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California Water Today 91 <br /> Delta pumping led many urban water agencies to pursue more aggressive con- <br /> servation measures and as many farmers south of the Delta faced severe water <br /> shortages. California water users are likely to face increasing scarcity and the <br /> need to continue adapting,as a result of a changing climate and deteriorating <br /> conditions of the state's aquatic ecosystems(Chapter 3). <br /> The Economic Value of Water <br /> The debates on how to allocate water across sectors reflect perceptions of the <br /> underlying value of water in different activities.Some of these values are easier <br /> to measure than others. <br /> Wide disparities in the value of agricultural water use <br /> The economic value of water in agriculture—the largest human use of water— <br /> is relatively easy to determine because almost all agricultural production is <br /> sold on the market. California has the highest grossing agricultural sector <br /> in the nation, but its value is small relative to the state's overall economy. <br /> In 2007, the value-added of crop and animal production in the state totaled <br /> $22.4 billion,or 1.2 percent of the state's$1.85 trillion gross domestic product.14 <br /> This share nearly doubles (to $40 billion) when food processing is included <br /> and would be somewhat higher if the value of farm services and agriculture- <br /> related transport were also included. In that same year, agriculture and all <br /> related industries accounted for about 5 percent of the state's employment <br /> (Figure 1.3). Within some regions, agriculture is far more important as a <br /> source of revenue and jobs;it accounts for as much as 15 percent of employ- <br /> ment in the San Joaquin Valley. <br /> The value of water use in agriculture varies from a few tens of dollars to <br /> thousands of dollars per acre-foot.Table 2.3 shows the estimated water use and <br /> revenue generated by major crop types for 2005, along with average revenues <br /> per acre-foot of gross and net water used.Irrigated pasture generated less than <br /> $50 per acre-foot of net water use—less than 1 percent of the average value of an <br /> acre-foot of water used to grow fresh vegetables,flowers,and other horticultural <br /> crops.The value of most"field crops"(alfalfa,rice,corn,and various grains and <br /> legumes)is also relatively low on average—ranging from$200 to$600/acre-foot <br /> 14. Value added,used to calculate gross state product,includes farm revenues from crop and livestock production and <br /> forestry and net government transfers less the cost of purchased inputs.Data are from the U.S.Bureau of Economic Analysis, <br /> gross domestic product by state:www.bea.gov/regional/gsp/.fhis total is lower than the gross value of farm production(such <br /> as that used to calculate crop water values in Table 2.3),which does not subtract the cost of purchased inputs. <br />