Instead of getting paid about $270 per acre-foot of water as laid out under the prior deals, the landowners are poised to get nearly $400 per acre-foot under the IRA program.
Now, the irrigation district is trying to renegotiate its long-term water transfer arrangement with Metropolitan — an arrangement that is crucial to maintaining water supplies for Los Angeles and San Diego as climate change wallops the region. After the federal program ends in 2026, the underlying water-saving contract reverts back to Metropolitan and runs for another 12 years.
Dana “Bart” Fisher, president of the Palo Verde Irrigation District’s board of trustees, said the district had already been talking to Metropolitan about raising their payments from the levels negotiated in 2004, and the Inflation Reduction Act program simply “shined the spotlight” on the issue.
“There is no question, there’s a disparity between our Met contract and what the feds have offered,” Fisher said.
In an interview, Bureau of Reclamation Commissioner Camille Touton acknowledged that many of the new conservation contracts are built on cheaper prior agreements.
But she argued that there is an important distinction between prior programs and the new federal one: under pre-existing deals like the one between Palo Verde and Metropolitan, the conserved water would have been consumed by another user. Under the new federal program, that water remains unused, helping to raise Lake Mead’s water line.
“That water that’s conserved stays in the system behind Lake Mead, and that is meant to stabilize those reservoirs,” Touton said.
She also noted that the Biden administration plans to use the remainder of the $4 billion in IRA funding for projects like canal lining, reservoir building and irrigation system upgrades that will lock in long-term reductions in water use.
There’s reason to think that water conservation deals would be getting more expensive now, even without the new federal funding, since the shrinking river means there’s increased competition for a limited resource.
“These programs are all programs that require a willing seller,” said Tom Buschatzke, Arizona’s lead negotiator on the Colorado River, noting that many of the pre-existing agreements with California farmers were negotiated under duress.