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<br /> <br /> <br />Water Project Construction Program Project Data <br /> <br /> <br />Applicant: Colorado Water Conservation Board <br /> <br />Project Name: Agricultural Water Transfer Project Type: Demonstration Project <br /> <br />Methods Grant Program <br />County: Statewide Drainage Basin: Water Source: N/A <br />Statewide Dra inage Basins <br /> <br />Total Study Cost: $ 1,500,000 Funding Sources: CWCB <br /> <br />CWCB Investment: ôÏÉØËØÊÉëÜÉØ   Òñß  Term: N/A <br />$ 1 , 5 0 0 ,000 <br /> <br /> <br />The 2007 Legislature approved the Colorado Water Conservation (CWCB) to develop a <br />competitive grant pro gram to advance various agricultural transfer methods as alternatives to <br />permanent dry - up in the Arkansas and South Platte Basins (authorized under SB 07 - 122). This <br />was in part a response to the increasing concern that the growing population and the assoc iated <br />urbanization is resulting in record levels of agricultural land dry - up. The Statewide Water Supply <br />Initiative (SWSI) indicated that over 500,000 irrigated acres could be lost by 2030 with most of <br />those in the Arkansas and South Platte basins. Agricu ltural has many significant benefits <br />including habitat, open space and helps to sustain rural economies. Without a sustainable <br />agricultural industry many small rural communities could not survive. When the Legislature <br />approved this grant program, the goa <br />- term reliable M&I water supplies while sustaining those important rural <br />agricultural dependent towns and economies. <br /> <br />This legislation provided for the appropriation of $1,500 ,000 from the CWCB construction fund <br />for the Board to develop and implement a competitive grant program to advance various <br />agricultural transfer methods as alternatives to permanent agricultural dry - up in the South Platte <br />and Arkansas river basins, includi ng but not limited to, interruptible water supply agreements, <br />long - term agricultural land fallowing, water banks, reduced consumptive use through efficiency <br />or cropping while maintaining historic return flows, and purchase by end users with leaseback <br />under defined conditions. One major goal of the grant program was to effectively advance a <br />- the - and to support projects <br />that will yield usable and transferable information which can be applied to other projects <br />throughout the State. <br /> <br />During the initial round of grant requests, the total amount requested ($2.3 million) , exceeded the <br />appropriated amount of $1.5 million. In addition, letters have been received from potential <br />applicants stating th eir interest in submitting requests at the November 2008 CWCB meeting. <br />Clearly, there is significant interest in this new area of water resource management and <br />additional funding of this important program will provide for further advancement of the tools <br />and methods to avoid the traditional dry - up of agricultural irrigated lands. <br />The grant program <br />established under SB 07 - 122 limited the projects to those located within the Arkansas and South Platte <br />River basins. Wh ile the SWSI reports a potential dry - up of 500,000 acres in these basins and that is <br />where the most critical need is located, this application proposes to open the projects Statewide. It is <br />conceivable that conservation projects, interruptible supply agreements and/or fallowing programs could <br />b e implemented in other basins for benefits in and outside of the basin. <br />3 <br /> <br />