Agricultural Water Footprints and Productivity in the Colorado River Basin
Abstract
The Colorado River provides water to 40 million people in the U.S. Southwest, with river basin spanning 250,000 square miles (647,497 km2). Quantitative water rights assigned to U.S. states, Mexico, and tribes in the Colorado Basin exceed annual streamflows. Climate change is expected to limit streamflows further. To balance water demands with supplies, unprecedented water-use cutbacks have been proposed, primarily for agriculture, which consumes more than 60% of the Basin’s water. This study develops county-level, Basin-wide measures of agricultural economic water productivity, water footprints, and irrigation cash rent premiums, to inform conservation programs and compensation schemes. These measures identify areas where conservation costs in terms of foregone crop production or farm income are high or low. Crop sales averaged USD 814 per acre foot (AF) (USD 0.66/m3) of water consumed in the Lower Basin and 131 USD/AF (USD 0.11/m3) in the Upper Basin. Crop sales minus crop-specific input costs averaged 485 USD/AF (USD 0.39/m3) in the Lower Basin and 93 USD/AF (USD 0.08 per m3) in the Upper Basin. The blue water footprint (BWF) was 1.2 AF/USD 1K (1480 m3/USD1K) of water per thousand dollars of crop sales in the Lower Basin and 7.6 AF/USD 1K (9374 m3/USD1K) in the Upper Basin. Counties with higher water consumption per acre have a lower BWF.
Local Knowledge Graph (27 entities)
Related Works
Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.
Upper Gunnison River Water Conservancy District Management Plan- 1999-2005 part 2
Union Park Background Documents- Part 1
Green Light for Adaptive Policies on the Colorado River
Efficient Water Use in the Colorado River Basin
Agriculture 3.0: Preparing for a Drier Future in the Colorado River Basin
Running on Empty: Climate Change and the Future of the Colorado River Basin
Recent Upper Colorado River Streamflow Declines Driven by Loss of Spring Precipitation
Data from: Landscape pivot points and responses to water balance in national parks of the southwest U.S.
CLM simulated data at three FLUXNET sites and three SNOTEL sites in the Colorado River Basin.
Cited 6 times
References (44)
44 references to works outside the Knowledge Hub
