grain elevator, corn, prescott, kansas, usda, u.s. department of agriculture, 2012 drought, water rights, rivers

Ruinous Drought Tests Kansas Model for Supplying Water to Farms

As the 2012 drought smothers the Great Plains, Kansas water laws — written to steady the economy, ecology, and use — are actually working.

grain elevator, corn, prescott, kansas, usda, u.s. department of agriculture, 2012 drought, water rights, rivers

A grain elevator looms over a railroad crossing in Prescott, Kansas. The U.S. Department of Agriculture forecasts that corn yields in Kansas this year will be the lowest since 1975. The drought prompted the state to cut off the water rights for 530 permit holders to protect river flows.

By Brett Walton
Circle of Blue

With nearly nine of every 10 hectares wrung so dry that rivers stopped flowing, Kansas is the epicenter of the country’s worst period of drought since the 1950s.

One measure of the state’s moisture emergency is that the Kansas Department of Agriculture cut off water withdrawals for 530 permit holders in 16 river basins, primarily in the eastern half of the state.

Meanwhile, in the prairies of western Kansas, where irrigated circles dot the rectangular fields, farmers are embracing a risky strategy of adjusting their annual water rights to salvage what is left of their crops. They are converting annual water rights into a five-year allotment, which allows them to use more water now. The trade-off is that they must reduce their water use in subsequent seasons during the next five years and pray that it rains.

Hydrogeography and Legal History
Kansas straddles the 100th meridian, which, in the course of American economic development, acts as a sort of Water Curtain, dividing wetter Eastern states from the arid Western half of the continent.

In effect, this cartographer’s mark separates those areas of the country where rainfall is sufficient to support agriculture and those where irrigation — the diversion of water from a stream, reservoir, or aquifer — is necessary to coax a plant from the ground. As such, different legal codes have developed in these two distinct hydrologic regions.

In the West, prior appropriation is the law of the land. This is a system of water rights based on seniority, or “First in time, first in right,” as the saying goes. In other words, those who developed the water first and made beneficial use of it are tops in the pecking order when there is not enough supply to meet all demands. Without a right, it is illegal to use the water. (Some exceptions are made for small-scale, household use.)

Unlike the West, where land ownership and water rights have been separated, Eastern states use a riparian system that allows property owners “reasonable” use of surface water, if they own land next to it. In many cases, states have adopted a regulated riparian system in which large withdrawals must acquire a permit.

Within this basic framework there is significant variation. Nebraska, for instance, regulates surface water rights and groundwater rights in two different systems. Texas, meanwhile, employs water rights for withdrawals from rivers and lakes but does little to regulate groundwater. And California combines elements of both the prior appropriation system and the riparian system.

Every state has a unique set of laws.

The state’s authority to cut water supplies on one side of Kansas and enable strategic water supply decisions on the other is an illustration of something uncommon in American environmental policy, business practice, and perhaps culture — a system of restricting access to natural resources that has attained enough historic and legal credibility to actually work effectively in a time of crisis.

What is happening with water management in Kansas, as farmers, regulators, and water suppliers contend with a ruinous drought, is a notable model for allocating resources to avoid conflict — a trick that will be ever more valuable for regions where climate change will reduce supplies of fresh water.

The water rights system that enables this swap grew out of mining customs that were introduced during the California Gold Rush in the 1850s. Since then, the system has been legally recognized by the federal government and adopted in much of the Western United States as the primary tool for allocating water. In other words, rights holders accept the risk of being shut off during a time of shortage in exchange for the system’s clear rules for determining who is allowed to use scarce water supplies.

Kansas is a key agricultural state — it is among the top 10 states to produce corn, soybeans, hay, summer potatoes, and cattle; it ranks second in the nation for wheat production; it is number one for sorghum grain — in a nation that is a major food exporter. Thus, because the state also draws water from a shrinking aquifer that is shared with seven other dry states, water management in Kansas has both national and global implications.

Lawmakers in Topeka have set up a flexible and resilient system, but they are reaching the limits of what they can do in the face of months, or years, of cloudless summer days. The current drought is a reminder of both the promise and the limitations of policy, as well as the bonds between water, food, and agricultural economies.

Dry Kansas
The water rights system in Kansas comes from nearly seven decades of laws passed by the state legislature and signed by the governor, starting with the Water Appropriation Act of 1945, which created a water rights framework that has been modified to fit new circumstances. The minimum stream-flow law was passed in 1985, while the multi-year allocation was one of six water management reforms signed this year by Republican Governor Sam Brownback, a former U.S. Senator.

“The laws provide flexibility, and they make conservation a beneficial use of water — producers are not penalized for not using water.”

–Bill Golden, water policy specialist
Kansas State University

The new laws are part of the state’s legacy of proactive water management, which began in the 1970s, said Bill Golden, a natural resources economist and water policy specialist at Kansas State University.

“The laws provide flexibility,” Golden told Circle of Blue. “And they make conservation a beneficial use of water. Producers are not penalized for not using water.”

Another of the six water bills that Brownback signed eliminates the requirement to use a water right or risk losing it. In the past, this principle of “beneficial use” (also known as “use it or lose it”) was used to discourage speculators from snapping up water rights and sitting on them.

Now, however, more states are recognizing that leaving water in the rivers is a useful act.

Surface Water On Hold
The 530 permit holders in Kansas who are now facing restrictions represent a cross-section of water uses. Towns, industries, and recreation have all been affected; however, more than half of the restricted permits are held by irrigators.

The state’s Department of Agriculture will enforce the ban on diversions until water levels in the streams and rivers stay above minimum standards for two consecutive weeks. Some bans have been in place since early June.The state opted for the flow standards in order to preserve aquatic life and recreation on the rivers and to protect the rights of senior holders who draw from wells that are replenished by stream flows.

Kansas Geological Survey, infographic, ogallala aquifer, drought

Image courtesy of Kansas Geological Survey
Shows changes to the water table in the High Plains Aquifer System in Kansas from 1950 — when large-scale groundwater pumping began — to the present. Saturated thickness refers to the part of the aquifer which yields water. In the maroon-colored areas, which include the Ogallala Aquifer, the water table has dropped by more than 60 percent, while the blue-colored portions show a modest increase.

A spokeswoman for the Kansas Water Office told Circle of Blue that curtailment does not happen every year. The last two years, however, have been dry, and more permit holders than usual have had their rights cut off.

Bob Wietharn is one of those affected. He farms 809 hectares (2,000 acres) of corn and soybeans in north-central Kansas and draws water from the Republican River. The curtailment came late enough in the growing season, at the end of July, that his crops were not badly harmed.

“If it had happened in June, it would have been a disaster,” he told Circle of Blue, noting that the water rights system in Kansas works well. “It is the fairest way to do it. There’s only so much water to go around. The older permits ought to be protected.”

Drying Ogallala
Whereas eastern Kansas has streams but little groundwater, the other half of the state relies on aquifers. For a time, groundwater was a natural insurance policy: if the rains failed or the rivers ran dry, plenty of water is located under foot. Not so anymore in Kansas, where groundwater and surface water are managed jointly.

“If this drought persists, it’s going to get seriously ugly in a hurry.”

–Wayne Bossert
NW Kansas Groundwater Management District

All told, the state has quite a bounty that it is trying to manage. Western Kansas sits atop the Ogallala Aquifer, which is part of the High Plains system, one of the world’s great stores of groundwater. The aquifer is also fabulously productive, yielding water at 10 to 100 times the rate of wells in the rest of the state.

Irrigated agriculture in western Kansas — and by extension, much of the region’s economy — owes its existence to the Ogallala. But the aquifer is also rapidly shrinking, because it is slow to recharge in the dry High Plains and because demand for the water is high, mostly for large-scale agriculture.

In some areas, the water table has fallen by 60 percent since the 1950s, and the remaining water may not last more than two decades. Other areas have a longer life expectancy, with the water supply forecasted to last up to 200 years.

Regardless of the timetable, the state is doing what it can to see that farmers have water now — when all of the state’s 105 counties have been declared federal agricultural disaster areas — and as far into the future as the resource can be stretched. “Managed depletion” is the term water officials use to describe this planned decline.

“It is essential that we help protect, extend, and conserve the life of the Ogallala Aquifer for future generations of Kansans, while also supporting today’s western Kansas economy,” Brownback said in May, after signing the final piece of the water policy package.

Groundwater Pumping Now
Because rivers right now are essentially dry in western Kansas, farmers are pumping a full allocation of groundwater, taxing an already-stressed system.

“If this drought persists, it’s going to get seriously ugly in a hurry,” said Wayne Bossert, talking about the effect on both agriculture and groundwater.

Bossert would know. Since 1977 he has led the Northwest Kansas Groundwater Management District, and this summer, he told Circle of Blue, is drier than any in his memory. A monitoring well in his district has dropped to its lowest level since it was installed four years ago, he said. A complete picture of the Ogallala Aquifer’s decline will not be available until the annual report is released in January 2013, but Bossert predicts that it will be “an eye-opener.”

Groundwater measurements from the Texas Panhandle in the aftermath of last year’s drought foreshadow what might be in store for Kansas. Average water levels in a portion of the Ogallala Aquifer registered the third-steepest decline in 61 years of record-keeping, according to the High Plains Underground Water Conservation District.

Kansas Geological Survey, infographic, ogallala aquifer, drought

Image courtesy of Kansas Geological Survey
In western Kansas, crops are irrigated using water primarily from the Ogallala Aquifer, one of the world’s great stores of groundwater. Earlier this year, the Kansas legislature passed a package of six bills that modified the state’s water rights system. The new laws focus on water conservation, but it is too soon to say how effective they will be.

The problem with agriculture is that when farmers plant their crop in the spring, they do not know exactly how much water will be available in the summer. Just this May, federal Department of Agriculture analysts were forecasting a record corn crop. Now, they are forecasting the worst yields since 1995.

“In the perfect world, the irrigator knows before every year’s crop decision how much he or she can pump. They are expected to crop accordingly. Most irrigators crop assuming they will get so much help from Mother Nature,” Bossert wrote in an email to Circle of Blue. “When they don’t get it, they have these difficult decisions. Virtually no one makes cropping decisions assuming they’ll get no help from Mother Nature — hence our predicament in 2012.”

Solutions: Nothing In The Bank
Kansas lawmakers have tried to help producers through the rough patch. Thanks to new laws, farmers can convert a single-year water right into a five-year account and vary their use according to the whims of weather and markets.
That allows farmers to take advantage of rising crop prices.

“The authority to pump water to finish out this year’s crop can increase the yield at a time when the market really demands the product,” said Mark Rude, executive director of the Southwest Kansas Groundwater Management District.

“If a guy can use a little more water one year, then rotate a crop that uses less water the next year, then that’s helpful.”

–Mark Rude, executive director
SW Kansas Groundwater Management District

The multi-year accounts, however, are still quite new — the ink had barely dried on the legislation before farmers had begun to sign up — and no one is certain whether the accounts will conserve water, maintain the status quo, or increase use. (The deadline for enrollment for this season is October 1.)

One concern is the very force behind the new instrument: drought itself. If the two-year dry spell persists, farmers could wind up exhausting their five-year allocations early, leaving nothing in the bank for the back end.

“It’s a new tool,” Rude told Circle of Blue. “We’ll see in the next few years if it accomplishes its goals. If a guy can use a little more water one year, then rotate a crop that uses less water the next year, then that’s helpful.”

Still, it is too soon to render judgment.

People living in Kansas are accustomed to murmurs about the future of the Ogallala, but because of recent drought, the rate of decline has undoubtedly picked up.

“This is an issue that has been with us in Kansas for the last 30 to 40 years,” said Rex Buchanan, the interim director of the Kansas Geological Survey, during a phone interview with Circle of Blue. “Now, it has become all that more pressing.”

5 replies
  1. David says:

    Brett,
    I’m working on a school project related to the drought of 2012 and its impact on irrigated agriculture in Kansas. I was wondering if you would be willing to share your source for the fact that Kansas Department of Agriculture cut off water withdrawals for 530 permit holders. I’ve been searching the departments web site and other news articles and haven’t been able to find the figure. I’m guessing that the state government is going to publish a total number like that, so I’m not surprised it’s hard to find. Any help you could offer would be very much appreciated. Thanks.

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