Technology for Trade: New Tools and New Rules for Water Use Efficiency in Agriculture and Beyond

Integrating forecasting, remote sensing, and smart markets to improve water allocation and drought resilience in western agriculture.

Sprinklers in a field on a sunny day.

The five-year Technology for Trade project advanced water use efficiency in agriculture through development and evaluation of three complementary innovations: improved seasonal forecasting, remote measurement of crop water consumption, and computer-aided “smart” water markets. Conducted across the Yakima, Okanogan, and Walla Walla River Basins, the research combined simulation-based water market experiments, real-world transaction data, and stakeholder surveys of water rights holders and irrigation district growers. In addition to technical tools, the project examined legal, regulatory, and contractual innovations needed to enable technology adoption while protecting existing water rights. Active engagement with regional stakeholders and an advisory committee helped focus research priorities and ensure practical relevance. The project generated research highlight papers and a public-facing summary describing outcomes and implications for agricultural water management in Washington state and beyond.

This project was funded by USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture project #1016467.

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Products from this Project

Project Leads

Yoder, J. and Rajagopalan, K.

People

Yoder, J., Rajagopalan, K., Howitt, R., Ronspies, R., Hall, S. A., Abatzoglou, J., Barber, M., Basu, S., Brady, M., Cook, J., Deol, S., Fabbri, C., Haller, D., Khot, L., Kruger, C., Liu, M., Nelson, R., Nijssen, B., Padowski, J., Peters, T., Pickering, N., Shuman, C., Stockle, C., Yorgey, G., and Young, R.

Project Dates

2018– 2022

Areas of Focus

  • Agricultural Practices
  • Agricultural Technology
  • Climate & Environment
  • Research Engagement & Communication
  • Water Resources & Policy

Topics

  • Climate Change
  • Community Engaged Research
  • Energy
  • Natural Resources
  • Production Systems
  • Soils & Fertility
  • Water Resources

Project Status

Complete

Collaborators

  • Kansas State University
  • Washington State University Biological Systems Engineering
  • Washington State University Civil and Environmental Engineering
  • Washington State University School of Economic Sciences
  • WSU Center for Environmental Research, Education and Outreach

Funding Source