Florida Statewide Agricultural Irrigation Demand (FSAID): Predicting the amounts and spatial distribution of irrigation water use (2015 to 2035) 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference Florida’s Water Management Districts 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference 2 Florida’s Water Supply Planning Process • Created by the Florida Legislature in 1997 (Chapter 97-160, Laws of Florida) • Every five years needs and sources are assessed for a 20year period, and any deficit must be addressed in a regional water supply plan by identifying sufficient new sources to meet future needs and to protect minimum flows and levels “The product of these political clashes was a statutory scheme purposefully designed to increase water resources. For the first time, the state’s water policy focused on the development of water resources and water supply, rather than merely allocating water among competing users.” (Matthews and Nieto, 1998, FSU Law Review) 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference 3 Central Florida Water Initiative (CFWI) Orlando Tampa Orlando Miami Issues with CFWI Demand Projections • Significant variation among the three WMDs in water use estimates for the same crop, at the district and county level • Interface of urban development and agricultural irrigation demand. • Significant crop trends not accounted for. • Example: Blueberry production has increased to meet demand in a period between April 1 and May 20 when Florida is the primary producer of fresh blueberries in the Northern Hemisphere. In the 10-year period 1996-2007, production increased from 2.7 million pounds to 7.8 million pounds and acreage more than doubled. Existing blueberry acreage was not accounted for and negligible growth was projected. 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference 5 FDACS Role in Water Supply Planning • Based on issues that arose during the CFWI planning process, the Florida Legislature assigned FDACS the responsibility of estimating future agricultural water supply demands. • Section 570.93(2), Florida Statutes, directs the department to establish an agricultural water supply planning program. In estimating future demand, appropriate conservation measures must be accounted for and significant uncertainties evaluated. • Section 373.709(2), Florida Statutes, directs the WMDs to consider FDACS estimates in determining the best available data for agricultural self-supplied water needs to be included in their regional water supply plans. Any adjustments or deviation must be explained in the plan, and the original estimates must be presented with the adjusted estimates. 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference 6 FSAID • Florida Statewide Agriculture Irrigation Demand • Contracted with The Balmoral Group to develop methodology and project estimates of future agricultural water supply demand • FSAID 1.0 completed June 2014 • FSAID 2.0 completed June 2015 • Significant changes included using available water use data rather than usage based on the Agricultural Field Scale Irrigation Requirements Simulation (AFSIRS) model, a single scenario, and explicitly modeling silviculture conversion 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference 7 FSAID 2.0 Goal • Develop agricultural water use estimates – including their spatial distribution – 2015 to 2035 using a consistent approach statewide Approach • Use measured irrigation water use to develop a water use model that links economic and biophysical factors; economic factors allow future prices and input costs to impact water use estimates 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference 8 Factors in Water Demand Model • Irrigation • Weather • Crop • Soils • Land Use Pressures Engineering Economic Economic Economic • Unirrigated Land • Crop Prices 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference 9 Econometric Model Replicate Water use Simulate Future conditions Project Future Demand Y = β0 + β1(RF) + β2 (ET)+ β 3 (NP) + β4(PERIRR) + β6 (IRR) + β5 (FF) +βLL + ε • • • • • • • Y = water use (million gallons per year, calculated at the field scale), RF is rainfall, ET is evapotranspiration, NP is a Crop-specific revenue variable, PERIRR is the percentage of permitted acreage that is irrigated, IRR is a dummy representing the type of irrigation system, and FF is a dummy indicating if the field had a freeze-protected crop and was in an area of freeze for the year of water use in question, • L is a vector of location attributes including Latitude/Longitude coordinates from GIS and Water Management District dummies. 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference 10 Trend toward increased utilization of land Historical Irrig./Ag 30% 25% 20% NWFWMD SRWMD 15% SJRWMD SWFWMD SFWMD 10% 5% 0% 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference 1987 1992 1997 2002 2007 2012 11 Irrigated share of total permitted area used in model development: Unirrigated land & Land use pressures Irrigated Share of Total Permitted Area 100% 90% 86% 80% 76% 70% 69% 60% 50% 52% 58% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% NWFWMD SRWMD SFWMD 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference SJRWMD SWFWMD 12 % of total irrigated polygons with water use data validated for model development: ranges from 4% to 15% of total irrigated area by district WMD NWFWMD SFWMD SJRWMD SRWMD SWFWMD FL Total ILG Polygons (FSAID2) 1,001 6,721 5,634 1,798 11,082 26,236 ILG Polygons with Meter Data (FSAID2) 369 1,119 222 140 1,336 3,186 ILG Polygons with Valid Meter Data (FSAID2) 127 1,119 220 140 1,296 2,902 ILG Polygons in Dataset (FSAID2) 123 983 212 140 1,073 2,531 % Irrigated polygons used for model development 16% 14% 12% 10% 15% 12% 10% 8% 8% 6% 4% 4% 2% 0% NWFWMD 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference SFWMD SJRWMD SRWMD 13 SWFWMD % of total irrigated area with water use data validated for model development: ranges from 3% to 19% of total irrigated area by district WMD NWFWMD SFWMD SJRWMD SRWMD SWFWMD FL Total ILG Acreage (FSAID2) 56,829 1,045,697 177,371 123,956 396,459 1,800,312 ILG Acreage with Meter Data (FSAID2) 26,956 145,080 6,122 10,416 69,949 258,523 ILG Acreage with Valid Meter Data (FSAID2) 10,791 145,080 5,781 10,416 66,900 238,969 ILG Acreage in Dataset (FSAID2) 10,747 139,224 5,753 10,346 66,114 232,184 % Irrigated Area used for model development 20% 19% 17% 15% 13% 10% 8% 5% 3% 0% 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference NWFWMD SFWMD SJRWMD SRWMD 14 SWFWMD Statewide Geodatabase of 2015 Irrigated Lands: crop, irrigation, soils, rainfall, ET Florida total cropland area: 8,508,719 acres, 147,000 fields Florida irrigated area: 1,800,312 acres, 27,000 fields FSAID Outcomes • Geodatabase (spatial dataset, 2015-2035): o Irrigated areas o Water use: irrigation, livestock, cold protection o Conservation potential Agricultural Water Use: Florida 2015 Agricultural Irrigation: 2,132 MGD Cold Protection: Livestock: 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference Aquaculture: 97.1 MGD 38.4 MGD 5.5 MGD 16 Projected Acreage Change 2015-2035 Projected MGD Change 2015-2035 Projections: 5% increase in irrigated acreage but 17% increase in water use NWFWMD SFWMD SJRWMD SRWMD SWFWMD Statewide 2015 – 2035 2015 2035 Change Acres MGD Acres MGD Acres MGD 56,829 46 66,713 59 9,883 13 1,045,697 1,237 1,129,211 1,448 83,514 210 177,371 208 157,536 223 -19,835 14 123,956 107 162,106 151 38,150 44 396,459 534 2015 AWRA 369,888 -26,571 77 Annual Water 611 Resources Conference 1,800,312 2,132 1,885,453 2,491 85,142 359 % Change Acres MGD 17% 29% 8% 17% -11% 7% 31% 41% -7% 14% 5% 17% 17 Relative changes in agricultural water demand by county Counties > 15 MGD 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference 18 Irrigation: inches/year 2015 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference 2035 19 Citrus: Field Crops: Vegetable: Hay/Pasture: 2015, inches/year 2015, inches/year 2015, inches/year 2015, inches/year 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference 20 Irrigation types: statewide FLORIDA FLORIDA, unsweetened Irrigation types: by district NWFWMD SJRWMD SRWMD SFWMD SWFWMD Crops: by district NWFWMD SJRWMD SFWMD, with sugar SFWMD SRWMD SWFWMD FSAID Outcomes • User interface: FSAID2.com 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference 24 Other uses of Data • Water Supply Planning • Alternative water supplies limited • Targeting Best Management Practices • Incentives to match need to funding • Policy implications: • Areas to encourage/discourage new farming activity? • Areas affected by changes in state water policy • Areas affected by citrus greening, imports • Understanding behavior • Crop choices vs. revenues vs. location • Understanding efficiencies • Actual equipment outcomes vs. published efficiency ratios 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference 25 Questions… 2015 AWRA Annual Water Resources Conference 26
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