Water use in Kansas is increasing, mostly due to dry periods and climate variability, according to a new U.S. Geological Survey fact sheet on public-supply water use from 1990 – 2012 in Kansas.
About 95 percent of Kansans depend on water provided by public suppliers such as cities, towns, rural water districts or mobile home parks. Currently, about 60 percent of this water is obtained from streams, reservoirs and lakes; the remainder is groundwater.
Public water supply withdrawals from 1990 – 2012 ranged from a low of 121 billion gallons in 1993, when average precipitation was almost 40 inches, to a high of 159 billion gallons in 2012, when average precipitation was less than 20 inches. The average amount of water each person uses per day is about 2.5 times greater in western Kansas (274 gallons) then in eastern Kansas (98 gallons). Water use tends to increase from eastern to western Kansas because of differences in precipitation. The new fact sheet was created in cooperation with the Kansas Department of Agriculture, Division of Water Resources (DWR).
“Water is so important to the everyday life of Kansans,” said Lane Letourneau, Water Appropriations Program Manager at the Kansas Department of Agriculture, Division of Water Resources. “Accurate water use information is essential for the state to manage the resource wisely and to use when we look out to the next 50 years to ensure we have a long term, reliable water supply.”