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Californias agricultural regions gear up to actively manage groundwater use and protection

Authors
Type
Published Article
Journal
California Agriculture
Publisher
University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources (UC ANR)e
Publication Date
Sep 30, 2015
Volume
69
Pages
11–11
Identifiers
DOI: DOI: 10.3733/ca.E.v069n03p193
Source
Center for Watershed Sciences John Muir Institute of the Environment
License
Unknown

Abstract

New regulations are emerging in response to historic groundwater depletion and widespread groundwater quality degradation in California. They aim at long-term preservation of groundwater resources for use in agriculture, in urban areas and for the support of ecosystems in streams dependent on groundwater. The regulations are driving a historic shift in the way the agriculture sector is engaged in managing and protecting groundwater resources in California. A review and synthesis of these recent regulatory developments the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act and new policies under the California Porter-Cologne Water Quality Control Act clarifies key challenges for farmers, scientists and regulators and points to the need for continuing innovation in agricultural practices as well as in planning and policy.

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