Drought may cause shutdown of Texas rice production
source: http://www.climatecentral.org/news/drought-may-cause-unprecedented-shutdown-of-texas-rice-pr...
-
-
- JanforGore
- added this
According to Bob Rose, chief meteorologist with the Lower Colorado River Authority (LCRA), it’s unlikely that enough rain will fall between now and March 1 to reach the 850,000 acre-feet threshold that was established by a recent agreement between the authority and the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. An acre-foot is the amount of water required to cover one acre of land to a depth of one foot, and it amounts to about 326,000 gallons.
As of January 30, the highland lakes that serve as the area’s reservoirs held about 758,000 acre-feet.
“This is going to be a huge, huge deal,” Rose said during a presentation at the annual meeting of the American Meteorological Society in New Orleans. “What’s going to happen is that there will be no water for rice irrigation in the Lower Colorado River Basin this year.”
Driving the Lower Colorado River Authority’s decision-making is the need to ensure there is enough water to meet the demand from Austin, the rapidly growing state capital that is completely reliant on water from the Lower Colorado River, as well as other municipalities and users, such as electric utilities that need water to run power plants.
The agricultural water restrictions would hit three Southeast Texas counties the hardest: Colorado, Matagordo, and Wharton. According to a 2011 analysis by the Texas AgriLife Extension Service, the combined direct and indirect economic benefits of rice production and processing in these three counties alone amounts to $675 million, including the support of nearly 9,000 jobs.
“This will be a huge blow to the region’s economy,” Rose told Climate Central. “We have never had a year where we have curtailed their [rice growers’] water or cut them off” completely, he said.
The 2011-12 drought ranks as the state’s most intense one-year drought since records began in 1895. The drought has had major impacts on agriculture in the Lone Star State, particularly for cattle ranchers, causing at least $5.2 billion in agricultural losses during 2011. This includes $1.8 billion in cotton losses, $750 million in lost hay production, and $243 million in wheat losses.
Texas is the largest cattle ranching state in the country, and the dry weather, combined with record summer heat and shortage of affordable feed this year caused many ranchers to cull their herds early or move their cattle to ranches in other states. The Texas cattle herd dropped by 11 percent during 2011, which translates to more than a million head of cattle.
Scientists say the drought is a likely result of a La Nina event in the Pacific Ocean, which tends to depress rainfall totals in Texas, particularly during the winter. However, global warming has likely exacerbated the drought and led to more heat extremes last summer, according to Texas state climatologist John Nielsen-Gammon.
More at the link
-
- groups:
- Green, Earth and Science, Sustainable Agriculture, Earth Care, 4 more
-
- tags:
- Environment, Economy, Climate Change, Texas, 3 more
-
-
freehit
-
But if (P)Rick Perry had succeeded in secedeing from the U.S. this wouldn't be our problem, right?
- 4 months ago
-
freehit
-
-
ampersand
-
I'm sorry, but growing a water intensive crop like rice in Texas seems like a particularly ill-adaptive, insane, and wasteful idea. One could probably make the same argument for California.
Are there huge distorted "federal agricultural"subsidies for this eco-stupidity? - 4 months ago
-
ampersand
-
-
JanforGore
-
ampersand:
Does seem ill advised in a drought prone area. However, the water will more than likely be taken from them in order to give it to the oil men and frackers to still have theirs. Even greater eco-stupidity.
- 4 months ago
-
JanforGore
-
-
ampersand
-
JanforGore:
That's quite true.
You'd think with the devastation the drought has brought to Texas there wouldn't be a single person there who wasn't an activist working to reverse the effects of global climate change.
Humans seem to have an amazing capacity for blaming the wrong thing in disasters they've often had a hand in creating.It's funny how some fundamentalists "pray for rain" but exempt their deity from blame in withholding the rain. (Although some do apparently see natural disasters like hurricanes as "punishment" for whatever particular group they fear and hate.)
Mexico's massive drought in in 2009 will almost certainly be repeated on a much larger scale with even more disastrous results and greater dislocations of population.
The problems of a half million people looking for work across the US border will be nothing compared to five or six million people in a desperate migration looking for water. - 4 months ago
-
ampersand
