Complex water management in modern agriculture: Trends in the water-energy-food nexus over the High Plains Aquifer

Smidt, SJ; Haacker, EMK; Kendall, AD; Deines, JM; Pei, L; Cotterman, KA; Li, H; Liu, X; Basso, B; Hyndman, D

HERO ID

10287963

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2016

Language

English

PMID

27344509

HERO ID 10287963
In Press No
Year 2016
Title Complex water management in modern agriculture: Trends in the water-energy-food nexus over the High Plains Aquifer
Authors Smidt, SJ; Haacker, EMK; Kendall, AD; Deines, JM; Pei, L; Cotterman, KA; Li, H; Liu, X; Basso, B; Hyndman, D
Journal Science of the Total Environment
Volume 566
Page Numbers 988-1001
Abstract In modern agriculture, the interplay between complex physical, agricultural, and socioeconomic water use drivers must be fully understood to successfully manage water supplies on extended timescales. This is particularly evident across large portions of the High Plains Aquifer where groundwater levels have declined at unsustainable rates despite improvements in both the efficiency of water use and water productivity in agricultural practices. Improved technology and land use practices have not mitigated groundwater level declines, thus water management strategies must adapt accordingly or risk further resource loss. In this study, we analyze the water-energy-food nexus over the High Plains Aquifer as a framework to isolate the major drivers that have shaped the history, and will direct the future, of water use in modern agriculture. Based on this analysis, we conclude that future water management strategies can benefit from: (1) prioritizing farmer profit to encourage decision-making that aligns with strategic objectives, (2) management of water as both an input into the water-energy-food nexus and a key incentive for farmers, (3) adaptive frameworks that allow for short-term objectives within long-term goals, (4) innovative strategies that fit within restrictive political frameworks, (5) reduced production risks to aid farmer decision-making, and (6) increasing the political desire to conserve valuable water resources. This research sets the foundation to address water management as a function of complex decision-making trends linked to the water-energy-food nexus. Water management strategy recommendations are made based on the objective of balancing farmer profit and conserving water resources to ensure future agricultural production.
Doi 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.05.127
Pmid 27344509
Wosid WOS:000381060900094
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword High Plains Aquifer; Water management; Irrigation; Agriculture; Economics; Policy
Is Peer Review Yes