Biden administration invests up to $400M to address water conservation

The USDA will invest in at least 18 irrigation districts to help farmers continue commodity production while also conserving water across the West.

Water
The USDA will invest $400 million in at least 18 irrigation districts to help farmers continue commodity production while also conserving water across the West.
(Photo: Montri, Adobe Stock)

Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack says the USDA will invest $400 million in at least 18 irrigation districts to help farmers continue commodity production while also conserving water across the West.

This funding — which will support irrigation districts and producers in using innovative water savings technologies and farming practices while producing water-saving commodities in the face of continued drought — is expected to conserve up to 50,000 acre-feet in water use across 250,000 acres of irrigated land in production, while expanding and creating new, sustainable market opportunities, according to a news release.

The funding builds on the Biden-Harris administration’s work to conserve water, increase the efficiency of water use, upgrade existing infrastructure and overall strengthen water security in the West, the release said.

The Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Reclamation announced in May 2024 it had staved off the immediate possibility of the Colorado River System’s reservoirs from falling to critically low elevations that would threaten water deliveries and power production, the release said.

Due to record conservation investments as well as improved hydrology, Lake Mead levels today are the highest since May 2021, the release said. The administration is now working to ensure the long-term sustainability and resilience by focusing on long-term water conservation in several basins across the west.

“Agricultural producers are the backbone of rural communities across the West and many of them are struggling under prolonged drought conditions,” Vilsack said in the release. “USDA is taking an ‘all hands’ approach to help address this challenge, including these new partnerships with irrigation districts to support producers. We want to scale up the tools available to keep farmers farming, while also voluntarily conserving water and expanding markets for water-saving commodities.”

USDA worked to select irrigation districts based on several commodity production and water management-related criteria in order to maximize the ability to achieve program objectives, leveraging available data from the Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Reclamation to ensure close alignment and partnership, the release said. USDA’s Economic Research Service provided data and analysis to support the preliminary selections. Districts that have been preliminarily selected for potential inclusion in this program include:

  • Black Canyon Irrigation District, Idaho.
  • Brooklyn Canal Company, Utah.
  • Central Oregon Irrigation District, Oregon.
  • Central Arizona Irrigation and Drainage District, Arizona.
  • Corcoran Irrigation District, California.
  • East Columbia Basin Irrigation District, Washington.
  • Elephant Butte Irrigation District, New Mexico.
  • Glenn – Colusa Irrigation District, Calififornia.
  • Greybull Valley Irrigation District, Wyoming.
  • Hidalgo & Cameron Counties Irrigation District 9, Texas.
  • Huntley Project Irrigation District, Montana.
  • Imperial Irrigation District, California.
  • Maricopa – Stanfield Irrigation and Drainage District, Arizona.
  • Palisade Irrigation District, Colorado.
  • Quincy Columbia Basin Irrigation District, Washington.
  • Solano Irrigation District, California.
  • Sutter Mutual Water Company, California.
  • Truckee-Carson Irrigation District, Nevada.

The preliminary selected districts may receive up to $15 million each in the awards and will enter into sub-agreements with the producers participating within the district. Depending on available funding, awards to additional districts may be possible, the release said.

The Packer logo (567x120)
Related Stories
With five weeks still left in the season, Mexico has smashed its avocado volume records — and grower-packer-shipper GLC Cerritos has scaled up its operations, riding a wave of unprecedented U.S. supply and demand.
In its second annual report, ECIP shows deepening participation and engagement across the industry’s supply chain when it comes to strengthening the approach to labor.
By shifting from late-day, expiration-driven discounts to proactive, morning markdowns fueled by real-time sell-through data, U.S. grocery retailers can transform avoidable produce shrink into a powerful lever for both financial discipline and environmental sustainability.
Read Next
The Canadian province looks to a massive acreage expansion to serve as an export-quality powerhouse while driving domestic sales at home.
Get Daily News
GET MARKET ALERTS
Get News & Markets App