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hatrack

(60,827 posts)
Wed Apr 3, 2024, 05:58 AM Apr 2024

What's The Biggest Single Use Of Federally Subsidized Colorado River Water? Growing Hay.

With chronic water shortages afflicting the Colorado River, discussions about how to cut usage have increasingly focused on a thirsty crop that consumes an especially large share of the river’s water: hay that is grown to feed cattle and produce beef and dairy products.

In a new study, researchers found that alfalfa and other cattle-feed crops consume 46% of the water that is diverted from the river, accounting for nearly two-thirds of agricultural water use. The research also shows that agriculture is the dominant user of Colorado River water, accounting for 74% of the water that is diverted — about three times the combined usage of all the cities that depend on the river.

The study presents the most detailed analysis of its kind to date, including extensive data on where the river’s water goes across seven Western states and northern Mexico. The research sheds new light on how the river’s water is used at a time when representatives of the federal government, states and tribes are seeking long-term solutions to reduce water use and adapt to climate change.

EDIT

As for the large acreages now growing alfalfa, (Ed. - former Interior Secretary Bruce) Babbitt noted that the crop generates relatively low returns and is often the first one taken out of production when farmers agree to temporarily fallow fields. He said that makes the crop an obvious place to begin reducing water use. “It is the most economical way, in the Colorado River Basin, of reducing consumption,” he said. “There are plenty of other areas in this country where there is more than adequate water to grow alfalfa and animal feed.”

EDIT

https://www.latimes.com/environment/story/2024-03-28/alfalfa-hay-beef-water-colorado-river

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What's The Biggest Single Use Of Federally Subsidized Colorado River Water? Growing Hay. (Original Post) hatrack Apr 2024 OP
I live next to a hay farm in the Four Corners. bluedigger Apr 2024 #1
Yes, obviously the Colorado Plateau and SW are the only hay-growing regions in the US . . . hatrack Apr 2024 #2
That was not my point. bluedigger Apr 2024 #3
No, I know what you're getting at - and for local/tribal ag communities, it's about self-sufficiency hatrack Apr 2024 #4

bluedigger

(17,146 posts)
1. I live next to a hay farm in the Four Corners.
Wed Apr 3, 2024, 06:50 AM
Apr 2024

They do use a lot of water to grow hay. It's an important crop, especially for the Ute and Navajo customers who are trying to maintain traditional agricultural lifestyles. I guess my question is how much would it cost to transport bulk livestock feed from the Eastern US, across the Rockies, or do we have a plan to transition to a new plant based diet? I hear the golf is pretty nice in Phoenix and Las Vegas, though.

hatrack

(60,827 posts)
4. No, I know what you're getting at - and for local/tribal ag communities, it's about self-sufficiency
Wed Apr 3, 2024, 04:36 PM
Apr 2024

But with massive enterprises designed to grow and export hay from the Mojave, or to cultivate pecans (26,000 acres of pecans in Arizona alone) and 3.2 gallons of water per almond, (with 74,000 acres in almonds in California alone), I'm squinting hard for some sort of recognition that these crops are being grown in a desert or semi-arid territories.

Haven't seen it yet . . .

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