Aug. 29, 2005
Valley Irrigation Districts Prepare for the Next Drought
Writer: Rod Santa Ana III, (956) 968-5581,r-santaana@tamu.edu
Contacts: Wayne Halbert, (956) 423-7015,waynehalbert@hidcc1.org
Dr. Juan Enciso, (956) 968-5585,j-enciso@tamu.edu
HARLINGEN – Wayne Halbert knows it's a matter of when, not if, the
Lower Rio Grande Valley suffers another drought.
Floods and droughts are the nature and history of the Rio Grande,
Halbert said. And when the next drought comes, he wants South Texas to be
ready for it.
Halbert is the manager of the Harlingen Irrigation District, one of 25
districts in the Valley. As manager, he's responsible for drawing water
from the river and moving it to users, including the city of Harlingen,
farmers and other entities.
Some will argue the 10-year drought is not yet over, but during its
darkest days, Halbert applied for funds to improve the efficiency of his
water district. His plan was three-fold: to improve the infrastructure of
the district's canal system, to meter the water flowing through the
district, and to meter and help improve on-farm water use.
He obtained matching dollar grants from various state and federal
sources, including the U.S. Bureau of Reclamations, the North American
Development Bank and the Texas Legislature.
The Harlingen Irrigation District has spent about $4 million of that
money re-lining cement canals, converting others to underground pipelines
and replacing old pipes with newer pipes.
"We also installed metering devices throughout the district so that we
know how water flows, where it's going and how much water we are able to
deliver to various locations," Halbert said. "It also helps us automate
our system a little so that we're better able to provide enough water to
farmers to allow them to be more efficient."
But with water now more plentiful and much cheaper than it was just a
few years ago, Halbert admits interest has waned for the third phase of
his water-saving plan: on-farm conservation.
"We don't have quite as much interest in the project as when the
drought and the cost of water were cutting deep into the pockets of our
farmers, but the project is just as viable now as it was then," he said.
Halbert is convinced that in addition to the cyclical inevitability of
another drought, international politics and urbanization will also squeeze
future water supplies.
"The political changes that have occurred in Mexico absolutely mean
that we will not get the water from Mexico that we have enjoyed in the
past," he said. "It just will not happen, regardless of any water-sharing
treaties. And development is changing the water game from agricultural use
to a much higher urban use. So we're just going to have to learn to live
with less water."
Part of that education will be paid for with a $3.7 million grant from
the Texas Water Development Board to the Harlingen and Delta Lake
Irrigation Districts, north of Weslaco.
Funds will be used to collect data from previously installed meters at
strategic locations throughout the districts to measure on-farm
irrigations.
An agricultural demonstration initiative will also be implemented.
Several institutions are included in this effort, including Texas
Cooperative Extension and Texas A&M-Kingsville.
"Our role is to provide technical assistance and guidance in several
demonstration projects, including the comparison of flood irrigation to
drip, surge, center pivot and other irrigation management strategies to
conserve water," said Dr. Juan Enciso, irrigation engineer at the Texas
A&M University System Agricultural Research and Extension Center at
Weslaco.
The project also includes the construction of a meter calibration
facility, one of few in the U.S., near the Harlingen Irrigation District's
pumping facilities on the river.
"This facility will do two things," Halbert said. "It will be an
educational tool for other irrigation districts and farmers alike, to see
how they can measure their water using different methods, and it will
serve as a facility to calibrate and repair meters."
Halbert hopes construction of the half-million dollar facility will
begin this fall.
Tom McLemore, manager of the agricultural demonstration initiative at
the Harlingen Irrigation District, said, "Water is a crop input that at
this point is relatively inexpensive. But when it becomes expensive and
scarce, we need to be prepared with the tools and solutions to properly
manage that input."
For more information, visit the Harlingen Irrigation District Web site
at http://www.hidcc1.org .
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