Abstract

With increasing energy costs, declining groundwater resources, and/or decreases in pumping plant efficiencies, irrigated producers have become more interested in their pumping costs. An effective method for analyzing irrigation costs is through the Oklahoma State University (OSU) computerized irrigation cost budget generator. However, when other land grant institutions attempted to use the OSU irrigation cost generator on their computers, the issue of computer program transferability arose. A discussion of the transfer problems of the OSU irrigation cost budget generator and the use of microcomputers to transfer the OSU algorithm are also presented.

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