https://www.naturalnews.com/046304_water_costs_extreme_drought_food_prices.html
(NaturalNews) It is not as if there aren't any economic factors influencing the price of groceries these days. Transportation alone, thanks to skyrocketing fuel prices, has lifted the cost of everything we buy at the grocery store. Now, one of the worst droughts in U.S. history is making the one thing absolutely vital for food production -- an ample water supply -- more expensive as well, and that, ultimately, will translate into even higher prices at the market.
To set the stage, back in February the U.S. Bureau or Reclamation released its first outlook of the year, in which the agency found insufficient water stocks in California to release to farmers for irrigation. That was the first time in the 54-year history of the State Water Project that had happened.
"If it's not there, it's just not there," said Water Authority Executive Director Steve Chedester, who noted that it would be tough finding water in the coming year or more. Farmers were to be hardest hit, the official added, stating, "They're all on pins and needles trying to figure out how they're going to get through this."
'Paying as much as 10 times more'One way to deal with the drought is for farmers to plant fewer fields, which would mean that early on there would be fewer crops; in the law of supply and demand, when supply is reduced but demand remains high, prices rise.
The other option would be farmers being forced to pay premium prices for the remaining available water, which would
also add to the final cost of crops -- costs that would have to be passed on to consumers.
Fast-forward to late summer 2014: As the
drought has only worsened over the summer, farmers in California's Central Valley, which is by far the world's most productive agricultural region, are paying
as much as 10 times more for
water than they did before the state's record dry spell forced officials to cut water supplies earlier this year.
As reported by
Bloomberg Briefs, costs to raise crops in California have soared to $1,100 an acre, or $140 more per acre than last year in the Fresno-based Westlands Water District, a region representing 700 farms, according to Gayle Holman, a spokeswoman for the district. Meanwhile, north of the state capital of Sacramento, in the Western Canal Water District, water is selling for double the usual price: $500 per acre-foot, which is about 326,000 gallons.
The most severe shortages have occurred in the San Joaquin Valley, in an area from Bakersfield to Patterson and Chowchilla, said Mike Wade, executive director of the
California Farm Water Coalition, a group based in Sacramento that represents farmers and most agricultural irrigation districts in the state.
Whole states are running dryThe drought, as it worsens, threatens also to dramatically increase production
costs that are already high in part because of an unexpected, unseasonable December frost, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Last month, analysts said they believe that the price of fresh fruit will rise as much as 6 percent this year.
Meanwhile, dairy products -- of which California is the largest producer -- could rise as much as 4 percent. Following three years of record-low rainfall, 82 percent of California is currently undergoing
extreme drought conditions, per the U.S. Drought Monitor, a federal website.
Mat Maucieri, a spokesman for the Bureau of Reclamation, said that the rising food prices are "a function of supply and demand in a very dry year and the fact that there are a lot of competing uses for water in California."
As shown on the U.S. Drought Monitor website, the entire states of California, Nevada, Arizona and New Mexico, along with most of Texas, Utah and Oregon, are experiencing
various levels of drought conditions. California is, by far, experiencing the worst.
Sources:
http://www.zerohedge.comhttp://www.nbcnews.comhttp://www.zerohedge.comhttp://www.washingtontimes.cohttp://droughtmonitor.unl.eduhttp://science.naturalnews.com
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