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California and federal government set to increase water deliveries after storms
California and federal government set to increase water deliveries after storms

Yahoo

time26-02-2025

  • Climate
  • Yahoo

California and federal government set to increase water deliveries after storms

State and federal agencies plan to deliver more water to California farms and cities following recent storms that brought rain and snow and boosted reservoir levels. Cities in Southern California and other agencies that depend on water delivered from Northern California via the State Water Project are projected to receive 35% of requested water supplies, up from an estimated 20% last month, the state Department of Water Resources said Tuesday. In a similar announcement, the federal Bureau of Reclamation said agricultural irrigation districts south of the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta are expected to receive 35% of their full contract amounts from the federal Central Valley Project — more than double the 15% they were allocated at this time last year. The agency said in a written statement that officials are acting on a recent order by President Trump to 'maximize water supply, particularly for south-of-Delta contracts.' After two wet years and the latest series of storms this month, the state's biggest reservoirs, including Lake Oroville and Shasta Lake, stand at above-average levels. "California is experiencing a winter of extremes,' said Karla Nemeth, the department's director. 'We've seen predominately dry conditions broken up by very wet, short storm events. Those conditions mean we must move as much water when it's available." Read more: Trump reenters California's water wars. It's unclear who will win Agricultural water agencies welcomed the announcement, saying it marks a notable improvement in their supplies from last year, despite a similar water situation at that time. Allison Febbo, general manager of the Fresno-based Westlands Water District, said the allocation 'offers our farmers the opportunity to make critical planting decisions that optimize feeding the nation.' The state and federal water systems, including dams, aqueducts and pumping facilities, are among the world's largest. They pump water from the Delta and send supplies flowing to Central Valley farmlands and about 30 million people. In the San Joaquin Valley, farmers use the water to irrigate pistachios, almonds, grapes, tomatoes, hay and other crops. Federico Barajas, executive director of the San Luis & Delta-Mendota Water Authority in Los Banos, said this year's federal allocation is a significant improvement over last year's initial allocation. 'However, given the high storage conditions and current high Delta outflow from recent storms, I know that many of the Water Authority's members were hoping for a higher initial allocation,' Barajas said. Read more: Decision to reduce water flows in California's delta sparks debate over imperiled fish Officials typically set the water allocations based on reservoir conditions, precipitation and snowpack in the Sierra Nevada. The allocations are often updated as conditions change during the winter and spring. This year, storms have brought the most snow and rain to Northern California, while areas to the south have seen below-average precipitation. This has meant reduced flows in the San Joaquin River and its tributaries, which has led to limitations on the Central Valley Project's water deliveries in the San Joaquin Valley because of environmental regulations aimed at protecting threatened fish species in the Delta. 'Unfortunately, this year's rainfall has disproportionately fallen in the northern portion of the Central Valley Project,' Barajas said. He said federal officials had worked with his agency to 'implement improvements in the allocation process over the last year, which has in part led to this higher initial allocation.' Karl Stock, the Bureau of Reclamation's regional director, said the recent series of atmospheric river storms and the relatively high reservoir levels have benefited the water outlook. 'However, the San Joaquin Basin has experienced critically dry conditions' this winter, he said. The initial allocations 'reflect this significant variation across the Sacramento and San Joaquin valleys.' The agency said other water suppliers north of the Delta are allocated 100% of their contract amounts, as are suppliers along the American River and in the Delta region. Agricultural suppliers that receive water from the Friant-Kern and Madera canals, meanwhile, were allocated 45% of their basic allotments. Read more: Coastal salmon fishing banned for a second year amid steep population declines Stock noted that California still has a portion of the traditionally wet season left until April. He said the agency is 'committed to delivering as much water as possible to our contractors consistent with the goals of the Central Valley Project and [Trump's] Executive Order 14181." Jeffrey Mount, a senior fellow at the Public Policy Institute of California's Water Policy Center, said the announcement didn't seem out of the ordinary for the Bureau of Reclamation, which typically sets allocations based on the current conditions. 'They're saying that they are going to maximize this, but they're not really giving the specifics on how they're going to do that in direct operations,' Mount said. The federal agency had shifted to taking a more conservative approach in its projected allocations following the severe 2020-22 drought, Mount said. 'It looks like they're being a little more the way they used to be in their projections, rather than the conservative approach they were taking after the drought,' he said. The initial supply forecast is timed to inform farmers as they plan the crops they will be planting. When federal supplies are reduced, growers typically turn to pumping more groundwater. So if the federal government ends up delivering more water to farms this year, Mount said, that will help farmers by enabling them to pump less groundwater. The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, which delivers supplies from the State Water Project to cities and local agencies, said the increased water deliveries will help meet demands and may add to the record amount of water it currently has stored in reservoirs and underground storage areas. MWD General Manager Deven Upadhyay said the increased allocation 'helps to buttress our preparedness for the inevitable swing back to dry conditions.' Environmental advocates have criticized state and federal water management decisions in recent years, citing declining populations of threatened fish in the Delta and two consecutive years of canceled salmon fishing seasons because of low population numbers. Read more: Expansion of San Luis Reservoir set to boost California's water-storing capacity Ashley Overhouse, water policy adviser for the group Defenders of Wildlife, said the state and federal announcements to increase water deliveries are 'irresponsible and reckless' and will further harm the Delta's deteriorating ecosystem and native fish by extracting excessive amounts of water. 'Last year, we saw the highest mortality rate of winter-run Chinook salmon in a four-year period,' Overhouse said. 'We also saw an unusually high number of Central Valley steelhead impacted by Delta pumping last year, exceeding thresholds established under the Endangered Species Act.' She said as climate change continues to affect California's water resources, the state 'must prioritize the health of our waterways.' The Bureau of Reclamation said in its announcement that the Trump administration is also investing more than $315 million in new water storage projects, including plans to build Sites Reservoir and raise a dam to expand San Luis Reservoir. Those federal investments are not new, however. The projects were also supported by the Biden administration. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Trump reenters California's water wars. It's unclear who will win
Trump reenters California's water wars. It's unclear who will win

Yahoo

time27-01-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Trump reenters California's water wars. It's unclear who will win

President Trump has signed an order directing federal agencies to 'maximize' water deliveries in California and 'override' state policies if necessary. Trump's executive order outlines steps intended to increase the amount of water pumped from the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta. The directive was praised by agencies that supply water to farmlands in the San Joaquin Valley, which could receive more water under the changes ordered by Trump. Westlands Water District, the largest agricultural water supplier in the Central Valley, welcomed the executive order. 'It's clear that what we've been doing for the past few decades has not been working; not for the people, for agriculture, or for the fish,' the district said in a written statement. Westlands General Manager Allison Febbo said the district intends to work with government agencies 'to bring common sense back' to water management in the valley, one of the nation's major food-producing regions. Read more: Trump wants to upend California water policy. State officials say it could do harm Environmental groups said the measures Trump is seeking, if fully carried out, would be disastrous for populations of threatened and endangered fish, as well as the state's commercial and recreational fisheries and the deteriorating ecosystem of the Delta. 'It would mean the loss of California's most important wild salmon runs, devastating impacts on salmon fishing jobs, enormous degradation in Delta water quality,' said Barry Nelson, a policy representative for the fishing group Golden State Salmon Assn. He also flagged the issue of states' rights: 'This is a very clear statement that the Trump administration believes that California should not have the right to control its water resources.' The order, posted on the White House website Sunday, directs the Interior and Commerce secretaries to 'immediately take actions to override existing activities that unduly burden efforts to maximize water deliveries.' It calls for delivering more water via the federally managed Central Valley Project, one of the two main systems of aqueducts, dams and pumping facilities in California that transport supplies from the Delta southward. The president also directed the federal Bureau of Reclamation to ensure state agencies 'do not interfere.' In the order, Trump criticizes 'disastrous' policies and water 'mismanagement' by California, and directs federal agencies to scrap a plan that the Biden administration adopted last month, establishing new rules for operating the Central Valley Project and the State Water Project — California's other main water delivery system in the Central Valley. Instead, Trump has told federal agencies to more or less follow a plan adopted during his first presidency, which California and environmental groups challenged in court arguing it failed to provide adequate protections for endangered fish. Read more: Why hydrants ran dry as firefighters battled California's deadly fires The order also attempts to link local water supply problems during the deadly Los Angeles County firestorms, such as fire hydrants that ran dry, with changes in how water is managed in Northern California. It says the Trump administration is setting a new policy to "provide Southern California with necessary water resources." However, water experts and state officials said such comments are inaccurate. 'The premise of this executive order is false,' said Tara Gallegos, a spokesperson for Gov. Gavin Newsom. 'We're unclear what the administration's concern with the current water policy is.' She noted that California pumps as much water now as it could under prior policies during Trump's first administration, and that because reservoirs in Southern California are at record-high levels, bringing in more water from Northern California would not have affected the fire response. 'There is no shortage of water in Southern California,' Gallegos said. 'Water operations to move water south through the Delta have nothing to do with the local fire response in Los Angeles. Trump is either unaware of how water is stored in California or is deliberately misleading the public.' Gallegos said the state 'looks forward to further dialogue with the federal government on securing our water supply for a hotter, drier future.' Trump's order focuses largely on the federally operated Central Valley Project, which delivers water from the Delta to farmlands that produce almonds, pistachios, tomatoes and other crops. The CVP ends in the southern San Joaquin Valley near Bakersfield and does not reach Southern California's urban areas to the south. 'This is a manufactured crisis and water grab for the agricultural sector, who are mainly growing crops for export,' said Regina Chichizola of the advocacy group Save California Salmon. In the San Joaquin Valley, agricultural water agencies have been under growing pressure from state regulators to curb chronic overpumping of groundwater, which has led to declining aquifer levels, sinking ground and growing numbers of dry household wells. Obtaining more water from the Central Valley Project could help some of these agencies address their water deficits. Trump's order is broadly worded, with some provisions laying out ways the administration could expedite water storage projects and waive protective measures for endangered fish species. Read more: Groundwater pumping is causing land to sink at record rate in San Joaquin Valley For example, it calls for expediting 'ongoing or potential major water-supply and storage projects' in California. It says the Interior and Commerce secretaries will each designate one official to coordinate environmental compliance for such projects, and develop a plan to 'suspend, revise, or rescind any regulations or procedures that unduly burden such projects.' Though the order does not specifically mention it, Trump has previously called for raising Shasta Dam to expand California's largest reservoir. Nelson, of the Golden State Salmon Assn., believes parts of the order are intended to move forward that dam-raising plan by attempting to override protections in state law for the McCloud River, which feeds into the reservoir. Conservation advocates said the order lays the groundwork for the Trump administration to leverage a rarely used amendment to the Endangered Species Act that enables the convening of a committee to exempt a federal action from the endangered species law. This committee has been called the 'God Squad,' referring to its authority to render a decision that may cause a species to go extinct. Environmental advocates said invoking this process could exempt the Central Valley Project's pumping operations from measures that protect vulnerable fish species in the Delta and San Francisco Bay, rendering these federal protections nonexistent. 'I have been working on water issues for 40 years. I have never seen such a clear statement of an administration's intent to devastate the Bay Delta system,' Nelson said. In recent years, fish populations have suffered major declines in the Delta and San Francisco Bay. Pumping to supply farms and cities has contributed to the ecological degradation of the Delta, where the fish species that are listed as threatened or endangered include steelhead trout, two types of Chinook salmon, longfin smelt, Delta smelt and green sturgeon. Fisheries authorities have shut down the salmon fishing season in California the last two years because of declining salmon populations. 'The Delta has been dying a death of a thousand cuts. This will accelerate that death significantly,' said Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla, who leads the nonprofit group Restore the Delta, which advocates for protecting the estuary. In 2020, when the previous Trump administration adopted new water delivery rules that weakened environmental protections, the state and conservation groups successfully challenged the changes in court. That cleared the way for the Biden administration, working together with the Newsom administration, to develop the current plan and the supporting biological opinions, which determine how much water can be pumped and how river flows are managed. Now, Trump is seeking to return to his administration's 2020 rules, while imposing additional measures to increase pumping. Trump's order does not appear to directly affect California's management of the State Water Project, the system that delivers water from the Delta to Los Angeles and other cities. However, because state flow requirements to protect endangered fish will remain in place regardless of any federal changes, an increase in the pumping by the federal system could, in theory, lead to a decrease in pumping by the state system, said Greg Gartrell, a former manager of the Contra Costa Water District. 'The whole situation is more complicated than turning a valve.' Read more: As salmon populations struggle, California bans fishing on rivers for a second year Gary Bobker, program director for the environmental group Friends of the River, said implementing the president's wish list would 'dewater California rivers, promote toxic algal blooms, cause a number of native species to go extinct — not just Delta smelt, but salmon, steelhead and sturgeon.' The biggest winners would be agribusinesses in the San Joaquin Valley, not people living in fire-prone areas, Bobker said. 'This exploitation of a humanitarian crisis to impose misinformed and destructive policies on California is an insult to the state's residents and the victims of the wildfires.' Trump's order also calls for emergency measures to improve disaster response. It directs federal agencies to ensure that state and local governments 'promote sensible land management practices,' calling for officials to report to the president on state policies 'inconsistent with sound disaster prevention and response.' It says the federal Office of Management and Budget will review all federal programs that support land management, water supply and disaster response. The order also directs federal agencies to expedite housing options for those displaced by the fires, and develop a plan to quickly remove contaminated waste and debris from burned areas. It calls for investigating alleged 'misuse' of federal grant funds by the city of Los Angeles. Read more: Visiting L.A. after firestorm, Trump focuses on overhauling California water policy The order packages Trump's goals for California water policy together with unrelated wildfire relief measures, said Felicia Marcus, a visiting fellow at Stanford University's Water in the West Program. 'He's sort of wrapping what he wants to do for other reasons into an L.A. disaster relief cloak, which isn't cool,' Marcus said. 'It distracts from the hard, real discussions that mature and reasonable federal and state water managers and stakeholders need to have to figure out how we manage California water resources for all the things that are important to Californians, which include urban use, agricultural use, recreational use, fish and wildlife.' This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Trump reenters California's water wars. It's unclear who will win
Trump reenters California's water wars. It's unclear who will win

Los Angeles Times

time27-01-2025

  • Politics
  • Los Angeles Times

Trump reenters California's water wars. It's unclear who will win

President Trump has signed an order directing federal agencies to 'maximize' water deliveries in California and 'override' state policies if necessary. Trump's executive order outlines steps intended to increase the amount of water pumped from the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta. The directive was praised by agencies that supply water to farmlands in the San Joaquin Valley, which could receive more water under the changes ordered by Trump. Westlands Water District, the largest agricultural water supplier in the Central Valley, welcomed the executive order. 'It's clear that what we've been doing for the past few decades has not been working; not for the people, for agriculture, or for the fish,' the district said in a written statement. Westlands General Manager Allison Febbo said the district intends to work with government agencies 'to bring common sense back' to water management in the valley, one of the nation's major food-producing regions. Environmental groups said the measures Trump is seeking, if fully carried out, would be disastrous for populations of threatened and endangered fish, as well as the state's commercial and recreational fisheries and the deteriorating ecosystem of the Delta. 'It would mean the loss of California's most important wild salmon runs, devastating impacts on salmon fishing jobs, enormous degradation in Delta water quality,' said Barry Nelson, a policy representative for the fishing group Golden State Salmon Assn. He also flagged the issue of states' rights: 'This is a very clear statement that the Trump administration believes that California should not have the right to control its water resources.' The order, posted on the White House website Sunday, directs the Interior and Commerce secretaries to 'immediately take actions to override existing activities that unduly burden efforts to maximize water deliveries.' It calls for delivering more water via the federally managed Central Valley Project, one of the two main systems of aqueducts, dams and pumping facilities in California that transport supplies from the Delta southward. The president also directed the federal Bureau of Reclamation to ensure state agencies 'do not interfere.' In the order, Trump criticizes 'disastrous' policies and water 'mismanagement' by California, and directs federal agencies to scrap a plan that the Biden administration adopted last month, establishing new rules for operating the Central Valley Project and the State Water Project — California's other main water delivery system in the Central Valley. Instead, Trump has told federal agencies to more or less follow a plan adopted during his first presidency, which California and environmental groups challenged in court arguing it failed to provide adequate protections for endangered fish. The order also attempts to link local water supply problems during the deadly Los Angeles County firestorms, such as fire hydrants that ran dry, with changes in how water is managed in Northern California. It says the Trump administration is setting a new policy to 'provide Southern California with necessary water resources.' However, water experts and state officials said such comments are inaccurate. 'The premise of this executive order is false,' said Tara Gallegos, a spokesperson for Gov. Gavin Newsom. 'We're unclear what the administration's concern with the current water policy is.' She noted that California pumps as much water now as it could under prior policies during Trump's first administration, and that because reservoirs in Southern California are at record-high levels, bringing in more water from Northern California would not have affected the fire response. 'There is no shortage of water in Southern California,' Gallegos said. 'Water operations to move water south through the Delta have nothing to do with the local fire response in Los Angeles. Trump is either unaware of how water is stored in California or is deliberately misleading the public.' Gallegos said the state 'looks forward to further dialogue with the federal government on securing our water supply for a hotter, drier future.' Trump's order focuses largely on the federally operated Central Valley Project, which delivers water from the Delta to farmlands that produce almonds, pistachios, tomatoes and other crops. The CVP ends in the southern San Joaquin Valley near Bakersfield and does not reach Southern California's urban areas to the south. 'This is a manufactured crisis and water grab for the agricultural sector, who are mainly growing crops for export,' said Regina Chichizola of the advocacy group Save California Salmon. In the San Joaquin Valley, agricultural water agencies have been under growing pressure from state regulators to curb chronic overpumping of groundwater, which has led to declining aquifer levels, sinking ground and growing numbers of dry household wells. Obtaining more water from the Central Valley Project could help some of these agencies address their water deficits. Trump's order is broadly worded, with some provisions laying out ways the administration could expedite water storage projects and waive protective measures for endangered fish species. For example, it calls for expediting 'ongoing or potential major water-supply and storage projects' in California. It says the Interior and Commerce secretaries will each designate one official to coordinate environmental compliance for such projects, and develop a plan to 'suspend, revise, or rescind any regulations or procedures that unduly burden such projects.' Though the order does not specifically mention it, Trump has previously called for raising Shasta Dam to expand California's largest reservoir. Nelson, of the Golden State Salmon Assn., believes parts of the order are intended to move forward that dam-raising plan by attempting to override protections in state law for the McCloud River, which feeds into the reservoir. Conservation advocates said the order lays the groundwork for the Trump administration to leverage a rarely used amendment to the Endangered Species Act that enables the convening of a committee to exempt a federal action from the endangered species law. This committee has been called the 'God Squad,' referring to its authority to render a decision that may cause a species to go extinct. Environmental advocates said invoking this process could exempt the Central Valley Project's pumping operations from measures that protect vulnerable fish species in the Delta and San Francisco Bay, rendering these federal protections nonexistent. 'I have been working on water issues for 40 years. I have never seen such a clear statement of an administration's intent to devastate the Bay Delta system,' Nelson said. In recent years, fish populations have suffered major declines in the Delta and San Francisco Bay. Pumping to supply farms and cities has contributed to the ecological degradation of the Delta, where the fish species that are listed as threatened or endangered include steelhead trout, two types of Chinook salmon, longfin smelt, Delta smelt and green sturgeon. Fisheries authorities have shut down the salmon fishing season in California the last two years because of declining salmon populations. 'The Delta has been dying a death of a thousand cuts. This will accelerate that death significantly,' said Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla, who leads the nonprofit group Restore the Delta, which advocates for protecting the estuary. In 2020, when the previous Trump administration adopted new water delivery rules that weakened environmental protections, the state and conservation groups successfully challenged the changes in court. That cleared the way for the Biden administration, working together with the Newsom administration, to develop the current plan and the supporting biological opinions, which determine how much water can be pumped and how river flows are managed. Now, Trump is seeking to return to his administration's 2020 rules, while imposing additional measures to increase pumping. Trump's order does not appear to directly affect California's management of the State Water Project, the system that delivers water from the Delta to Los Angeles and other cities. However, because state flow requirements to protect endangered fish will remain in place regardless of any federal changes, an increase in the pumping by the federal system could, in theory, lead to a decrease in pumping by the state system, said Greg Gartrell, a former manager of the Contra Costa Water District. 'The whole situation is more complicated than turning a valve.' Gary Bobker, program director for the environmental group Friends of the River, said implementing the president's wish list would 'dewater California rivers, promote toxic algal blooms, cause a number of native species to go extinct — not just Delta smelt, but salmon, steelhead and sturgeon.' The biggest winners would be agribusinesses in the San Joaquin Valley, not people living in fire-prone areas, Bobker said. 'This exploitation of a humanitarian crisis to impose misinformed and destructive policies on California is an insult to the state's residents and the victims of the wildfires.' Trump's order also calls for emergency measures to improve disaster response. It directs federal agencies to ensure that state and local governments 'promote sensible land management practices,' calling for officials to report to the president on state policies 'inconsistent with sound disaster prevention and response.' It says the federal Office of Management and Budget will review all federal programs that support land management, water supply and disaster response. The order also directs federal agencies to expedite housing options for those displaced by the fires, and develop a plan to quickly remove contaminated waste and debris from burned areas. It calls for investigating alleged 'misuse' of federal grant funds by the city of Los Angeles. The order packages Trump's goals for California water policy together with unrelated wildfire relief measures, said Felicia Marcus, a visiting fellow at Stanford University's Water in the West Program. 'He's sort of wrapping what he wants to do for other reasons into an L.A. disaster relief cloak, which isn't cool,' Marcus said. 'It distracts from the hard, real discussions that mature and reasonable federal and state water managers and stakeholders need to have to figure out how we manage California water resources for all the things that are important to Californians, which include urban use, agricultural use, recreational use, fish and wildlife.'

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