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Top Dollars For Water
The offer from the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California and others to buy water from the Sacramento Valley for $700 per acre-foot reflects how dire the situation is as the state suffers through its fourth year of drought. In 2010 — also a drought year — it bought water but only paid between $244 and $300 for the same amount. The district stretches from Los Angeles to San Diego County.
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The offer is a hard one to turn down for farmers like Tennis, who also sits on the Western Canal Water District Board. Farmers can make around $900 an acre, after costs, growing rice, Tennis said. But because each acre of rice takes a little more than 3 acre-feet of water, they could make around $2,100 by selling the water that would be used.
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The water purchase may be cancelled in some areas if the selling districts end up with shortages of their own. If the Western Canal Water District doesn't get a full allotment of water from the state, the deal is off, Trimble said.
The Washington Department of Ecology has requested $9 million in drought relief from the legislature. The money would pay for agricultural and fisheries projects, emergency water-right permits, changes to existing water rights, and grant water-right transfers.
originally posted by: SlapMonkey
a reply to: FarleyWayne
If you are growing a crop that is so heavily dependent upon water, such as rice, should you farm it somewhere that has an overabundance of water?
Just saying.
originally posted by: ketsuko
a reply to: SlapMonkey
They used to grow it in the coastal areas before cotton.