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Economics of Agricultural Water Conservation: Empirical Analysis and Policy Implications AWRA NM Section O’Niell’s Pub 4310 Central SE Albuquerque Frank A. Ward NMSU ACES April 6, 2012 Background • Climate Change: more floods/droughts, greater conflict potential in dry places like NM • Continued population growth • Growing values of shrinking key ecological assets • Growing values of treated urban water (pop + econ) • Irrigated ag consumes 85-90% of water in NM • Ongoing search for ways to conserve water in irrigated agriculture – technology – policy – Projects (drip, sprinkler, water saving crops) (subsidies, regulations, pricing, … ) (infrastructure, leveling, … ) 2 Ways to reduce ag water use • Reduce land in production – Cities buy or rent water or water rights from ag – Farm prices deteriorate • Alter crop mix, e.g.: – More acres in cotton – Fewer acres in alfalfa, pecan orchards – Develop more drought tolerant crop varieties • Reduce water application rates (deficit irrigate) • Shift to water conserving irrigation technology – To sprinklers – To drip irrigation 3 A Reminder Evaporation v Transpiration Water Use/Acre Weighted Ave over Crops Technology Apply ET E? T? Return Flood 4.63 2.11 0.21 1.90 2.51 Drip 2.48 2.48 0.12 2.36 0.00 4 Separating E from T Z. Samani, NMSU, March 30, 2012 • No simple empirical methods for separating E and T. His satellite ET map of EBID does not split E-T. • Theoretical approaches could be used, but they are hard to test. • For any given crop, drip irrigation typically produces higher yields, so takes more ET than surface irrigation. • For any given crop, Samani’s satellite ET map should show higher ET for drip than surface irrigated ones. • But drip acreages in EBID map area are small. He has not yet made that test. 5 Rio Grande Basin 6 Gaps • Little work in NM (or elsewhere) explaining what affects irrigation water savings that integrates – – – – – Farm economics: Farm hydrology: Agronomy: Basin hydrology: Basin institutions: profitability water application yields by crop net water depletions protect senior water rights • Big gap in NM • Big gap in the world’s dry regions 7 Aims • Data: Assemble data on crop water applications, crop water use, yields, land in production, crop mix, cost, and prices that characterize economics of irrigated ag in NM’s RG Project Area • Economic analysis: Conduct analysis that explains profitability, production, land and water use in the Project Area. • Policy Analysis: Forecast land and water use, crop production, farm income, and economic value of water in the Project Area for: – Several (5) drip irrigation subsidies – Selected (2) water supply scenarios 8 Study Region: Elephant Butte Irrigation District • http://www.ebid-nm.org/ 9 EBID recent history (acreage) 95,000 90,000 85,000 80,000 75,000 70,000 65,000 60,000 Not Ordering Misc Grain, Hay, Forage Vegetables Cotton Alfalfa Pecans 50,000 45,000 40,000 35,000 30,000 25,000 20,000 15,000 10,000 5,000 2003 2001 1999 1997 1995 1993 1991 1989 1987 1985 1983 1981 1979 1977 1975 1973 1971 1969 1967 1965 1963 1961 1959 1957 1955 0 1953 Acreage 55,000 Cash Receipts Doña Ana and Sierra Counties (2005, $million) County Total Hay Chile Onions Pecans Doña Ana 167.9 22.0 21.7 32.5 91.7 Sierra 44.9 1.9 22.4 18.4 2.3 Total 212.9 23.8 44.1 51.0 94.0 Approach • Analyze water conservation subsidies that reduces capital cost to convert from surface to drip. – Public policy: Taxpayer $ to reduce the costs of drip irrigation conversion – Private effect: Makes it cheaper to convert • Integrates farm economics and basin hydrology 12 Farm Level Economics • NMSU Farm costs and returns • Published by NM county, year, crop, and irrigation technology • Web -- http://aces.nmsu.edu/cropcosts/ • Our analysis: Assumes growers maximize income while limited by water allocations, land, and available crop choices 13 Basin Hydrology: Water Rights Administration • Requires water depletions in the basin to be no larger with water conservation subsidies than without them • Distinguishes crop water application from water depletion for both surface and drip irrigation 14 Pecans, drip irrigated 15 Pecans, surface irrigated 16 Pecans: Drip or Surface Irrigated 17 Farm Economics • Drip compared to surface irrigation – Drip: better applies quantity and timing of water that the plant needs for max yields – Drip: higher yields (higher ET) – Drip: reduces water applied – Drip: conversion costs are high • Farmers need economic advantage to convert from surface to drip irrigation. – Growers convert not to conserve water, but for income – At low water prices the economic advantage of converting typically is weak or negative – Yield gain must be very large 18 Cost of Converting: Surface to Drip Irrigation • Conversion Capital Costs: – About $1500 / ha for 10 year life – About $150 / ha per year • Conversion is a major investment, so for the conversion to increase income: – Yield gain must be high – or – $ Value of saved water must be high 19 Basin Hydrology • NM water administration (NMOSE) is charged to protect existing water rights • This means – Applications / acre fall with drip irrigation – Depletions cannot increase – For a given crop, yields are higher under drip than under surface irrigation – Higher yields consume higher ET 20 EBID Remote Sensing: NMSU • Basin-wide Evapotranspiration mapping • Demand forecasting, water operations support • Depletion changes with: – Management options – Changing crops – Drought cycles • Informs sustainable water management 21 Our Empirical Analysis of NM Ag Water Conservation • Maximize – Objective: Farm Economic Returns • Subject to – Constraints • Hydrologic • Agronomic • Institutional 22 Policy Assessment Approach Data Headwater supplies Policy Process Outcomes Crop prodn Baseline: no new policy Crop ET Law of the River Crop prices Crop costs Water price Land supply Alternative : Various drip irrigation subsidies Crop Mix Maximize NPV for EBID Water Use Water Saved Farm Income NPV 23 Ag Water Balance 24 Crop Water Data Used, EBID, NM A Crop Tech ET Yield Ret tons/ac ac-ft/ac/yr A Tech ET Yield Ret tons/ac ac-ft/ac/yr Alfalfa f 5.0 2.2 2.9 8.0 d 2.7 2.7 0.0 10.0 Cotton f 2.8 1.2 1.6 0.4 d 1.5 1.5 0.0 0.5 Lettuce f 2.5 1.1 1.4 12.5 d 1.4 1.4 0.0 15.6 Onions f 4.0 2.3 1.7 16.9 d 2.9 2.9 0.0 21.1 Sorghum f 2.0 0.9 1.1 2.0 d 1.1 1.1 0.0 2.5 Wheat Green Chile Red Chile Pecans f f f f 2.5 4.6 5.0 6.0 1.1 2.0 2.2 2.6 1.4 2.6 2.9 3.4 4.6 11.0 1.7 0.6 d d d d 1.4 2.5 2.7 3.2 1.4 2.5 2.7 3.2 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 5.8 13.8 2.2 0.7 25 NM Pecans: Water Balance Total ET: higher with Drip Flood Drip 6’ 3.2’ 3.2’ 2.6’ 3.4’ Return to system 0 Return to system 26 Under the Hood 27 Ag Water Use Objective NBAuckt Max NPV Ag t (1 r ) u c k t u u location c crop k irrig tech ( flood v. drip ) t year NBAuckt [ Pct Yielduckt Cost uckt ] Luckt 28 Constraints • Irrigable land, EBID supplies • Hydrologic balance • Institutional – Endangered Species Act – Rio Grande Compact (CO-NM; NM-TX) – US Mexico Treaty of 1906 – Rio Grande Project operation agreement (NM/TX) – No increase in water depletions: NM OSE 29 Results • Ag Water Use and Water Savings – 0 pct drip conversion subsidy – 25 pct conversion subsidy cost – 50 pct – 75 pct – 100 pct 30 Table 3. Price (Scarcity Value) of Water by Water Shortage and Drip Subsidy, Rio Grande Project, USA, 2006, $US/Ac-Ft ET Water Supply Scenario % Capital Subsidy, Drip irrigation 0 25 50 75 100 Normal 0.00 11.58 23.16 34.75 46.33 Dry 69.35 79.00 89.54 101.12 112.70 31 Table 5. Total Water Applied by Technology and Subsidy Rio Grande Basin, NM, USA, 2006, ac-ft / yr Tech flood Total all Crops drip Total Water Applied Water Conserved (Reduced Applications ref: no subsidy) Water Supply % Capital Subsidy, Drip 0 25 50 75 100 normal 251,394 245,003 238,612 232,221 225,830 dry 211,384 205,992 200,026 193,635 187,244 normal 12,214 15,169 18,124 21,079 24,034 dry 5,320 7,814 10,572 13,527 16,482 normal 263,608 260,172 256,736 253,300 249,864 dry 216,705 213,806 210,598 207,162 203,726 normal 0 3,436 6,872 10,308 13,744 dry 0 2,899 6,107 9,543 12,979 32 Table 6. Total Water Depletion by Irrigation Technology and Drip Irrigation Subsidy Rio Grande Basin, NM, USA, 2006, acre feet/yr Technology flood Total all Crops drip Water Supply Water Conserved (Reduced Depletions Ref: No Subsidy) 0 25 50 75 100 normal 114,752 111,797 108,842 105,887 102,932 dry 96,253 93,759 91,001 88,046 85,091 normal 12,214 15,169 18,124 21,079 24,034 dry Total Water Depleted % Capital Subsidy, Drip irrigation 5,320 7,814 10,572 13,527 16,482 normal 126,966 126,966 126,966 126,966 126,966 dry 101,573 101,573 101,573 101,573 101,573 normal 0 0 0 0 dry 0 0 0 0 0 33 0 Lessons Learned • Irrigators invest more heavily in water-saving technologies when faced with lower costs for converting from surface to drip. • Drip irrigation subsidies farm income, crop yields, value of food production, and crop water applied. • However, by increasing crop yields and raising crop water ET, drip irrigation subsidies put upward pressure on water depletions. • Where water rights exist, authorities need to guard against depletions with growing subsidies to reduced water applications. • Where no system of water rights exists, expect increased depletions of the water source to occur with increased drip irrigation subsidies. • In the RG Project Area, a 100% subsidy of the cost of converting from surface to drip irrigation raises the economic value of water from $36 to $101 per 1000 m3 depleted with 20% supplies. 34 Research Questions • Ag water use and conservation: hard to define, measure, forecast, evaluate, alter. • Need better measurement of water use by field, farm, district, basin (accounting) • What policies motivate growers to reduce ag water depletions? (importance of water rights adjudication) – At any cost – At minimum taxpayer cost 35 Research Questions • How will adjudication of Middle Valley’s water rights increase ag water conservation and make more water for urban and environmental uses? • How will climate change influence the choice of policies to promote ag water conservation? 36 Research Questions: NM Statewide • Level of historical (or current) ag water use, by: – Crop – Year – River basin (Colorado, RGR, Pecos…) – Location • How has historical irr water use been affected by supplies available? • What has climate change done to NM’s headwater supplies? – reduced by 25% in RGB hws since 2000 – but is it statistically significant? 37 Research Questions • What policies would protect and sustain NM’s aquifers affordably? • What actions would reduce ag water use likely to occur? – Without climate change – With climate change that affects: • Yields • Evaporation • ET • Supplies – With high, medium, low future: • Prices • Yields • Costs 38 Big research/policy question • Cheapest way to reduce ag water use to supply water for other uses – – – – Urban Domestic Key ecological assets Energy • In the face of – Recurrent Drought – Climate change 39 Tentative answers • Better water measurement, e.g. – Gauges – Tracking use by crop (application, ET) • Better water accounting – Current use patterns – Potential use patterns: future mgmt, policy • Adjudications – Who has the senior/junior rights in the face of future supply variability. Important as drought/climate intensifies. 40 Thank you