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Landsat can be an Impartial Arbitrator in Water Conflict Issues

Landsat can be an Impartial Arbitrator in Water Conflict Issues

Map of northern Mason Valley, NV
Map of northern Mason Valley, NV showing irrigated fields (polygons). Colors represent amounts of seasonal evapotranspiration derived from Landsat satellite thermal imagery (blue is high water use, and red is low water use).

Speaking at an important state-wide water summit in March, Nevada Governor Brian Sandoval lauded DRI’s METRIC program calling its Landsat satellite technology an important tool in monitoring water usage. In his keynote address at the Nevada Water Resource Association (NWRA) annual conference in Las Vegas , Sandoval said the Desert Research Institute is solving critical water issues through ground-breaking research, such as mapping agricultural consumptive water use from space using Landsat satellite thermal imagery. This project was initiated by DRI research professor James Thomas, Ph.D., and led by DRI assistant research professor Justin Huntington, Ph.D., with collaboration from University of Idaho research professor, Richard Allen, Ph.D. and hydrologist Adam Sullivan, P.E. from the Nevada Division of Water Resources.
“This research produces water consumption rates of plants needed to refine Nevada’s basin water budgets and better manage water transfers and water right issues,” Huntington said. “The beauty of Landsat satellite imagery is that there is nearly a 30-year archive so that the history of water use, as well as current use from agriculture and native vegetation, are equally available. This science has now been established in the literature and is being actively applied in other western states for water management needs.”
“This [research] will help create much needed jobs throughout the state and allow for opportunities to partner with the state’s universities along with national and international agencies to develop technological advances that will keep Nevada on the forefront of scientific innovation,” Gov. Sandoval said
Huntington and his colleagues at DRI create evapotranspiration maps using a program called METRIC, which stands for Mapping Evapotranspiration at high Resolution using Internalized Calibration. METRIC was developed by Allen at the University of Idaho, and first implemented for water right management by the Idaho Department of Water Resources.
Huntington and his colleagues have enhanced METRIC so that the Nevada Division of Water Resources can use the program for day to day operations and monitoring of water use and special projects. The program relies on Landsat satellites which take high resolution digital pictures of earth in the visible and invisible spectrums, with primary reliance on Landsat’s thermal infrared imager. This imager captures digital pictures of land surface temperature. Each ‘pixel’ of a Landsat image represents a 30 meter by 30 meter area so the researchers can see at scales fine enough to record when farmers irrigate fields, or natural land surfaces become wet, and water evaporates from soil surfaces and transpires through plant leaves. These processes combined are termed evapotranspiration (ET). ET consumes energy, making the surface cool. This cooling is easily detected using Landsat’s thermal imager. “After all, it is at the field scale that water rights are managed in the west,” Huntington said.
Landsat satellite imagery required to make METRIC ET maps is currently free of charge and publicly available through the U.S. Geological Survey’s Earth Resources Observation and Science Center.
“Access to accurate ET maps produced using a widely accepted approach allows water resource managers to assess water use on a field by field basis in an objective way where everyone is treated equally,” Huntington said. “With equality of data for everyone, disputes over data or lack of data are reduced, which is a big change in how water conflicts have been dealt with in the past.”
According to Tony Willardson, Executive Director of the Western States Water Council, agreement on the data and the models that use those data go a long way in resolving water conflict issues, as the level of detail needed to resolve issues is on a field by field basis.
“The biggest challenge faced by the water management communities right now is to keep the Landsat program and future satellites funded and on schedule,” Allen said, who is also a member of the national Landsat Science Team.
Currently only one Landsat is functional and it is not able to collect complete images, according to Allen. The next Landsat, Landsat 8, will be launched next January.
“Landsat 8 will be an extremely valuable satellite, but we need to launch a new Landsat satellite at least every four years to have two or more flying at any one time, and right now, the funding for Landsat 9 is being delayed while Congress and federal agencies study the costs,” Allen said. “Our water resources cannot tolerate delays and potential gaps in image collection. Our water is much too valuable to not be well managed.”
Source: Desert Research Institute
Related Link:
Governor praises DRI’s METRIC program [external link]

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