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Water Delivery Organizations Convey Much of the Water Used for Irrigation in the Western United States
Irrigation water delivery organizations arose in the Late 19th and early 20th centuries to coordinate conveying water across arid farmland in the western United States. They range from small communal ditch organizations, private companies, and nonprofit organizations to large formal quasi-public ins...
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Published in: | Amber waves 2023-10, p.1-5 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Magazinearticle |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Irrigation water delivery organizations arose in the Late 19th and early 20th centuries to coordinate conveying water across arid farmland in the western United States. They range from small communal ditch organizations, private companies, and nonprofit organizations to large formal quasi-public institutions. Today these organizations play a major role in conveying water to farms, ranches, and other water users in the western United States. The role of these institutions is smaller in parts of the rest of the United States that have more precipitation or where most water is directly pumped from groundwater.According to results from the USDA's 2019 Survey of Irrigation Organizations (SIO), irrigation water delivery organizations in the western United States managed about 70 percent of water withdrawn for irrigation and almost 60 percent of water withdrawn for all agricultural, commercial, industrial, and municipal uses in an average year. Much of the surface water delivered by organizations in the western United States comes from water stored in snowpack. As warmer temperatures and variable precipitation reduce snowpack and alter the timing of spring runoff, irrigation water delivery organizations will continue to play an important role in water conservation in the western regions. In the central and southeastern United States, where rainfall is abundant and groundwater is more accessible, irrigation water delivery organizations account for less than 3 percent of water withdrawn for all uses in an average year.The four western regions defined by the USDA's National Agricultural Statistics Service consist of the Northwest (Idaho, Oregon, and Washington), Pacific (California and Nevada), Southwest (Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah), and Eastern Rockies (Colorado, Montana, and Wyoming). These regions contain mostly arid land west of the 100th meridian, the longitudinal line delineating the more arid western half of the United States. The High Plains (North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas) and the Southeast (Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Florida) are to the east of the four western regions. The SIO survey did not include the remaining States because organizations that deliver water to farms or influence on-farm groundwater use are rare or nonexistent in those States. |
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ISSN: | 1545-8741 1545-875X |