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Drought

Western drought could be return to normal, harsher climate
New York Times; 05/02/2004

Region wrestles with sixth year of drought
Christian Science Monitor; 04/27/2004

Drought continues six-year reign over the West
Santa Fe New Mexican (AP); 04/11/2004

Farmland loss

Arizona farmland disappearing at rate of 55 acres per hour
Arizona Republic; 02/27/2004

Tough times cut Utah farmers' profits, numbers
Salt Lake Tribune; 02/15/2004

Western Montana farmland disappears beneath developments
Missoulian; 07/13/2003

Lack of profit, pressure to subdivide erases Colorado farms
Denver Rocky Mountain News; 11/13/2003

Water Policy

Court ruling could poke holes in federal dams
Denver Rocky Mountain News; 05/04/2004

Utah plan would bring more water to growing Wasatch Front
Salt Lake Tribune; 03/30/04

Arizona tribes' landmark water deal would make them power brokers
High Country News; 03/16/2004

Bush budget to include funds to help guarantee western water supplies
Santa Fe New Mexican (AP); 01/27/2004

Colorado law turned off hundreds of irrigation wells
Denver Rocky Mountain News; 08/29/2003

Sustainable farming

New Mexico ranchers market range-to-grill grass-fed beef
Santa Fe New Mexican; 01/12/2004

Montana organic beef grower sees gain in mad-cow scare
Christian Science Monitor; 12/29/2003


Backgrounders
Drought

U.S. Drought Monitor

U.S. Geological Survey Streamflow Monitors

USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service's Western Water Supply Outlook

Farmland Loss

American Farmland Trust

Farmland Information Center

Trust for Public Lands Ranchlands Conservation Report

Water policy

U.S. Department of Interior Water 2025: Preventing Crises and Conflicts in the West

Colorado River Water Users Association

Central Arizona Project

Arizona's Salt River Project

Colorado Water Congress

Idaho State Water Plans

Montana Reserved Water Rights Compacts

Nevada Division of Water Resources

New Mexico Water Conservation Plan

Utah Division of Water Rights

Utah Lake Drainage Basin Mitigation

Wyoming Water Development Commission

Sustainable farming

Center for Sustainable Environments

Arizona's Food Security, Safety and Sustainability
Weighing the Risks of Bioterrorism, Contamination, Drought, and Farmland Loss to Urban Growth.
(pdf)

LocalHarvest map: Sources of sustainably grown, locally produced food

FoodRoutes: Dedicated to reintroducing Americans to their food

North American Farmers Direct Marketing Association


Western Perspective is sponsored by:



Heat's on agriculture
Unrestricted growth and unrelenting drought threaten
the future of farms and ranches in the Mountain West
By Gary Nabhan
for Headwaters News

Something unprecedented in scale but chronic in its effects on our livelihoods and landscapes is happening all around us in the American West: drought.

Recently, the water level of Lake Powell has dropped more than 100 feet, and federal agencies predict that the lake may be empty by 2007.

In central Arizona's Verde Valley, eight of 10 springs have dried up, and irrigators have been told that they must cut their deliveries to forage crops by a third.

Drought-driven bark beetle infestations have killed off more than two-thirds of the trees on a million acres of New Mexico, Colorado and Arizona, increasing fire hazards that can further diminish rangeland productivity.

While some of these changes are "natural" and largely beyond our control, most have been aggravated by having already-scarce water supplies shunted from working landscapes in the West to cities where both growth and per capita use remain largely unchecked.

In a survey of residents living in every county of Arizona, less than a third of the urban dwellers in metro Phoenix and Tucson felt their consumption patterns had been affected in any way by the drought, whereas well over two-thirds of rural dwellers had already suffered impacts on their economic and food security.

In a recent forum aimed at advancing food security and sustainability in the West, I was asked which was the worse threat to the future of Western ranching and farming, drought or land conversion for urban sprawl?

If we step back a moment, and look at the course of Western history, it becomes clear that there is a curious but insidious connection between the two.

It is now dawning on many Western livestock producers that pre-drought levels of cattle, sheep and hay production in the region will never again be achieved, at least not during our lifetimes. The reason for this is that whenever a prolonged drought occurs in the rapidly urbanizing West, more water is permanently shunted away from agriculture to maintain the growth of cities and their suburbs, which then further subdivide and fragment the West's working landscapes.

Take a look at the fate of Arizona's farms and ranches since the prolonged drought began to worsen around 1997. Because farmers in the state have faced diminished irrigation supplies, higher water prices, reduced yields and rising input costs, they are currently shouldering nearly a quarter more debt than they did at the start of the drought.

The average number of Arizona farms and ranches lost each year over the past half-century has been 82, but since the onset of the current drought, it has increased to 100.

Many of the region's prime farmlands have been converted to condos, retirement homes, malls and golf courses that demand more water be permanently allocated to them. Ironically, there are ample indications that while farmers are adopting water-conserving practices that have cut their per-acre use by one-fifth over the past quarter-century, per capita urban use in Western cities has increased by one-quarter over the same period.

What many fail to see is that current water allocation policies exacerbate the meteorological drought faced by farmers and ranchers, creating a "political drought" that threatens to undermine our food security.

The facile assumption of such developer-biased policies is that the food production lost in the West due to urban expansion can always be made up by importing meat, vegetables and grains from offshore sources.

But as Americans are quickly learning, food produced and imported from beyond our borders may be fraught with perils: mad cow disease, contamination from E. coli and salmonella, high pesticide residues and farm worker abuse.

In a recent public opinion survey undertaken for the Center for Sustainable Environments by the Social Research Laboratory at Northern Arizona University, it became clear that well over half of consumers contacted are deeply concerned about the quality, safety, traceability and production proximity of the food they eat.

And yet, while such strong concerns are prevalent among every economic class and ethnicity now living in the West, they have yet to influence state and federal water and land policies that determine how secure our food future will be.

Let's look in detail at what the public wants that our federal water projects, land-use agencies nor land grant agricultural colleges are not currently offering.

Recognizing that local food production contributes to food security and safety, 59 percent of Arizonans surveyed strongly support and 33 percent somewhat support setting aside a portion of each community's water supply to be used exclusively for local food production.

Surprisingly, 80 percent claim they would be willing to pay as much as 10 percent more than their current food bills if locally produced food became accessible to them.

In addition, 24 percent of those surveyed are concerned enough about meat safety to want to purchase more locally produced and packaged range-fed beef and lamb. Of those, 71 percent claimed they would pay more for range-fed beef and lamb produced and direct-marketed by neighboring ranchers, given current concerns about meat safety and traceability.

While this should be good news to the farmers and ranchers forging the marketing efforts of the American Grassfed Association, there remain many obstacles in the way of both producers and consumers.

One of them is the disappearance of smaller-scale slaughterhouses and meat-processing plants near where range-fed and grass-finished beef and mutton are produced.

In the aftermath of the mad cow scare last winter, federal agencies began to close down some of the few small-scale meat processors, claiming that they didn't have enough inspectors to frequently monitor such operations. This was an infuriating move in the wrong direction, since most critics agree that large feedlot and slaughterhouse operations run by the likes of ConAgra and Tyson are more likely to chronically violate food-safety rules.

Range-fed cattle and sheep are among the few food-production strategies that do not require large water diversions to function, and conservation-oriented ranchers in particular need the hurdles lowered to provide their neighbors with fresh, safe, sustainably grown meat.

Westerners will inevitably face further impacts of drought driven by erratic and changing weather conditions. But it is time to end the agricultural water shortages caused not by drought itself but by greedy developers who push our region's population beyond the carrying capacity of our land and its water supplies.

Such "developer-driven droughts" threaten to rob the West of its food security and the health of its rural communities, while leaving no water in our rivers and lakes for fish or wildlife.

To arrest these trends, the Center for Sustainable Environments has launched a marketing campaign for regionally grown food products grown with water-conserving practices: "Get Your Fresh From Canyon Country."

It is time that water-conscious consumers and environmentalists help farmers and ranchers stay on the land through this era of record drought, rather than standing by passively while land developers further diminish our region's chances to have a sustainable food future.


Dr. Gary Nabhan is co-author of a new policy paper on drought, water scarcity and food security in the West, available at www.environment.nau.edu.
 

Changes plow agriculture under

By Shellie Nelson, assistant editor
Headwaters News

May 26, 2004


Farmers and ranchers in the West are feeling the heat these days. Unrelenting drought combined with explosive growth is fueling competition for precious water and making selling out much more attractive than eking out a living for an ever-shrinking share of the market.

Experts forecast that the drought will continue for the sixth straight year.

Mild winters have allowed increased populations of bugs to munch their way through trees and plants.

Disappearing grass and hay crops are causing farmers and ranchers to cull their herds again and again, and given the changing times making them realize their herds may never return to levels seen a decade ago.

The arrival of mad cow disease in the United States closed borders to American beef and caused widespread layoffs in packing plants across the West.

Brucellosis penned Wyoming cattle into the state, and other states either banned the import of Wyoming beef or required more extensive testing for cattle shipped from there.

As water supplies dwindle, county, state, federal and tribal officials are faced with tough choices. As the drought deepens and spreads, they are forced to negotiate and trade away water to save salmon and to slake the thirst of new developments.

Family farms are disappearing at a rate calculated in acres per minute in Arizona, Colorado and New Mexico, and teamed with Texas, they lead the nation in farmland lost between 1997 and 2002.

A recent study by Colorado College indicated that less than 3 percent of all Westerners make their living at agriculture and natural resource-based industries, and those industries contribute only 2 percent of earned income to the economies of the Western states.

The crushing drought, encroaching development, growing demand for dwindling water supplies and change in economic base are driving farmers and ranchers from their land in record numbers.

Those who stay must adapt and learn new ways to hold onto their land in face of increasing challenges.

Some are turning to agritainment or agritourism, where city dwellers are treated to authentic rural experiences on working farms and ranches.

In Colorado, agritainment is the perfect melding of the $7 billion tourism industry and the $5.2 billion agriculture industry.

Farmers and ranchers in New Mexico are hitching a ride on the agritourism bus with festivals, hunting, dude ranching, farm tours and wildlife safaris.

The mad cow scare is driving increased consumer awareness of food production methods and has helped fuel demand for organic beef.

Agriculture, as with all industries in a changing environment, must adapt and change to survive. Western farmers and ranchers are showing their resilience by changing their crop base, developing other streams of income and creating local markets for their produce and beef.

 
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Room to work together

While some critics feel that the fight for water between farmers, city dwellers, and wildlife advocates is the last great battle in the West, others are finding ways to bring these various interests together in collaborative conservation projects.

In the town of Dewey in central Arizona, Young's Farm is both a natural and cultural landmark. It is a natural landmark because of the ancient cottonwoods growing ins its healthy riparian corridor adjacent to fields and turkey production.

Biologists have documented that when Central Arizona's riparian habitats are adjacent to pesticide-free small-scale agriculture, they harbor the highest densities of breeding birds recorded anywhere in North America. 

Yet these fields and wildland habitats lie smack-dab in the trajectory of growth for Prescott Valley, one of the fastest-developing bedroom communities in the Southwest.

As other farms and ranches in the area have been converted to subdivisions, none of the water formerly used for crops and livestock has been returned to streams or cottonwoods for wildlife.

Recently, however, the Trust for Public Land determined that Young's Farm is far more valuable to this state as a working farm than as another housing development.

Fortunately, many of the thousands of visitors to the Young family's farmers market, cafe and nursery agree that  the preservation of family farms for local food production, open space and wildlife habitat benefits all of us.

They have begun to  play a vital role in safeguarding this rural heritage by helping the Trust raise funds to purchase the development rights to Young's Farm. This will place a conservation easement on the property that will allow the Young' family and those who come after them to utilize the land for only for the purposes of farming and wildlife enhancement though those farming practices.

Currently, this coalition of farmers, urban consumers and land trusts is trying to convince the legislature and the governor to fund the Arizona Agricultural Protection Program (A.R.S. § 3-3301-3308).

For such a purpose, approximately $2 million to $4 million is available from the "Agricultural Program" of "Growing Smarter." However, this money needs statutory direction into "conservation-based management alternatives" that preserve open space.

The Arizona Agricultural Protection Program does this and also works to leverage additional funding for the preservation of open space through the federal Farm and Ranch Land Protection Program and nonprofit organizations such as the Central Arizona Land Trust and the American Farmland Trust.

Funding this program will help purchase the development rights of Young’s Farm and other prime agricultural lands throughout Arizona.


In short, farmers, wildlife and urban-dwelling conservationists can all win through such collaborative conservation efforts. If we can help conservation-oriented farmers and ranchers stay in business and on the land, we will protect some of the most diverse working landscapes in the West.

Rather than seeing more range wars in our region, lets all step in toward "the radical center" and make such visions a reality.

See www.youngsfarminc.com  or contact Sara Young-Teskey at 928-632-7272 | P.O. Box 147 Dewey, Arizona 86327
- Gary Nabhan

What about cities' impact?
Interesting debate on this issue. I think the over-production of food must stop immediately, let alone the water and land it takes to feed cows.

To think, all of that land and water to feed animals, oh the humanity! Let's "sell" the land and water rights back to the government and let them manage it effectively.

I mean really, we don't need to export food to developing countries. We can burden their agriculture systems by simply importing what is required. If you think of it, we import and export food and animal products from around the world and for what?

We should all go vegetarian and move to the city and the problem will certainly be solved. Oh wait, we'll need that land, water, and overproduction for our new vegetarian diet. Ooops. <ctrl-alt-sarcasm off>

As with everything in our free market economy (I know this is a shocker for the more socialistic in this debate), market conditions should dictate the business cycle for the most part and all subsidies should be reduced to absolute minimum levels.

Otherwise, we become captive to foreign markets and end up with severe limitations on the economy in the long run. Make water and land-use alternatives economical to the farmer and rancher, and you'll be able to shift the impacts somewhat.

Let's talk about the unfair burden metropolitan areas create on our resources and the negative impacts this has on our environment, shall we?

Mike Eiselein
Baker City, OR

Problem is too much food
George Wuerthner's literal calving over Gary Nabhan's essay was emblematic of those whose minds lack the room for any more facts.

That said, I don't particularly agree with Nabhan's call for more locally based agricultural production which I assume is driven by a "bioregionalist" outlook.

The fact is, America already produces more food than it needs in toto. That's the main driver of our food reality. That's why prices are low, margins are narrow, debt is high, second jobs are rife, and why droughts will blow away more farmers. I think that sucks, but that's reality, too.

It is certainly possible to have a food crisis inasmuch as a war could disrupt a stream of supply, but in the main, America still domestically
produces the essentials, the commodity crops that provide plain old calories, in sufficient amounts that mass starvation isn't a realistic scenario. Yet.

If such a scenario develops into a realistic one, then there will be adjustments, some very difficult, and land will be put into production, returned to production, or changed to the crops most needed and wanted.

That, folks, is the way the real world works, always has, and always will -- at least in a free society.

My farmer and rancher buddies fully realize the quandary they are in. One rancher friend of mine tells me that here in the Flathead, the farm support infrastructure is already at the breaking point of viability.

Oddly enough, we both, at different stages, had latched on to the availability of mechanical bearings as an indicator. The sawmills now lost, the aluminum plant now near death, even the railroad, had a symbiotic infrastructure relationship with the ag sector. Now bearings are spendy and hard to find ... they used to be cheap, in all sorts of grades, and on the shelf ready to run out to that busted combine ticking itself cool.

So things are now just that much tougher. Some producers will convert to specialty crops, but for many, the rational choice is going to be to get out for top dollar, to either get back in someplace else, or to retire reasonably well.

No amount of conservation easements will make all the farms we now have economically viable under any circumstances.

No amount of zoning restrictions (as that Fort Collins dude advocated last week) will do anything except rob already struggling ag producers of the only thing they have remaining, once an operating profit becomes impossible, the value of their land in its highest and best use.

Someday, perhaps, the sky will fall, and it won't be possible to transport crop products long distance. Then, and only then, does bioregionalist policy make sense. But nobody can prove that the sky will fall. Until it does, we shouldn't implement policies based on unproven assumptions.

Dave Skinner
Whitefish, Mont.

Save water, eliminate farms
Gary Nabhan writes that drought is making it difficult for agriculture to persist in the face of subdivisions and booming cities.

He believes that society should save western agriculture – even in desert states like his own Arizona.

And he goes on to suggest we should subsidize agriculture to make subdivision less likely so that local production can provide food for these cities.

Nabhan bills himself as a conservation biologist. Any conservation biologist worth his salt would be cheering the demise of western agriculture, not lamenting it.

Analysis of land use in the West shows that agriculture is the dominant use by acreage and is also the major cause of species endangerment, habitat fragmentation, water pollution and the spread of exotic weeds, and that it disrupts and degrades natural ecological cycling and controlling processes like wildfire and large carnivore predation.

Secondly, as an expert on agriculture, Nabhan knows, or should know, that the vast majority of water in the West goes towards agriculture not booming cities.

Our rivers and aquatic ecosystems are suffering not because people are wasting water on green lawns – as lamentable as that practice may be – but because we are trying to grow water-loving cow-forage crops like alfalfa in the desert.

Even in populous California, more than 80 percent of all water consumed goes to agriculture, not to industry or urban domestic uses.

In low-population states like Arizona or Montana, the distortion between urban uses and agriculture is even greater.

In Montana, for instance, nearly 97 percent of all water consumed is used for ag. In other words, we would have to have hundreds of millions of new residents in the West before we would come close to a situation where urban users were the largest consumer of water and the major factor in aquatic habitat degradation.

But even more disappointingly, Nabhan should know that the vast majority of western water does not grow food that is directly consumed by humans.

Nearly all western farmland, and nearly all irrigation water is used to grow cattle food – like hay, corn, and other crops ultimately fed to livestock.

Agriculture, not cities and suburbs, are the major fraction responsible for the loss and fragmentation of western landscapes.

Again even in California, the most populous state, less than 4-5 percent of the state's acreage is directly impacted by urbanization and sprawl, while more than 70 percent of the state is affected by ag, if you include lands used for livestock grazing as well as crop production.

If one wants to point the finger at what is destroying western landscapes, sprawl isn't the major problem – at least not yet.

And when Nabhan talks about local production of food, he doesn't admit that we could feed entire states on a fraction of the land currently in ag production.

For instance, slightly more than 1 percent of the land in California is used for vegetable crop production, even though California grows half of all the vegetables in the nation.

If we only used precious water and land for growing food directly consumed by humans, we could free up and restore hundreds of millions of acres of the western landscape currently degraded to grow livestock and livestock forage crops.

Finally, Nabhan makes another gross error by assuming that greater subsidies will prevent sprawl and subdivision.

Subdivisions are driven by demand, not the availability of land. The only way to prevent sprawl is not by subsidizing agriculture – particularly agriculture in the desert, like in Nabhan's home state of Arizona – but through the enactment of strict land-use planning and using tax dollars to buy land, instead of giving it away to a bunch of farmers to grow cow food.

George Wuerthner
Richmond, Vermont


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