Document Details

The Effect of Declining Groundwater Levels on Supply Well Operations

Josué Medellín-Azuara, Jay R. Lund, Angela J. Kwon, Robert M. Gailey, Brad J. Arnold | August 15th, 2016


This report explores the impact of droughts on domestic and irrigation well operations. Well completion reports and groundwater depth data obtained from the Department of Water Resources were used in the analysis. The percentages of wells in which the top, middle or bottom of the screened interval became exposed above the pumping water level were calculated and implied maintenance or replacement costs were estimated. Increases in pumping costs from greater depths to groundwater were estimated as well.

For our case study, we selected a 27 square mile area in Tulare County, where the California Department of Water Resources has determined that groundwater is in a state of critical overdraft and designated the basin as High Priority under the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act. Results indicate that for the 2015 drought, there was significant potential for incurring well maintenance and replacement costs as a result of drought conditions and water levels approaching critical points in the screened intervals. While the assumptions associated with the current method appear to result in overestimation of impacts, the current drought may have resulted in several million dollars in well maintenance and replacement costs. For irrigation wells that remained in operation, increased depths to groundwater would increase overall pumping costs. About $5.31 per acre ($1.7 per acre-foot) were estimated as increased pumping costs in the recent 2012-2015 drought. While these costs are not large on a per acre basis, they may be significant when incurred across large agricultural areas. This proof of concept analysis highlights the value of information on groundwater levels and well constructions for estimating impacts of droughts on long term groundwater pumping capacity and operation.

This analysis can be extended for the entire Central Valley in an effort to quantify the impacts of drought and the importance of groundwater management.

Keywords

Central Valley, economic analysis, Groundwater Exchange, irrigation, planning and management, Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA)