-- Solutions available to cities and industry won't work for agriculture.
Desalination and recycling may present viable alternatives to
municipalities and industry where water can be piped between sources and
demand centers. But it's generally impossible to recapture sufficient
amounts of evaporation in agricultural regions, and farms are too large,
cost sensitive, and distant from oceans for desalination to work.
-- The only option left is for agriculture to increase water efficiency.
Existing technologies can bring agricultural water demand within
sustainable levels in many scenarios. Efficiency improvements from drip and
smart irrigation, for example, can reduce consumption; while genetically
modified crops can improve yields, require less water and resist drought.
Optimal use of fertilizer and pesticides, plastic mulches, and more
efficient food distribution can also help minimize water use.
-- Water needs will limit large-scale adoption of some biofuels. If long-
term projections for biofuels from organizations like the U.S. Energy
Information Administration hold true, crops grown for biofuels would
account for 15% of agricultural water withdrawals in 2050 -- even
accounting for a major shift to lower-water feedstocks like cellulosic and
algae biomass. This figure could be enough to tip the scales to
unsustainability, even with adoption of water-saving agricultural
technologies. As a result, for biofuels to boom, the shift away from
current feedstocks -- such as corn, sugar, and soy -- will have to be even
more thorough than now projected.
"Traditionally, agriculture has been reluctant to try new technologies. But
improved crop yields present financial incentives for farmers," said
LoCascio. "And water costs could become another driver promoting adoption
of water conservation technologies."
"Malthus Returns: Solving the Unsustainable Agricultural Water Demand
Conundrum" is part of the Lux Water Intelligence service. Clients
subscribing to this service receive ongoing research on water industry
market trends and forecasts, continuous technology scouting reports,
proprietary data points in the weekly Lux Research Water Journal, and
on-demand inquiry with Lux Research analysts.
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Contact Information: Contact: Carole Jacques Lux Research, Inc. 617-502-5314 carole.jacques@luxresearchinc.com