Conflicts in Water Transfer from Irrigation to Municipal Use in Semiarid Environments

Paper presented at Tenth Annual Conference of the American Water Resources Association, San Juan, Puerto Rico, Nov. 18-23, 1974. === Groundwater is the principal supply for irrigation and for rapidly increasing municipal water requirements in Arizona. As a result of this increasing demand water tab...

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Main Authors: Cluff, C. B., DeCook, K. J.
Other Authors: Water Resources Research Center, University of Arizona
Language:en_US
Published: 1974
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/314440
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-3144402015-10-23T05:30:45Z Conflicts in Water Transfer from Irrigation to Municipal Use in Semiarid Environments Cluff, C. B. DeCook, K. J. Water Resources Research Center, University of Arizona Water Resources Research Center, University of Arizona Paper presented at Tenth Annual Conference of the American Water Resources Association, San Juan, Puerto Rico, Nov. 18-23, 1974. Groundwater is the principal supply for irrigation and for rapidly increasing municipal water requirements in Arizona. As a result of this increasing demand water tables are declining at an ever increasing rate. Even with importation of water through the Central Arizona Project, transfer of water from agricultural to urban use is inevitable as the State continues to grow. In the Phoenix area this transfer is occurring progressively without undue conflict. As the City expands, adjacent farmland is developed and water formerly applied to crops is used for domestic purposes. In the Tucson area, which at present is entirely dependent on groundwater, outlying irrigated lands have been purchased and retired by the City and nearby mines to secure water rights. This forced retirement of farmland does present several conflicts which are discussed in this paper. 1974-11 http://hdl.handle.net/10150/314440 en_US Water Resources Research Center. The University of Arizona.
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language en_US
sources NDLTD
description Paper presented at Tenth Annual Conference of the American Water Resources Association, San Juan, Puerto Rico, Nov. 18-23, 1974. === Groundwater is the principal supply for irrigation and for rapidly increasing municipal water requirements in Arizona. As a result of this increasing demand water tables are declining at an ever increasing rate. Even with importation of water through the Central Arizona Project, transfer of water from agricultural to urban use is inevitable as the State continues to grow. In the Phoenix area this transfer is occurring progressively without undue conflict. As the City expands, adjacent farmland is developed and water formerly applied to crops is used for domestic purposes. In the Tucson area, which at present is entirely dependent on groundwater, outlying irrigated lands have been purchased and retired by the City and nearby mines to secure water rights. This forced retirement of farmland does present several conflicts which are discussed in this paper.
author2 Water Resources Research Center, University of Arizona
author_facet Water Resources Research Center, University of Arizona
Cluff, C. B.
DeCook, K. J.
author Cluff, C. B.
DeCook, K. J.
spellingShingle Cluff, C. B.
DeCook, K. J.
Conflicts in Water Transfer from Irrigation to Municipal Use in Semiarid Environments
author_sort Cluff, C. B.
title Conflicts in Water Transfer from Irrigation to Municipal Use in Semiarid Environments
title_short Conflicts in Water Transfer from Irrigation to Municipal Use in Semiarid Environments
title_full Conflicts in Water Transfer from Irrigation to Municipal Use in Semiarid Environments
title_fullStr Conflicts in Water Transfer from Irrigation to Municipal Use in Semiarid Environments
title_full_unstemmed Conflicts in Water Transfer from Irrigation to Municipal Use in Semiarid Environments
title_sort conflicts in water transfer from irrigation to municipal use in semiarid environments
publishDate 1974
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/314440
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