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Dr. Bill Golden Department of Agricultural Economics Economics of Groundwater Conservation to Agriculture Economics of Groundwater Conservation to Agriculture.

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Presentation on theme: "Dr. Bill Golden Department of Agricultural Economics Economics of Groundwater Conservation to Agriculture Economics of Groundwater Conservation to Agriculture."— Presentation transcript:

1 Dr. Bill Golden Department of Agricultural Economics Economics of Groundwater Conservation to Agriculture Economics of Groundwater Conservation to Agriculture Kansas Water Congress - Summer Conference Kansas Water Congress - Summer Conference Manhattan, Kansas July 31, 2014

2 Big Question  What happens to agriculture and the rural economy as we reduce groundwater usage?  The evidence is not consistent !!!

3 What We Think We Know Example from Southwest Kansas. Both curves exhibit diminishing marginal returns to applied groundwater. Curves vary by crop, location, precipitation, and time

4 Future Projections for Sheridan #6 LEMA  20% Reduction by Limiting Water Use

5 What We Have Observed: Wet Walnut Creek IGUCA: Irrigated Crop Revenue  Statistically significant short-run and a statistically insignificant long-run reduction in annual irrigated crop revenue. Figure 6. Time Series Comparison of the Indexed Values of Irrigated Crop Revenue

6 Comparison of GMD #1 and GMD#4  Target and Control Group

7 Total Irrigated Acres  Statistically significant reduction in annual irrigated acreage  Statistically significant reduction in annual irrigated acreage Source: Water Right Information System

8 Water Use per Acre  Statistically significant reduction in water use per acre Source: Water Right Information System

9 Total Value of All Crops  No statistically significant reduction in the annual total value of all crops. Source: www.ipsr.ku.edu

10 Total Annual Payroll  No statistically significant reduction in total annual payroll. Source: www.ipsr.ku.edu

11 Irrigated Cropland Price  Irrigated cropland prices have inflated at similar rates. Source: Farm Management Guide MF-1100; Kansas Land Prices and Cash Rental Rates by Dhuyvetter and Taylor

12 Lessons Learned  We may be over estimating direct economic impacts  Irrigators operate in a dynamic setting and implement long-run strategies to mitigate negative economic impacts  It is difficult to predict in advance what these long-run strategies will be  We may not be as economically efficient in ground water use as we think.

13 New Question: Which is More Important – the Well Being of the Producer or Rural Economy Source: Potential Economic Impact of Water Use Changes in Southwest Kansas

14 Why Conserve Groundwater?

15 The Value of Groundwater in Alternative Uses  Aylward et al. (2010) estimated that: The value of water in irrigated agriculture ranged from $12.33/ac-ft to $2466.96/ac-ft with an average figure of $345.37/ac-ft The value of water in irrigated agriculture ranged from $12.33/ac-ft to $2466.96/ac-ft with an average figure of $345.37/ac-ft The value of water in domestic use ranged from $9.87/ ac-ft to $3552.43/ ac-ft, with an average value of $715.42/ ac-ft The value of water in domestic use ranged from $9.87/ ac-ft to $3552.43/ ac-ft, with an average value of $715.42/ ac-ft The value of water in industrial use, ranged from $12.33/ ac-ft to $8560.36/ ac-ft, with an average value of $1060.79/ ac-ft. The value of water in industrial use, ranged from $12.33/ ac-ft to $8560.36/ ac-ft, with an average value of $1060.79/ ac-ft.

16 The Value of Groundwater in Alternative Uses  Guerrero et al. (2010) estimated, that with the same volume of water, ethanol production in western Kansas and eastern Colorado created 87 times more Value Added than corn  Guerrero et al. (2012) suggests that, accounting for only the direct water use, dairies are a relatively high-value user of water generating over $93,000 per acre-ft.  After studying Sunflower Electric Power Corporation’s Holcomb expansion, Leatherman and Golden (2010) estimated the reduction in agricultural producer income at $1,179,713 per year. The annual gain in income from coal fired electricity production was estimated as $195,057,652.

17 Conclusions  The Economics of Groundwater Conservation Depends on Who You are Conserving it for: The agriculture producer The agriculture producer The rural economy The rural economy Higher valued water users Higher valued water users

18 Questions


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