In partnership with the Fort Yuma Quechan Tribe, this project will relocate an irrigation pumping station and enrolling tribal land into a rotational fallowing program. A rotational fallowing program involves alternating periods of crop cultivation and fallowing/unplanted land to enhance soil health, manage pests, and improve water retention, thereby promoting sustainable agricultural practices.
The existing water pump is currently inefficient and prevents the Tribe from utilizing its full water rights. Relocating the Tribe’s water pump will enable more efficient water delivery and provide access to their full water rights, and it will also be powered by solar energy instead of diesel fuel. Updating the pump will allow the Tribe to implement a seasonal fallowing program that will reduce agricultural water demand and reallocate the saved water maintaining riparian habitat restoration, wetland water supply projects, and/or participate in water/system conservation programs that bolster levels at Lake Mead.
Project Partner: BlueCommons
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Lower Colorado Resilience Project
This project, led by Restauremos El Colorado, Centro Luken, BlueCommons, and BEF, aims to reduce water use from the Colorado River in Mexico and help preserve storage levels in Lake Mead through farmer agreements on water leases in the Mexicali region of Mexico. Restauremos El Colorado has developed relationships with farmers in the Mexicali watershed, these farms will temporarily pause activities to decrease reliance on river water. The saved water will be used to lower Mexico’s withdrawals from Lake Mead, supporting conservation efforts and creating new storage reserves.