Friday, January 28, 2022 CapitalPress.com Pioneering evapotranspiration mapping from space By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press RICK ALLEN Farmers and ranchers are hearing a lot about NASA’s OpenET and its ability to make critical water data free and available for water man- agers in 17 western states. But they might not know the new online platform that uses satellites to estimate the water consumption of crops and other plants builds on the pioneering work of Rick Allen, a University of Idaho water resources engineer, and the Idaho Department of Water Resources. Age: 69 Position: Professor of wa- ter resources engineer- ing, University of Idaho Location: Kimberly Research and Extension Center Education: Ph.D., civil engineering, University of Idaho, 1984; master’s degree, agricultural engineering, University of Idaho, 1977; bache- lor’s degree, agricultural engineering, Iowa State University, 1974 Evapotranspiration Allen and his research team at the Kimberly Research and Extension Center, working closely with IDWR, devel- oped a physics-based model using satellite data to com- pute and map evapotranspi- ration, or ET. The model is named METRIC — Mapping Evapotranspiration at High Resolution with Internalized Calibration. Evapotranspiration includes water evaporation from the land and water tran- spiration from plants. The work was funded by a National Aeronautics and Space Administration grant, and Allen’s team began work- ing on the project in 2000. IDWR was an “eager user” because it knew there would be challenges among ground- water and surface water users, Allen said. “Idaho was really the fi rst state to use satellite-based ET data,” he said. For its work, the team received the Innovations in American Government Award from Harvard Uni- versity’s Kennedy School of Government in 2009. That early work led to NASA’s OpenET. That platform off ers six diff erent ET mapping models, Courtesy of Rick Allen Rick Allen views evapotranspiration maps of southern Idaho. including METRIC, and it is free to anyone who needs that information, he said. “It allows people to eas- ily compare or average all six models together to get a con- sistent estimate of ET,” he said. Allen is a member of the OpenET Consortium and was a member of the NASA Land- sat Science Team from 2007 to 2017. That team helped guide the development of future satellites and applica- tions of satellite data, he said. “I’ve really enjoyed being able to work with NASA, benefi ting from all the sat- ellite technology they’ve designed and launched over the years,” he said. “I’ve also enjoyed working with the state of Idaho and seeing our developments put into action for eff ective water resources management.” Farming roots Allen grew up on a corn and soybean farm in north- west Iowa. The family also fed cattle and hogs, and he was in charge of the hogs. “I wanted to stay tied to agriculture but also wanted to do something technical,” he said. After getting a master’s degree in agricultural engi- neering at the University of Idaho in 1977, he went to work at the university’s Kim- berly Research and Exten- sion Center in south-central Idaho as a research associate. His time there was divided between ET estimation and irrigation management and evaluation and irrigation sys- tem design. In 1984, he went to Iowa State University as a researcher and teacher. In 1986, he moved on to Utah State University where he also did research and teaching. He likes teaching, but it also entailed more stress than research. “I think I was fairly good at it, but I didn’t want to con- tinue it for my entire career,” he said. In 1998, he returned to full-time research at the Uni- versity of Idaho. He’s worked in general irrigation, the relationship between surface water and groundwater and irrigation design for the Irrigation Asso- ciation, an international orga- nization, and was named its Person of the Year in 2016. He’s written numerous publications and was lead author of the Food and Agri- culture Organization’s “Crop Evapotranspiration” man- ual, which has become a global standard on crop water requirements. He was also co-editor of the American Society of Civil Engineers’ practices manual “Evapo- transpiration and Irriga- tion Water Requirements,” a source standard that is widely used in irrigation litigation in the U.S. He’s also spent quite a lot of time in many coun- tries helping to review research programs and teach- ing short courses on irriga- tion systems design and water management. “I’ve really enjoyed see- ing the technology evolution in irrigation, all the electron- ics and sensors,” he said. This story fi rst appeared Dec. 3, 2021. Research interest: Evapotranspiration, irrigation water require- ments, satellite image processing in water resources, hydrologic water balances, impacts of water conservation, center pivot design and operation, weather data quality and processing, evapotranspiration mea- surement Affi liations: OpenET Consortium, member; NASA ECOSTRESS Science Team, member; NASA/ USGS Landsat Science Team, past member Publications: 212, prima- ry author on 78 Awards: Numerous, including Innovations in American Governance Award, Harvard Univer- sity’s Kennedy School of Government; Arid Lands Hydraulic Engineering and Royce Tipton awards, American Society of Civil Engineers; 2016 Irrigation Association Person of the Year (international) Family: Wife; three grown children; two grandchildren INTERESTED IN GROWING TEFF? LOW INPUT WE HAVE EVERYTHING FROM PIVOTS TO SOLID SETS AND MORE! DROUGHT TOLERANT ROTATES WELL WITH COMMON COMMODITIES PLEASE CALL US FOR A QUOTE! 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