Green | November 16, 2008 | 7 comments

Farmers in California feeling effects of drought

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JanforGore
Water restrictions, higher prices, and wildfires that are more ferocious brought on by climate change are changing the landscape of California and the lives of those who have farmed there for decades. Is California another Australia in the making? The only section of California that is not currently in drought is the very Northern tip. Much of the area now experiencing these wildfires and fiercer winds as last year is experiencing moderate to severe drought.

http://www.drought.unl.edu/dm/DM_state.htm?CA,W
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7 comments // Farmers in California feeling effects of drought

  • HolyCity2012
  • GreenhouseNeutralFoundation
  • csmonut
    • 0
      csmonut  
    • Start putting in gardens, folks. It won't be long before we'll not be able to afford what little food comes from CA and the mid-west.
      As for bulding in hte desert...they won't stop. There's too much money being waved around.
      Well...maybe not right now, but that will change.
      More golf courses in a water hungry state! That's what we need! :(

    • 3 years ago
  • JanforGore
    • 0
      JanforGore  
    • At this pace it would not surprise me to see environmental refugees from California in the next couple of decades. People are going to have to understand that this can only be remedied if they participate in the solutions, and unfortunately there will have to be hard choices to come. We cannot continue building in deserts to support an increasing population and wasting water with abandon and not think that somewhere along the road we will have to pay the piper.

    • 3 years ago
  • Virtual_Will_Rogers
    • 0
      Virtual_Will_Rogers  
    • ..all of the Indigenous people that have ever lived on this planet treated Nature as you would a friend...with respect...they wasted nothing and took nothing for granted....humans today are wasteful beyond imagination...water...food...probably around 65% of the food grown in the world goes to waste....energy and natural resources wasted...two little people living in a 5000 square foot house with air conditioning going full blast....churches all around the world that are used a few hours a week with utilities blasting....water being used in deserts to grow plants that are not native to that area....oil that needs to stay in the Earth being hauled from one point to another...polluting the water tables...destroying the oceans....it is said...you reap what you sow....one of the most truthful statements ever made...and humans are reaping what they sow...the sad part is that it is a minority of people that have brought about these catastrophic events that are taking place at this time....they planted this disgusting crop...I hope it does not get so bad that all the Californians have to load up and move back to Oklahoma....Golden Ruler....Will

    • 3 years ago
  • JanforGore
    • 0
      JanforGore  
    • Image
    • Website from State of California covering this drought which is the worst in decades. Drought is not something to be poo pooed. It is a silent killer of more than just economies. Just look to Africa and Australia as examples to see the results of what has happened to drought left unchecked.

    • 3 years ago
  • JanforGore
    • 0
      JanforGore  
    • Rancho Water to me is wrong to charge what they are charging and taking advantage of the drought to make more money. But also, farmers then need to learn to conserve water and cut down on the crops they grow that use much water. Unfortunately, having to pay more for the water may eventually help them get to that point. Conservation is the key.

      From the article:

      Farmers served by the Rancho California Water District will pay more for water. It's just a question of when.

      A program that allowed farmers to get cheaper water in exchange for agreeing to cutbacks in supplies in drier times could be phased out by 2013. That means farmers used to getting discounted water for crops will pay the same as the district's household and industrial customers.

      That, combined with higher fuel and fertilizer costs and cheaper foreign goods, is the last thing local farmers need, said Ben Drake, a district board member who runs a farm management company.

      "I may not be able to farm in the next eight to 10 years," said Drake, who has been in the Temecula Valley since the 1970s.

      "None of my clients are spending any extra money on anything."

      For years, many Rancho Water farmers received discounted water through the Metropolitan Water District's Interim Agricultural Water Program. Metropolitan wholesales water to Rancho, and its program gave farmers a lower rate in exchange for being first on the chopping block for supply cuts.

      The program relies on surplus water; right now, there is none and Metropolitan doesn't expect to have a surplus in the next few years, said Rancho spokeswoman Meggan Reed.

      About 1,700 customers take part in the program. About 48 percent of the water sold by Rancho Water goes to agriculture.

      With a long-term drought and a court decision cutting supplies from the Sacramento River Delta, Metropolitan, which supplies 70 percent of the Rancho district's water, announced last year a 30 percent cut in water supplied to program participants.

      Rancho Water had little choice but to pass along the cuts to farmers. To take the sting out of the cutbacks, district staff worked with farmers to find more ways to conserve water. Now, with the program gone by 2013, the district is giving farmers a chance to opt out now and pay the same rate as regular customers.

      Program participants pay 65 cents per hundred cubic feet or 88 cents per hundred cubic feet, depending on where they are. With the program's demise, those customers would pay either 72 cents per hundred cubic feet or $1.88 per hundred cubic feet.

      Those who opt out -- the deadline is Jan. 1 to opt out for next year -- will not be subject to the 30 percent cutback, although they face much higher charges if they exceed their water allowance.

      Gene Bianchi, of De Luz, said he's not sure whether he'll opt out of the program.

      Bianchi has about 1,100 avocado trees on his 12-acre parcel. He says he is spending about $11,000 to $12,000 annually on water.

    • 3 years ago
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