Michael Stravato for The Texas Tribune
A GPS receiver was mounted on a pipe at a subsidence monitoring station in Fort Bend County near Richmond, Tex.
Amid a persistent drought, a growing population and a dwindling supply of surface water, much of Texas is searching for underground water resources.
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Michael Stravato for The Texas Tribune
Stan Ulcak, a representative with the Harris Galveston Subsidence District, working with a receiver last week. The area is prone to flooding.
But a large swath of Texas — home to close to one-quarter of its population — is looking for water supplies anywhere but beneath its surface. A century of intense groundwater pumping in the fast-growing Houston metropolitan area has collapsed the layers of the Gulf Coast Aquifer, causing the land above to sink. The only solution is to stop pumping, a strategy that some areas are resisting.
The geological phenomenon, unique to this part of Texas because of the makeup of the aquifer's clay layers, is known as subsidence. Areas in and around Houston have sunk as much as 10 feet in 100 years, causing neighborhoods to flood, cracking pavements and even moving geologic faults that could lead to infrastructure damage. "It's an upfront and personal issue when you're on the coast and you see land loss," said Mike Turco, who heads the subsidence districts responsible for addressing the problem in Harris, Galveston and Fort Bend Counties. "You have oil barracks that are out in Galveston Bay now."
Subsidence has long been a concern in Harris and Galveston Counties, which are nearer to the gulf and more prone to flooding. Spurred by state lawmakers in the 1970s, the counties have worked to reduce their groundwater dependency to 25 percent from more than 50 percent. That number will continue to fall as they increase their reliance on rivers like the Trinity and San Jacinto, as well as planned reservoirs.
Neighboring Fort Bend County, on the other hand, which still relies on the Gulf Coast Aquifer for 60 percent of its water, is farther inland, and the effects of subsidence can be less tangible.
"There are perception issues," Mr. Turco said. Whether subsidence means anything to someone depends on where you're standing, he said. "If you're standing next to the river, it could be a big deal."
In Fort Bend County, unlike Houston, "there isn't a ship channel to walk to," he said.
Now that the county is starting to grow, in part because of the expansion of nearby Houston, studies by the subsidence districts estimate that if nothing is done, parts of Fort Bend County will sink about five feet in the next four decades. The impact could be lessened to just two feet under recent regulations asking certain areas to convert 60 percent of their groundwater supplies by 2025. Not everyone agrees with the approach. Some towns dislike the rules that force them to find alternative water supplies, worried about the high cost of conversion and unsure whether their own land is actually sinking.
"Typically, subsidence is equated to growth," said Terri Vela, the city manager for Richmond, which is about 30 miles west of Houston. "And Richmond proper has not seen that growth. I don't even know that we have subsidence today in Richmond."
Ms. Vela pointed out that subsidence in the county affected some areas more than others. For instance, the land has sunk nearly a foot in 15 years just a few miles to the east of Richmond, in booming Sugar Land. But in Richmond itself, the ground has lowered less than three inches — although the Fort Bend subsidence district warns that could change if its outlying areas continue to grow as they have in recent years.
Alternative supplies have been difficult to find, Ms. Vela said. About five years ago, Richmond and a neighboring town, Rosenberg, secured a long-term contract to take water from the Brazos River, with plans to build a water treatment plant. But then the area was hit by drought, and the river's flows were at their lowest by 2009. the towns were then besieged with requests from industrial and other water users to buy the newly acquired water.
The overwhelming demand for Brazos River water led the towns to question whether it would really be available. "Is this a long-term, sustainable water source?" Ms. Vela said. "Everyone else has put their straws in before we've gotten to it."
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