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Irrigation Tax Could Steer Farmers From Water-Intensive Crops

By Kimbra Cutlip

Your post-workout almond milk and fruit smoothie might one day leave your pocketbook significantly slimmer too, as water shortages in western U.S. states threaten to alter the price and availability of some types of produce.

A new University of Maryland-led study found that water conservation policies that raise the cost of irrigation for California farmers could result in them leaving agriculture or switching from  like  to annual crops like tomatoes.

The study reveals potential wide-ranging effects of controversial water taxes proposed under California's Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, which is designed to achieve  sustainability by 2042.

The findings have important implications for policymakers in all western U.S. states, which are facing a water crisis and are struggling to develop policies that preserve critical water resources without gutting the . The study also helps illustrate the challenges of countries around the world in balancing  with the need to feed growing populations amid the increasing impacts of climate change, the researchers said.

"Our study found that farmers will ride out short-term increases in the cost of water, like during a drought, but as cost increases become permanent, they shift away from crops like fruit trees, which are long-term investments" that produce high-value crops, but also have high water demands, said study co-author Louis Preonas, an assistant professor in the Department of Agriculture and Resource Economics.

California produces 18% of the total U.S. crop value, with a high percentage of specialty crops, Preonas said. That includes practically all of the almonds sold in the U.S., and 80% of those sold on the global market. Large-scale shifts away from almonds, which grow on fruit trees, could raise prices and have unintended downstream consequences throughout the economy.

But such shifts may be necessary to achieve the state's goals for water sustainability by 2024, the researchers said. For many years, California's robust agricultural production of fruits and other crops with high water needs has required farmers to extract more water from aquifers than is naturally replenished. With increasing heat and drought due to climate change, the future of the state's water supply is becoming increasingly fragile.

To understand how farmers would respond over the long term to policies that taxed water use, Preonas and his colleagues looked at California farmers' responses to changes in electricity prices between 2008 and 2019.

Although groundwater is free in most of California, it takes electricity to run the pumps that feed , so the researchers were able to use electricity prices as a proxy for a tax on water use. They estimated groundwater consumption on farms using data about groundwater levels, electricity usage and the energy needs of the specific pump equipment on each plot of agricultural land throughout California.

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