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Thursday, 02/12/2009 9:18:59 PM

Thursday, February 12, 2009 9:18:59 PM

Post# of 949
CNFO Technology Could really experience a Boom !!! How you Wonder ?

Consider a State Surrounded By Ocean but No Fresh Water For Irrigation. Waters Bills as High as 14,000 + Per Month Per Farm !!

Fantasy Perhaps Not

10, 2008 · Severe droughts have combined with an unexpected culprit — a tiny fish — to put the squeeze on Southern California's water supply. Farmers in places like San Diego County are the first to feel the pinch.

Last month, the Metropolitan Water District, which supplies water to 18 million mostly urban customers in Southern California, started cutting water supplies to most agriculture customers by 30 percent. Urban users still have unlimited water.

Deal with the Devil

The cutbacks have their roots in California's last big drought, which took place in the late 1980s and early '90s. After that, the Metropolitan Water District invested in big water-storage projects, and to pay for them, it doubled water prices over a short time.

To keep their businesses afloat, most farmers made a kind of "deal with the devil."

"The deal was that, in exchange for a discount on the water rate, we would be willing to take the first cutbacks in an emergency situation," says Al Stehly, who manages about 450 acres of avocado trees for himself and other landowners in the county.

For 50 years, farmers like Stehly have been using water pumped in from the Colorado River and from Northern California to turn the dry, hilly landscape northeast of San Diego into lush groves and fields.

These, days avocados are the biggest crop. In fact, San Diego County is the country's biggest avocado producer.

Stehly shows off the steep slope where he grows 60 acres of avocados in rural Valley Center. Nothing but sagebrush would grow here before he started irrigating it and planting trees.

"We've got really good weather, but without the water, I really can't grow anything," Stehly says.

In the heat of the summer, he gives each tree about 300 gallons of water, and his water bills run $14,000 a month.

Drastic Measures

Because of the 30 percent cut in water supply, Stehly plans to take chainsaws to about 1,200 trees — a quarter of his grove. He will cut them down to about four feet tall and try to keep the stumps alive by giving them about a tenth of the water they usually need.

"We're going to kind of put them in suspended animation, hoping that the cutbacks are lifted and we can resurrect them," he says.

Stehly is stoic about the situation, but some other farmers are spitting mad.

"The price of water is bad enough, but then when they tell us we've got to cut by 30 percent, then you stop and say, 'OK, what will I do?'" says Gary Broomell, who has been growing oranges and grapefruits in Valley Center for almost 50 years.

Broomell says with competition from imported fruit, and pressure to sell out to developers, growers had to take the deal the water agency offered.

"We had no choice," he says. "We can't pay the full price. That's a given, especially in citrus. If we were paying the full price the last 10 years, we wouldn't be here anymore."

Delta Smelt

Broomell blames environmentalists for stopping projects that would bring more water to the region, and for pushing a lawsuit to protect a tiny endangered fish, called the Delta smelt, that lives hundreds of miles away. He says he's in an untenable situation.

"I honestly think it's more manmade than Mother Nature," Broomell says of the farmers' water crisis.

Broomell's take stems from a decision by a federal judge in Fresno to protect the smelt, which live in the Sacramento Delta, east of San Francisco Bay.

"These powerful pumps that are at the south of the Delta basically pull the smelt towards it. And when they get into the pumps they, of cours,e get killed," says Jeffrey Kightlinger, general manager of the Metropolitan Water District.

The court ordered the agency to stop pumping during the winter months, when the smelt are near the pumps. That reduces the water Southern California gets from Northern California by about 25 percent to 30 percent, according to Kightlinger.

Climate Change Impact

The ruling could not have come at a worse time, Kightlinger adds.

"The Colorado River is in its eighth year of drought, and Northern California also had a very dry year this past year. And then we had last year, the driest year ever recorded in the Los Angeles basin," Kightlinger says.

Kightlinger says it's not clear what role climate change plays in California's water shortage.

But late last month, researchers from the University of California at San Diego reported that emissions of greenhouse gases, such as those from cars and power plants, are to blame for the shrinking snow pack in the mountains of the West. And they predict that the snow pack and water supply will decline even more.

Kightlinger said he does not know how long the farmers will be shorted.

But farmers in San Diego County predict it will be a multi-year problem. And Stehly says it might be time to start thinking about a new crop that uses less water.

"I really enjoy wine, so maybe we'll try making some wine," Stehly says.

Related NPR Stories

*
Jan. 22, 2008
Farmers Battle over Water for California
*
Oct. 15, 2007
California Grapples with Water Shortage

Some farmers are trying to cope by drilling new wells to tap underground water supplies. But those are on the decline, too, and the wells are costly. Near Mendota, farmer Bill Diedrich said one of his neighbors spent $130,000 to drill down 1,700 feet, but didn't hit water and had to refill the hole.

Mr. Diedrich's nephew, Todd Diedrich, is letting 1,000 acres of his family's 1,500-acre farm go fallow this year to concentrate scarce water. But he faces a predicament shared by many other farmers: He still has to pay down a $210,000 note for a tomato harvester he and his father, Jim, bought recently and a $700,000 note for a drip-irrigation system they put in two years ago. "Ironically, we put in that system to conserve water," said 39-year-old Todd Diedrich.

If the water situation doesn't ease soon, industry experts expect numerous farmers to go out of business in a year or so. Particularly vulnerable are farmers who have loans tied to being able to secure water supplies, said Richard Howitt, a professor of agriculture economics at the University of California at Davis. In essence, these farmers use their water rights as collateral for loans that go toward crops and equipment.

View Full Image
California aqueduct
Jim Carlton/The Wall Street Journal

Fresno County farmers rely on water from the California Aqueduct, which will be carrying far less this year because of drought and court-ordered environmental restrictions.
California aqueduct
California aqueduct

The trickledown from the farm cutbacks, meanwhile, is rippling across the Central Valley. Officials at Ayala Corp., a Riverdale provider of contract farm labor, said they expect to find jobs for 4,000 workers this year, compared with 6,000 last year, 10,000 in 2007 and 15,000 four years ago. Mr. Howitt estimated that 40,000 to 45,000 workers in the valley's farming sector will lose jobs this year because of the water restrictions, with $1.2 billion in related lost wages.

For each lost farming job, businesses that support the workers suffer. At the Don Pepe restaurant in Firebaugh, owner Juan Miguel Marquez said his revenue fell 20% in 2008 because of fewer farm workers patronizing the establishment. A former farm worker himself, he said he expects revenue to fall an additional 40%. "All we can do is pray," Mr. Marquez said in Spanish, in a nearly empty restaurant. "We pray for rain."

Write to Jim Carlton at jim.carlton@wsj.com


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