The most effective way in which to improve water conservation is to improve soil health. This is one of the aims of both Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) and Regenerative Agriculture (RA). A note: Conservation Agriculture (CA) practices, a subset of Regenerative Agriculture, whilst important, have as their aim to make soil more resilient to climate change events. Regenerative Agriculture goes one step further and has as its aim to renew and restore degraded soil. Soil is the home of water.
The part that soil plays in water management is greatly underestimated and misunderstood. When soil is healthy and retains all the water that it can, then costs go down, and yields increase (naturally) as does income (Hawken 2017 - read his ‘Drawdown’). All soils are composed of the same basic materials: air, water, mineral particles, and organic matter It is the proportions of these ingredients that vary and create the different soil profiles (O’Hare 1988). Decaying organic matter, or humus, is where the water and carbon (60%) are held. Farming practices that assist in protecting and renewing soil health and aid water and nutrient retention are those such as biodiversity, diverse cover crops, diverse and indigenous trees, no-tilling, and no chemicals.