[env-trinity] Klamath water allocation short of demand for farmers, ranchers

Tom Stokely tstokely at att.net
Mon Apr 27 10:14:37 PDT 2020


https://www.bendbulletin.com/business/klamath-water-allocation-short-of-demand-for-farmers-ranchers/article_a296a6e4-82ec-5fae-8367-5ba2b0ff6779.html

Klamath water allocation short of demand for farmers, ranchers
   
   - By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press
    
   - Apr 24, 2020 Updated Apr 24, 2020
    
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Water flows from Upper Klamath Lake into a canal. Most farmers within the project will be allocated far less water than they received last year.
George Plaven/Capital Press file photo   
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Klamath water allocation short of demand for farmers, ranchers

GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation will provide approximately 140,000 acre-feet of water to farms and ranches from U...
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KLAMATH FALLS — As expected, irrigators in the Klamath Project are getting less water than they will likely need this summer thanks to a combination of dry weather and more water being kept in-stream to protect threatened coho salmon.

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation will provide approximately 140,000 acre-feet of water to farms and ranches from Upper Klamath Lake in 2020, the agency announced Wednesday.

That is only one-third of historical demand for the Klamath Project, which delivers irrigation water to 230,000 acres of farmland in Southern Oregon and Northern California.

“We are having a very challenging water year,” said Jeff Nettleton, the bureau’s Klamath Basin Area Office manager. “We’ve had a dry fall, winter and spring, resulting in a low snowpack and significantly lower-than-average reservoir inflows. These conditions make it even more challenging than normal to meet all the water needs in the basin.”

The Klamath Basin is averaging just 57% of normal snowpack and 66% of normal precipitation for the water year dating back to Oct. 1, according to the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service. Oregon Gov. Kate Brown signed a drought declaration for Klamath County in March.

To make supplies even tighter, the bureau has agreed to send more water down the Klamath River to protect coho from a disease as part of a new three-year interim operating plan.

The plan, finalized Wednesday, comes on the heels of a lawsuit filed by the Yurok Tribe, Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations and the Institute for Fisheries Resources against the bureau, seeking an additional 50,000 acre-feet of water for salmon.

Instead, the bureau promised to provide an additional 23,000 acre-feet for Klamath River coho during low water years through 2023, and the plaintiffs agreed to suspend, though not withdraw, their case.

The agreement with tribes and commercial fishing groups also buys more time for the bureau to complete a longer-term operating plan. Federal law requires consultation with the National Marine Fisheries Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to protect several species of threatened and endangered fish, including Klamath River coho and suckers in Upper Klamath Lake.

A five-year plan was released in 2019, but scrapped after the bureau determined it had received erroneous information from an outside source.

David Felstul, water operations chief for the bureau’s Klamath Basin Area office, said it all amounts to a delicate balancing act for resources.

“Every acre-foot of water is valuable and is in limited supply,” Festul said.
The Klamath Water Users Association, which represents farms and ranches in the Klamath Project, calculated the 140,000 acre-foot water allotment several weeks in advance. The Klamath Project Drought Response Agency is working with growers to enroll in financial programs that could blunt the impact of water shortages, such as idling land.
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