Michigan State University map; click on the image to enlarge it. |
The Ogallala covers eight states (Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Wyoming, South Dakota), but so far no agreement has been reached among them about how to save the aquifer.
"In fact, Colorado officials faced with legal challenges from Kansas over dwindling surface water in the Republican River have found that their best option to comply with a 1942 compact is to take more water out of the aquifer," Finley reports. "The state bought wells from farmers during the past decade and has been pumping out 11,500 acre-feet of water a year, enough to satisfy a small city, delivering it through a $60 million, 12-mile pipeline northeast of Wray to artificially resuscitate the river."
Farmers say they're trying to use less groundwater, but it's difficult. "We have come to realize that, yeah, we are overmining it. We are acutely aware of that now. There’s a definite attitude to make more than just the natural progression as far as efficiency," said Rod Lenz, president of the Republican River Water Conservation District. If the Ogallala runs dry, it will take about 6,000 years to replenish itself.
Farmers struggle with trying to implement often more-expensive sustainable watering practices with corn prices that have dropped to $3.50 a bushel, down from $7 a bushel in recent years. But farmers can't address the problem alone, since their customers are urban. "People in cities increasingly demand environmentally correct crops, which requires more water. "If they want natural grain-fed cattle, and non-GMO (genetically modified organism) crops — all that good stuff — it is going to take water," John Deere dealer Cody Powell told Finley. By using pesticides and GMO seeds, he points out, "With the same amount of water, you could get twice as much corn."
from The Rural Blog http://ift.tt/2yZbmyz Rural areas at risk as water levels drop in massive Ogallala aquifer - Entrepreneur Generations
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