Western Water Resilience Case Studies - FIC

We’ve detected that you are using an outdated browser.

Please use a new browser like Chrome, Firefox, Safari or Microsoft Edge to improve your experience.

We’ve detected that you are using an outdated browser.

Publications

Western Water Resilience Case Studies

Growers across the West Coast face increasing water unpredictability driven by climate change, prolonged drought, and shifting water policies. For small-scale and historically underserved farmers, limited access to funding, technical assistance, and water rights often means they must adapt with fewer resources. And yet many are leading the way, developing low-cost, resource-efficient strategies out of necessity and ingenuity. These case studies are part of a broader initiative to support farmer-led innovation. Based on lessons from six farms and a decade of dry farming work in Oregon through the Dry Farming Institute, the case studies share the process, tools, and resources that have been most helpful for producers.

Western Water Resilience Case Studies

 

This project was a collaboration between American Farmland Trust, the Dry Farming Institute, Oregon State University Extension, the Washington Water Trust, the USDA California and Northwest Climate Hubs and Oregon Climate and Agriculture Network. This project was supported by the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture’s Extension, Education, and USDA Climate Hubs Partnership program (Award #2023-67019-39349) in 2024, focused on providing effective, translatable, and scalable approaches to address climate change through regional partnerships.

Publisher
Washington D.C.: American Farmland Trust and Corvallis, OR: Dry Farming Institute
Page Numbers
4
Publication Date
June 01, 2025
Publication Type
Reports and Guides
State
Oregon, Washington
Keywords
Environmental Benefits, Soil Health

Visit American Farmland Trust

Get engaged and receive the information you need right in your inbox.