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12 - Crystal Powers - Managed Aquifer Recharge

12 - Crystal Powers - Managed Aquifer Recharge

FromDaugherty Water for Food Podcast


12 - Crystal Powers - Managed Aquifer Recharge

FromDaugherty Water for Food Podcast

ratings:
Length:
11 minutes
Released:
Jun 6, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Managed aquifer recharge can be an innovative way to both satisfy endangered species’ habitat restoration and benefit crop irrigators in the area. This is exactly how it was used in Nebraska’s Central Platte Valley when river canals were already in need of repair after more than 100 years of use. The process consists of recharging an aquifer using either surface or underground recharge techniques, making the stored water available for use in dry years when surface water supplies may be low. In the Central Platte Valley, this was done through a low cost, low energy method of timing the flow of water and managing its gravitational seep into the ground. It now contributes to the streamflow targets of each endangered bird species, with an estimated value of $43.7 million. In this episode, DWFI Communications Specialist Arianna Elnes interviews Crystal Powers, research and extension communications specialist with DWFI and the Nebraska Water Center. They dive more into this collaboration between the Central Platte Natural Resource District (CPNRD), the Nebraska Department of Natural Resources (NeDNR), and the Platte River Recovery Implementation Program (PRRIP), as well as private irrigation districts and canal companies. A new book published by UNESCO includes this project as a case study in effective managed aquifer recharge and it was co-authored by Powers.
Released:
Jun 6, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (35)

Welcome to the Daugherty Water for Food Podcast! Since 2010, the Daugherty Water for Food Global Institute at the University of Nebraska has worked toward one goal: a food and water secure world — one in which global food security is ensured without compromising the use of water to meet other essential human and environmental needs. It’s a daunting vision, but one that is vitally important. This podcast amplifies the voices of those making waves in this space.