Groundwater mining in the Ogallala Aquifer in relation to rising energy prices and agricultural production

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1980
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Short, Charles
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Economics

The Department of Economic Science was founded in 1898 to teach economic theory as a truth of industrial life, and was very much concerned with applying economics to business and industry, particularly agriculture. Between 1910 and 1967 it showed the growing influence of other social studies, such as sociology, history, and political science. Today it encompasses the majors of Agricultural Business (preparing for agricultural finance and management), Business Economics, and Economics (for advanced studies in business or economics or for careers in financing, management, insurance, etc).

History
The Department of Economic Science was founded in 1898 under the Division of Industrial Science (later College of Liberal Arts and Sciences); it became co-directed by the Division of Agriculture in 1919. In 1910 it became the Department of Economics and Political Science. In 1913 it became the Department of Applied Economics and Social Science; in 1924 it became the Department of Economics, History, and Sociology; in 1931 it became the Department of Economics and Sociology. In 1967 it became the Department of Economics, and in 2007 it became co-directed by the Colleges of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Liberal Arts and Sciences, and Business.

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1898–present

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  • Department of Economic Science (1898–1910)
  • Department of Economics and Political Science (1910-1913)
  • Department of Applied Economics and Social Science (1913–1924)
  • Department of Economics, History and Sociology (1924–1931)
  • Department of Economics and Sociology (1931–1967)

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Abstract

The last four decades have seen extensive development of irrigation using groundwater from the Ogallala Aquifer in the Mid-continental High Plains area (Ogallala Zone). But water withdrawn is depleting groundwater stocks causing the water table to fall. Crop production with pumped water is energy intensive and increasing energy prices weakens the competitive positions of irrigators from the aquifer relative to farmers in the rest of the nation. These issues are of concern to the entire region because local economies throughout the area are closely linked with primary agricultural production;A recursive, regional, linear programming model was constructed to evaluate effects in 1990 and 2000 of the falling water table, rising energy prices and varying export levels. The model is national in scope but simulates in detail the constraints and production possibilities in the Ogallala Zone. The model represents production alternatives with more than 2,500 rotations each with a different relationship between yields, resource use and costs. Production is constrained principally by available land subdivided according to productivity and production costs into 216 categories in the Ogallala Zone and 204 categories in the rest of the nation. The categories in the Ogallala Zone respresent eight different water situations in terms of depths to water and saturated thickness, five land management classes, and seven regional subdivisions. The model assumes competitive equilibrium; it determines prices for land, water and endogenous crops (feed grains, wheat, soybeans, cotton, hay, and silage) while other resources receive market rates of return;The area not irrigated in the Ogallala Zone because of the decline of the water table depends upon economic conditions as well as physical factors; the area depleted varies from 0.80 to 1.07 million for the period 1977-1990 and from 1.7 to 2.0 million acres for the period 1977-2000 for model solutions with varying assumptions about the level of exports and energy prices. Both increased energy prices and decreased exports reduce farm income per acre attributable to irrigation;The effect of doubling of energy prices is to increase crop prices, increase the prices of land, induce the conversion of land irrigated with groundwater to dryland, and reduce water and energy use. The most dramatic adjustments are in the Ogallala Zones where the area irrigated with groundwater declines by 48.8 and 40.9 percent for a doubling of energy prices in 1990 and 2000, respectively. The effect of decreased exports is similar except that crop and land prices fall and use of nitrogen fertilizer also declines;Much of the irrigation in the Ogallala Zone is not competitive with high energy prices likely to prevail in the future. Over the next decade high energy prices and exports may be more critical to the region then the falling water table. But the cumulative effects of the falling water table will make this an increasingly important problem in the time that follows.

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Tue Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 1980