Water Quality

California rice has been a leader in improving water quality for more than 20 years by innovatively working with programs that decrease concentrations of select pesticides in the surface water of the rice-growing region.

With approximately 500,000 acres of rice grown annually north of Sacramento, most emphasis has been on the Sacramento River Basin. Beginning in 2003, the California Rice Commission took over full management of the Rice Pesticides Program, assuming the responsibility for monitoring, sampling, analysis, reporting and recommendations. The Rice Pesticides Program is currently specific to one pesticide, thiobencarb, known by the common trade names of Abolish and Bolero.

From the experience gained with the Rice Pesticides Program, the California rice industry took a proactive role in the Irrigated Lands Regulatory Program (ILRP) as a commodity specific coalition that covers rice growers in the Sacramento River Basin. Irrigated agriculture has operated under an agricultural discharge waiver from 1982 until December 31, 2002. Currently, farmers operate under a conditional ILRP set to expire in 2011. The conditional ILRP includes surface water monitoring of several constituents including, but not limited to, pesticides, nutrients, sediment, turbidity, total organic carbons, toxicity, dissolved oxygen and total dissolved solids. In addition, the program provides management plan development for mitigation purposes.

Water quality

The agricultural community has been working with the Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board (CVRWQCB) on specifics of a permanent, long-term ILRP (LT-ILRP) when the conditional program expires. The LT-ILRP will include groundwater and nutrient management. The CRC is working through a stakeholder process to assure a feasible regulatory process is in place for farmers.

According to regulations imposed by Legislature and the CVRWQCB, property owners of irrigated agricultural lands must decide whether to participate as a group or individual. All conventional and organic rice growers in the Sacramento River Basin receive automatic inclusion in the California Rice Commission Coalition. Acreage other than conventional rice should receive coverage under the Sacramento River Water Quality Coalition. Both landowners and growers share responsibility to maintain proper coverage under the ILRP.

Water in rice field

Environmental Features

Herbicide Brochure
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Rice herbicide brochure

Growers can learn the latest information about stewardship practices for protecting water quality.

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Environmental Stewards ad

Environmental Stewards

Some 230 wildlife species derive food and habitat from California ricelands. These species include ducks, raptors and other spectacular wildlife. Providing wildlife habitat is all in a day’s work for the state’s 2,500 family rice farmers.

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Species Report
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Wildlife known to use California Ricelands

No crop does more to help the environment than California rice. Our fields provide an estimated $1 billion in habitat to 230 wildlife species, including seven million ducks and geese along the Pacific Flyway...