrester  Meadows et al Limits to Growth  Turner (2008) etc.
Note for the website version: This is thanks to some of the most impressive presentations at the meeting,
before this one was offered. The UCOWR organizers provided a particularly effective structure and sequence.
Why “increase water supplier leverage on
land use?” Where IS this going?
• To GET TOWARD SUSTAINABILITY in that Water-Food-Energy nexus, there
are some beginning points for thinking LONG-TERM
• And how to transition? How to make improve damage control?
• Private ownership of almost all farmland so voluntary…
• WATER SUPPLIERS THINK, FINANCE and ACT LONG-TERM
• WATER RATE PAYERS are also consumers, recreators, live in places, enjoy
good air and good water… ALL of the ecosystem services are directly or
indirectly benefits to the rate-payers…
• RACE: RAPID DESTRUCTION VERSUS LOCAL GREENING… CITIES MUST HELP!
• “Put on your own oxygen mask first…” A sad new family motto
The Real Goal: Conserve inherent
agricultural capacity and ecosystem services
A working definition:
Capacity of agricultural resources, including water,
soils, techniques, crafts, and skills, live truebreeding seeds and livestock, to produce food, feed
and fiber with inputs only from local and regional
agricultural and related activity.
INHERENT capacity is greater than utility as a
substrate for a stew of fertilization and biocides.
Beginning Points -- Three Keys to Transition?
Design for maximum economic yield (not maximum gross output, but best
return on investment of inputs)… for the long planning horizon!
• RIGHT-SIZING – best scale for landscape may not be best scale for one farm
energy or for export) – economies of scale, not consolidation and
simplifying!
• GOAL: INTEGRATED MULTIFUNCTIONAL AGROECOLOGY – SETS of rightsized operations, resources, and projects to improve resilience… (e.g., sets of
renewable energy and cooperating groups of farms/ranches). (long note!)
• Integrated: livestock and crops and energy and all the other outputs!
• Multifunctional: many outputs, try to design for all the outputs
• Agroecology: use the whole environment rather than opposing it!
• THE BIG ASSESSMENTS: TRANSFORMATIONAL CHANGE NEEDED!
• WHAT WOULD YOU DO IF YOUR FAMILY OWNED ALL THE PIECES?
Maximum economic yield rather than maximum revenue – getting off the treadmill of
maximum possible production makes sense!
A GRAPHIC VIEW OF RESILIENCE
Cost of making maximum harvest
A few points on economics – just to mention…
• Efficiency is definable on a distribution of resources; it is an adjective, not
a noun.
• FIELD SCALE Vs FARM SCALE Vs LANDSCAPE SCALE Vs REGIONAL SCALE
???
• SHORT –TERM RATIONALITY --Clark, 1973: Economics of Extinction –
Positive discount rate: reduce the future from far ahead to present value:
– A century or two out, values are trivial; not much good decades out!
– Discount the future PLUS all that uncertainty?
• Evaluation is definable within a general equilibrium, but not transferable
to a different equilibrium with reallocated resources and price
structures… Norgaard & Howarth 1992, etc
• Benefit-Cost Analysis is NOT adequate for the long term!
• We can’t just “do the math”! THINK SOIL FORMATION
and WATER QUALITY/CONTAMINATION…
Two Sets of Problems: Peri-urban/Irrigated “small” vs BIG ag
• For the small operations Still over 50% of farm assets, but 16% of sales… and
7% of net farm income: HIGH VULNERABILITY
• Urbanization, rural residential development – tremendous land and water loss!
• Inability to finance transition for resilience to climate and “markets”!
• For the Big conventional Ag: Sustainability Doubtful…
• Erosion of soil, soil quality losses already very serious!
• Herbicide and other resistance evolving fast; no till at risk!
• 25 years (1982-2007) : same # acres but 22% are not the same acres!
DISPLACEMENT FROM BEST LAND…then ethanol-spurred sodbusting again!
• FOR EVERYONE: CLIMATE VARIATION AND CHANGE – higher intensity
precipitation events, more frequent extremes with cumulative impacts…
destructive sequences… (National Climate Assessment 3, May 2014, Chaps 3 and
6; Walthall et al. 2012 USDA input report).
• “SOIL EROSION ESTIMATED TO COST IOWA $1 BILLION IN YIELD” –May 2014
Slide of aerial photos, by Tom Dickinson, IBS and Geography, U of Colorado
IRRIGATION REPLACES AND EXPANDS RIPARIAN CONDITIONS
The green area includes land
unintentionally wetted by irrigation
return flows and conveyance loss -- it is
important habitat and filtration and denitrification, pollinator, IPM refugia…
“Natural”? No; hybrid ecology.
Data source: Landsat Enhanced Thematic Mapper, 2005.
Map by Thomas W. Dickinson, Institute of Behavioral Science,
University of Colorado at Boulder
Conversion of Best Farm Land – Near
Loveland, in Weld County, CO
I-25
Boyd
Lake
1997
One square mile
BLUE CURVES – IRRIGATION CANALS
Slide by Tom Dickinson, IBS and Geography, Source: National Agriculture Imagery Program
(NAIP),USDA-FSA Aerial Photography Field Office
Conversion of Best Farm Land
near Loveland, in Weld County, CO
One square mile
Source: National Agriculture Imagery Program (NAIP)
Slide by Tom Dickinson, Institute of Behavioral Science, CU-Boulder
Conversion of Best Farm Land
near Loveland, in Weld County, CO
One square mile
Source: National Agriculture Imagery Program (NAIP)
Slide by Tom Dickinson, Institute of Behavioral Science, CU-Boulder
Conversion of Best Farm Land
near Loveland, in Weld County, CO
One square mile
Source: National Agriculture Imagery Program (NAIP)
Slide by Tom Dickinson, Institute of Behavioral Science, CU-Boulder
2007 publication
This is where the best land and water is or was…
New view, 2013 – color
Scheme flipped
Here, green is influence
And brown is not…
http://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/
urban-influence-codes/documentation.
aspx#.U6KXFSimWns
American Farmland Trust: Farming on the Edge – series of reports including 2006, Sokolow, on interactions of
conservation easements and local planning ; Esseks et al. 2009: Case studies if 15 urbanizing counties,
Consumer Demand Drives Growth in the Organic Sector
(08 Feb 13 Chart of Note) -- THE RACE IS ON! Who gets what they want?
And, there is huge growth in direct sales, farmers’ markets and food hubs…
Back to pre-emergent see, post-emergents…. Tillage… Stay with the package
But make the package more complicated… And, see National Research Council 2012 Summit
On managing resistant weeds…
From the joint statement of ASA, CSSA, SSA…
While
there is
still soil
to save!
habitat of soil biota… diversity … abundance
downpours… increased soil erosion…
affect soil chemistry and biology…
water retention capacity… soil organic matter…
impacts of intense rainfall and drought…
See also Crop Science Society of America,
2011, Position Statement on Crop Adaptation
To Climate Change.
NEW: USDA Technical Information
Bulletin No. 1935: Climate Change and
U.S. Agriculture… Walthall et al. , 2012
and National Climate
Assessment, May 2014 … etc…
Toward Respect for Ecosystems – what if we lived in them?
• The original analysis: Von Thunen, 1826, The Isolated State (inventor
of marginal productivity economics: what is a functional region
without external inputs?) What makes the most sense?
• More recent: What does sustainable farming look like? E.g. Wes
Jackson’s Land Institute farm in Salina, KS: looks pretty good even
with price subsidy distortions from uncharged externalities… (Baum
2009)
• Sustainable diversified, integrated farming look pretty good…
(Kremen et al. special series in Ecology and Society (2012)). U.S. vs
European traditions… (Carr et al. 2012; Renewable Ag. and Food
Systems special issue; see also RAFS 23(4) 2008).
• But, big gaps in research on sustainable agriculture as a separate
business… (Seufert et al. 2012)… SO, WHAT IF NOT SEPARATE?
More tid-bits on ecosystem services values…
• Frisvold and Konyar 2013: reviewed other work, also…
• Nitrate REMOVAL from drinking water costs US $1.7 B/year… Remove 1%
from source water, save >$120M/yr.. See also USDA CEAP summaries
• Water-related benefits of preventing sediments/erosion $1.5 to $7/ton
• Land Trust Alliance, American Farmland Trust, National Assn. Homebuilders:
• Open space costs $0.35/ $1 in tax revenue
• Residential development costs $1.16/$1 in tax revenue (Colorado, 2003: $1.62/$1!)
• Consumer will to pay for trails, open space, amenity, quality of life…
• Trust for Public Land, 2010: Long Island NY: 10-fold ROI on Agricultural
Conservation Easements; > 23 States now purchase… some tax credits, too
• Philadelphia estimates that it saves >$132M/yr from ecosystem services
• So… the right thing looks better even with BCA – why is it rare?
This system provides more than a Billion gallons a day…
And avoids very expensive filtration and water treatment
Costs by control of pollution in the watersheds.
The upper watershed in the Catskills was first “developed”
by the City in 1905, now programs to maintain water quality
• Whole farm plans
• Forest Management plans
• Conservation Easements
Payment for ecosystem services – BUT S$$$
Government program assistances; septic design, salting, economic
development [smart growth!]
An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure!
http://www.nycwatershed.org/aw_description.html
http://www.cwconline.org/
http://www.nyc.gov/html/dep/html/drinking_water/maplevels_
wide.shtml
Thinking out of the farm-scale box –
Toward Agroecology/ecosystems
• “If it was just losing the water, why did we lose so many farms in the
wet years?”
– Often asked; not answered often
• My argument: farmers and ranchers need to use all their assets, with
water as key, AND…
• Cities and water managers are critical partners
– Where states dont act or are self-crippled
– Citizen have far wider interests than water rates
– Water suppliers have foresight!
– And cities have cheap long-term capital
–IWRM with full monitoring and adaptive management and long-term
participatory planning and great design… Ideal, but meanwhile…
Soil and Water Conservation Society , Ankeny,
Iowa 2010
THIS IS THE SOURCE on disproportionality of
impacts on water from some operations.
But, now, add disproportionality in
glyphosate resistance management.
Disproportionality is about the need
to target the bad actors… the worst
sources…
WHAT ABOUT BENEFITS FROM
TAKING LANDSCAPE
SERIOUSLY?
The Landscape Scale – BENEFITS!!!
• Landscape scales for ECOSYSTEM SERVICES , habitat values, connectivity
– AVOID ESA, RECOVER DIVERSITY, SUPPORT TRANSITIONS…
• Farm INVESTMENT “right-sizing” in equipment and purchases
• Farm output marketing – RISK MANAGEMENT and production
sequencing to meet demands
• STABILIZE AGRICULTURAL LANDSCAPE! Be able to use a long-range
planning horizon. (large set of references in “speakers’ notes”) PLACE TO INVEST IN!
• Resilience from flexibility of management – organize to stop perforation and
conversion of the best land -- Maybe climate info can stimulate?
• TIME TO GET OFF THE GRID!!! See Dosskey et al, various… design for
multifunctionality, for agroecology, for diversity and CUT LOSSES – close the
loops… The rectangular land division is no longer sensible!
A Blurry Continuum of Leverage: A THOUSAND THESES AWAIT YOUR MODELING!!!!
OWNERSHIP (single
agency)
PARTNERSHIP
LEASE
CONTRACT –
COMMON or
PES?
COMMUNITY
SUPPORTED
AGRICULTURE
Fee simple – total
JUST BUY IT
As defined
OWN IT BUT
NOT ALONE
Land for long term; some
places called “ground
lease” for building
investment
Crops – commonly
VERY tightly
controlled by Nonfarm party –
40% of US AG NOW!
Non-farmer rights
vary with deal;
commonly a variable
portion of mixed
outputs
Permanent easement
– usually RIGID land
uses, especially if TAX
Breaks involved
(Fed Estate, State)
CAN BE Flexible
and
Contingent
Farming Rights – often
called plain leasing, for
specified duration usually a
few years or less
Share of crops,
historically tightly
controlled by land
owner
Can include
obligations beyond
payment or a mix;
Farmers set the terms
Transferred
Development
Rights
Multiple Parties,
Multiple Interests
(can implement a
coalition
Water Banks/Etc: -- where
legally allowed – wide
variation, purposes may be
constrained, or duration
Payment for
Ecosystem Services
can be contract or
more like partnership
Can include access for
amenity, recreation,
and philanthropy
E.g. TDR for Smart
Growth Clustering
E.g. Water
sharing
permanent deal
E.g. Idaho Snake River.
Working water markets
E.g. New York City
watershed protection
for >1 BG/day
Hundreds are
florescing! Often also
with direct sales such
Locator Map
Bessemer is
Adjacent to and
East of Pueblo
Colorado
An example of
thinking “out of
the farm-scale
box”… This is
some of the best
fruit and vegetable
land in the
Western U.S., but
it is being
fragmented for
“development”
and the water
rights are of great
value…
Canola for (1/2) of Alfalfa
Halved the Alfalfa area, and substituted for Canola
THE TIMING OF WATER APPLICATION HAS ECONOMIC VALUES AS WELL AS THE VOLUME –
This provides a lot of early-season water that might be valuable for municipal supply
as well as for other higher-value crops… Lots to explore!
Canola (just read “Price-stabilized biodiesel fuel and high-protein
feed) for Corn
Halved the Alfalfa area, and substituted for Canola
Putting in winter canola instead of the corn (4130 A) makes water available early and
later in the season… this may be what the municipality needs.
Nobody in the driver’s seat… this is “development” of some of the best farm land in the US