
The
Central Nebraska Public Power and Irrigation District
-- Irrigation Division --
The
Central Nebraska Public Power and Irrigation District is a multipurpose
water agency providing irrigation, electric generation, groundwater
recharge and recreation.
However,
it was the need for irrigation that provided the impetus for the
idea and subsequent construction of the Central District's project
which began service in 1941.
Today,
Central's hydro-irrigation project provides water to more than 112,000
acres served directly and to another 100,000-plus acres that receive
water from Lake McConaughy through contracts with Central or other
irrigation projects.
Central
also provides groundwater recharge benefits from its system of canals
and laterals to more than 310,000 acres irrigated by wells in and
adjacent to Central's service area.
The
Irrigation Division provides irrigation service to about 1,300 accounts
in Gosper, Phelps, Kearney, Dawson and Lincoln Counties. Adams County
was to have received service, but a 1936 Nebraska Supreme Court
decision denied service to the county by prohibiting transbasin
diversions of water. The case was reversed in 1980, but too late
for Adams County to receive irrigation deliveries from Central.
The
Irrigation Division's headquarters are in Holdrege, with irrigation
offices in Minden and Bertrand.
Operations
and Improvements
Central's
first deliveries of water to irrigators took place in 1941 and began
in earnest the following year with deliveries to more than 44,000
acres. Over the next 35 years, the number of irrigated acres grew
to more than 123,000 (the number of irrigated acres has remained
stable at about 112,000 acres since 1984) and the canal system operated
as designed with only minor changes or improvements, such as replacement
of wooden turnouts with concrete structures, and the construction
of the E67 Canal in the mid-1950s.
Advances
in technology and a better understanding of hydrogeology would bring
improvements, starting with planning and design for the E65 Rehabilitation
Project in 1969. Small project loans from the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation
-- the first obtained in 1975 and the second in 1980 – allowed
Central to rehabilitate and modernize its two main irrigation systems:
the E65 Canal, which serves almost 43,000 acres in the Bertrand-Loomis
area; and the Phelps Canal, which serves almost 60,000 acres from
northwest of Holdrege to north of Minden.
The
E65 project consisted of enlargement of most of the E65 Main Canal,
new control structures, the addition of Elwood Reservoir and installation
of supervisory control equipment on the principal operating structures.
Elwood
Reservoir, located just south of Johnson Lake, is filled during
the non-irrigation season by diverting water from the Supply Canal
into the E65 Canal. The water is pumped into the reservoir at the
Carl T. Curtis Pump Station. Each year, approximately 24,715 acre-feet
are pumped into the reservoir, which has a capacity of more than
40,000 acre-feet. The water is then allowed to flow back out of
the reservoir during the irrigation season for delivery to irrigation
customers. The releases augment the E56 Canal’s diversion
capacity of approximately 365 cubic feet per second.
The
project also improved service to E65 customers by increasing deliveries
from 1 acre-foot per acre per season to 1-1/2 acre-feet per acre
per season and switched deliveries from three-week rotations to
two-week rotations.
The
Phelps loan provided funds to rehabilitate 64 miles of the Phelps
Main Canal, some lateral enlargements, plus additions and modifications
to major control structures. The Phelps Canal is Central's largest
irrigation canal with a capacity of 1,300 cubic feet per second.
More than half of the Phelps system's 250 miles of canals and laterals
were replaced, rehabilitated or improved by 1986 and additional
improvements have been made on an annual basis since that time.
The
E67 Canal, which serves more than 5,000 acres southeast of Johnson
Lake, was added to the system in 1954 at the request of area farmers
who experienced difficulty in
procuring adequate supplies of groundwater. In 2001, Central began
another ambitious improvement project on the E67 Canal. Completed
in time for the 2003 irrigation season, the project replaced most
of the canal system’s open laterals with 18 miles of buried
pipeline and 2.8 miles of membrane lined canal.
The
project provided a two-week delivery rotation for irrigation customers,
rather than the three-week rotation that had been in place since
the canal went into service. Transportation losses (seepage and
evaporation) were largely eliminated, resulting in an annual reduction
in diversions to the canal system by 45 to 50 percent.
Central
continues annual maintenance and improvement activities on its canal
systems. Several small and/or inefficient canals have been abandoned
or replaced with pipelines. Membrane lining has been added in areas
where seepage losses were unacceptably high.
Central
also provides irrigation water to more than 6,500 acres served directly
from the Supply Canal as it passes through Lincoln and Dawson counties
to the headgates of the three irrigation canals in northeast Gosper
County.
Conjunctive
Use
An
important part of the rehabilitation projects was the attention
given to designing, incorporating and improving the “conjunctive
use” aspect of Central’s system.
Within
the context of Central’s system, conjunctive use is the recognition
of the hydrologic relationship between surface water irrigation
and groundwater resources and the effective, efficient use and management
of both resources to produce sustainable social, economic and environmental
benefits.
During
the planning stages for the E65 rehabilitation project, computer
groundwater modeling studies of the system resulted in a design
that provides recharge where groundwater development (irrigation
wells) is heavy and a lined system, or pipelines, where irrigation
comes mainly from the surface water system. The result has been
a generally stable water table beneath and adjacent to Central’s
service area.
Central’s
efforts marked the first time in Nebraska that an irrigation system
was designed to address the water supply and the needs of both surface
and groundwater irrigators. Central monitors a system of 137 observation
wells throughout the service area, enabling the District to compile
the necessary data for continued evaluation of groundwater levels.
Data
from the U.S. Geological Survey and the Conservation and Survey
Division of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln show that the water
table beneath Central’s service area has risen since the system
went into operation in 1941 by 10 feet to more than 50 feet. Similar
data from counties just outside Central’s service area show
just the opposite
– declines in the groundwater table of five to more than 30
feet over the last 60 years.
Water
Rights
Central
has several types of state water rights. Irrigation water rights
have been obtained for the land served by Central’s distribution
system. These water rights remain with the land regardless of its
ownership as long as water is applied to the land. Irrigation water
rights for each parcel fall into two categories: natural flow and
storage use rights.
Natural
flow is diverted from the base flow of the river and these types
of water rights are administered by the Nebraska Department of Natural
Resources on a “first-in-time, first-in-right” principle.
As the natural flow of the river diminishes, junior water rights
are shut down so more senior, or older, water rights can continue
to receive water. Central’s earliest water rights were obtained
in 1934, but are still junior to most other Platte River water rights,
many of which date back to the 19th century.
The
majority of Central’s diversions for irrigation are storage
water released from Lake McConaughy. Central has a water right to
store 2 million acre-feet annually behind Kingsley Dam.
Several
irrigation projects that depend primarily on natural flow water
rights contract with Central or other irrigation projects for supplemental
water; that is, storage water that can be delivered when natural
flow is unavailable or available in insufficient quantities.
Another
type of water Central holds is a permit to divert water for the
production of hydroelectric generation at its four hydroelectric
plants.
Supervisory
Control and Data Acquisition
Installation
of supervisory control capability for Central’s E65 and Phelps
irrigation canals started in 1977 and was completed in 1985. The
main structures on both canals are monitored and controlled at Holdrege,
Bertrand or Gothenburg, depending upon circumstances and the time
of day.
A canal
system can be placed in an “automatic mode” that allows
the computer to maintain canal levels by operating the control gates.
This minimizes the effects of sudden rainstorms or use changes and
reduces the adjustments that canal patrolmen (also known as irrigation
service specialists or ISS) must make over the course of a day.
It also allows timelier adjustment of canal flows and reduces the
number of miles ISS must travel within the irrigated area.
Automated
structures have electrically operated gates with position transmitters,
upstream and downstream meters that indicate canal elevation above
and below the structures, and remote terminal units (RTUs) that
link the equipment together. Data reports from the RTUs are sent
via microwave signal to computers that either operate the system
or provide information to a control operator who can enter the necessary
commands.
Managing
Resources
Management
of water resources is an important part of Central's operations.
To manage the system properly, it is imperative that accurate measurements
are taken and that thorough records are compiled. Such practices
enable Central to evaluate and adjust its operations accordingly.
Each
customer's turnout is fitted with a water meter or is measured by
an ISS. Records of deliveries are kept down to the tenth of an inch.
Central
has been active in water conservation efforts for many years and
has gone to great lengths to improve the efficiency of its delivery
system. Practices include conversion of turnouts to pipe outlets
fitted with flow meters; encouraging the use of soil moisture blocks
and soil probes to measure soil moisture; digging reuse pits for
landowners throughout the irrigated area; improvements in the supervisory
control system to increase the timeliness of deliveries; creating
the position of conservation director to work directly with irrigation
customers on on-farm systems; cooperation with federal and state
natural resources agencies; and adoption of conservation policies
that encourage and reward irrigation customers for adopting conservation
measures or practices.
Such
efforts include the pivot incentive policy that has prompted a dramatic
increase in the number of pivots served by Central's irrigation
system. In 2003, more than 200 pivots, covering almost 25% of contracted
acres, were operating on Central's system. Central also devised
the Incremental Pricing & Conservation Credit
Program and provides cost-sharing for other conservation measures.
Gated pipe has become the most common delivery method and siphon
tubes, a common sight in furrow-irrigated fields for many years,
have all but disappeared. Central also encouraged the use of surge
valves, which increase the efficiency of gated pipe irrigation,
and many irrigation customers have installed the devices.
As
a result of Central's efforts to efficiently manage and conserve
its available water resources, the Irrigation Division operates
one of the most efficient irrigation projects in the western United
States.
IRRIGATION
DIVISION -- MAP OF CENTRAL'S CANAL SYSTEM IN THE IRRIGATED AREA
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