Document Details

Land Transitions and Dust in the San Joaquin Valley

Andrew Ayres, Jaymin Kwon, Joy Collins, Elisa Gonzales, Zaira Joaquín Morales | July 24th, 2022


The Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA) requires groundwater users to bring their basins into balance over the next two decades. In the San Joaquin Valley, this will mean taking more than 500,000 acres of agricultural land out of intensive irrigated production. Among other issues, this could potentially lead to air quality impacts if the lands become new sources of dust, especially windblown dust, which can have numerous negative short- and long-term health and environmental impacts. In addition, the changing climate may exacerbate risks as warmer temperatures can dry out soils and increase dust emissions. The overall air quality impact of transitioning agricultural land to new uses is nuanced, but proactive management can help to identify high-risk areas and at-risk communities, and direct effort and funding to the most cost-effective interventions.

Keywords

agriculture, Central Valley, fugitive dust, planning and management, Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA)