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Water news you need to know

A collection of top water news from around California and the West compiled each weekday. Send any comments or article submissions to Foundation News & Publications Director Vik Jolly

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Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Northern Fresno County well owners must register wells by Sunday

The deadline for landowners in the North Kings Groundwater Sustainability Agency (GSA) in north Fresno County is Sunday, Nov. 30. Otherwise, well owners will be subject to a $100 penalty per well. The GSA has been on a quest to identify an estimated 7,000 wells within its boundaries since May. … The registry will help the agency fill “data gaps,” get a better handle on groundwater management and demonstrate a desire to maintain local control to state regulators. It stems from the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA), which requires local agencies bring aquifers into balance by 2040. 

Other groundwater news:

Aquafornia news SeafoodSource

California announces $71 million for salmon conservation, recovery

The state of California has announced funding for several salmon and steelhead recovery projects as part of a USD 87 million (EUR 75 million) investment in conservation. … The grant funding – which was approved at the WCB’s November meeting – will be spread across 16 projects, several of which directly tie into the California Salmon Strategy for a Hotter, Drier Future – a plan released by Governor Gavin Newsom in January 2024 to coordinate the state’s response to declining salmon populations. … The bulk of the funding – roughly USD 71 million (EUR 61 million) – will go directly to projects supporting salmon health and habitat in California’s rivers.

Other salmon news:

Aquafornia news The Ukiah Daily Journal (Calif.)

Water storage options discussed at forum in Ukiah

What will life be like for farmers in the Russian River Watershed after the Potter Valley Project is decommissioned and its dams removed? “An absolute disaster,” said one attendee of a forum held in Ukiah Monday to update the public on the process of dismantling the Pacific Gas and Electric Company’s hydroelectric plant in Mendocino County. … As for which storage options might be pursued, [IWPC legal council Scott] Shapiro said that was not something the IWPC was prepared to address at this point, as the first step was “making sure the water continues to flow, the second part is figuring out how to maximize water storage.”

Other Potter Valley Project news:

Aquafornia news Mexico News Daily

Scientists from Mexico and US create joint water management portal

Mexico’s national university and a U.S. NGO comprising water management experts have agreed to jointly develop a digital platform with information on the water resources that the two neighboring countries share. The National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM)’s Institute of Geography will work with the Permanent Forum on Binational Waters (PFBW) to create and run the platform that will include scientific data, maps and other key information in Spanish and English about the shared water sources in the border region, most prominently the Río Bravo (Rio Grande on the U.S. side), the Colorado River and the Tijuana River basin. 

Aquafornia news South Tahoe Now (South Lake Tahoe, Calif.)

Tahoe Fund launches “A Million for the Marsh” campaign

Now that the former Motel 6 building, restaurant, and parking lot have been demolished from the Upper Truckee Marsh in South Lake Tahoe, planning is underway to bring this wetland back to life. To support the next phase of this project, the Tahoe Fund announced “A Million for the Marsh” campaign to raise the first $1 million of private funds to help secure the public funds the California Tahoe Conservancy will need to revive this area and bring significant improvements to Lake Tahoe’s clarity. 

Other habitat restoration news:

Aquafornia news FOX26 (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Golden mussel invasion: What’s being done about it?

For years, farmers have struggled with water supplies. Sometimes, because of drought. Other times, because of government red tape. But now, they are facing a new threat that requires all hands on deck— from laboratories to the legislature. “The potential impact is significant,” says Kelly Vandergon, Deputy General Manager for Operations and Maintenance at Westlands Water District. FOX26 was there Friday, as crews carried out maintenance on a pump near Five Points along the California Aqueduct. As they removed the traveling water stream pump you could see shell after shell– Golden Mussels— attached to the pipe.

Other invasive species news:

Aquafornia news University of California

Blog: Solar-panel-covered canals have their day in the sun in California

California is taking the first steps in realizing an idea to save billions of gallons of water each year and produce enough clean energy to power a city the size of Los Angeles for nine months annually. The simple but brilliant concept? Cover as much of California’s roughly 4,000 miles of irrigation canals with solar canopies as possible. … Now, after almost a decade of careful study and planning, the highly anticipated Project Nexus, a private/public/academic partnership between the California Department of Water Resources, Turlock Irrigation District, and Solar Aquagrid — based on research by UC Merced and UC Santa Cruz — is online.

Aquafornia news Summit Daily (Colo.)

A Colorado filmmaker’s new documentary seeks to raise awareness of the state’s murky river access laws

Accessing rivers and streams is a “fundamental component of our culture and identity,” says an unnamed narrator in the opening minutes of a Colorado filmmaker’s latest short film. Yet it is also “an enduring conflict.”  In his 20-minute documentary “Common Waters,” filmmaker Cody Perry puts a spotlight on Colorado’s murky river-access laws and how decades of ambiguity have led to public confusion. … The issue has a long and tumultuous history in Colorado, which has seen a host of legal battles over recreationists entering sections of waterways that overlap with private land. At the center of the debate is the question of when and whether the public has a right to use those segments of streams. 

Aquafornia news Ventura County Star (Camarillo, Calif.)

Ventura issues order not to use tap water in Pierpont area

Ventura officials have warned hundreds of residents in the Pierpont neighborhood not to use their tap water after trace amounts of gasoline was detected in the city’s water supply near Harbor Boulevard and Monmouth Way. … It was unclear exactly how the gasoline may have gotten into the drinking water supply. Over a year ago, a gas-like odor spread through the beachside Pierpont neighborhood, prompting two evacuations in four days. More than a week after initial reports, agencies said they traced the source to the Sinclair gas station on Harbor Boulevard. 

Related article:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: Drought killer — California storms fill reservoirs, build up Sierra snowpack

A string of early-season storms that drenched Californians last week lifted much of the state out of drought and significantly reduced the risk of wildfires, experts say. … Overall, the state is at 186% of its average rain so far this water year, according to the Department of Water Resources. … The [Central Sierra Snow Lab] research station at Donner Pass has recorded 22 inches of snow. Although that’s about 89% of normal for this date, warmer temperatures mean that much of it has already melted. … The snow water equivalent, which measures how much water the snow would produce if it were to melt, now stands at 50%.

Other weather and water supply news around the West:

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

The West faces a water crisis. EPA could make it worse.

The Trump administration is struggling to head off a crisis along the West’s most critical river, but the pollution regulation it proposed last week could make the problems worse, according to water experts. The EPA proposal would dramatically restrict the number of streams and wetlands that receive protection under the federal Clean Water Act even though the agency itself acknowledges it would exclude many of the mountain streams and wetlands that are the source of more than 70 percent of the flow of the Colorado River. … If the EPA proposal moves forward, those diminishing supplies could face increased pollution.

Other Clean Water Act news:

Aquafornia news California Department of Water Resource

News release: New DWR conveyance study finds groundwater stabilization key to protecting Valley water supplies

The Department of Water Resources (DWR) has released a comprehensive new assessment of water conveyance in the San Joaquin Valley. … The study, an action in Governor Newsom’s 2020 Water Resilience Portfolio, finds that the top priority for improving conveyance in the San Joaquin Valley is stopping or minimizing land subsidence, especially near State Water Project and Central Valley Project conveyance facilities. This can only be achieved over the long term by raising groundwater levels above critical thresholds. The study also finds that repair of existing conveyance infrastructure is more important than expanding or building new conveyance because the region has limited surface water supplies. 

Other groundwater news:

Aquafornia news Grist

How to make data centers less thirsty

Data centers are notoriously thirsty. Researchers at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory have found that, in 2023, the facilities consumed roughly 17 billion gallons of water for their operations in the U.S. alone. But that’s only a small part of the picture: A much, much larger share of data center water-intensity is indirect, a byproduct of the facilities’ enormous appetites for energy. … However, new research from Cornell University shows that there’s a way to mitigate both the climate and water footprints of these facilities: Build them in places with lots of wind and solar energy.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news Arizona Public Media

Hobbs, western governors tackle water needs at WGA Conference

Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs joined governors from Hawaii, Montana, Idaho and Utah to talk about water, energy, agriculture and healthcare at Western Governor’s Association’s winter meeting in the Phoenix area on Thursday, Nov. 20. The conference brought state leaders together less than two weeks after the seven basin states who rely on Colorado River water failed to come to an agreement on new management guidelines. … ”I’m sure I would have the exact same views as Governor Hobbs if I was a Lower Basin state,” [Utah Gov. Spencer] Cox said during the press conference. … While Cox has pushed for resolving a new agreement without federal intervention–despite the missed federal deadline–Hobbs continued campaigning in favor of it.

Other Colorado River use news:

Aquafornia news Red Bluff Daily News (Calif.)

Saving the salmon: Major Battle Creek grant provides hope for wildlife

Efforts to improve the revitalization of Battle Creek were recently achieved through River Partners’ acquisition of the historic 1,721-acre Battle Creek Ranch in Tehama County. The acquisition was made possible through a $15.05 million grant approved by the California Wildlife Conservation Board (WCB), which also awarded nearly $600,000 to retire a water-right diversion associated with the property. The goal is to restore one of California’s most important salmon-bearing waterways, according to WCB. The acquisition will conserve the last unprotected lands along lower Battle Creek, which would complete a nearly three-decade-long effort to preserve all properties along the waterway’s 7.5-mile lower reach.

Other salmon restoration news:

Aquafornia news Denver Gazette (Colo.)

Is a larger beaver population in Colorado possible? It’s complicated.

Colorado Parks and Wildlife wants to see more beavers back at their historic range in the state. That’s clear from the “overarching goal” stated in a recently released draft strategy: “Increase beaver populations and beaver-occupied wetland habitats in Colorado until social or ecological carrying capacity is reached.” Those social and ecological factors are complicated — also clear from the 125-page document called the Beaver Conservation and Management Strategy. … In building dams, beavers are known to affect stream flows in a way that guards against flooding, protects water quality by controlling debris and combats drought by recharging groundwater

Other wetland biodiversity news:

Aquafornia news The Hill

Opinion: Congress urged to reform infrastructure approval process

… In my district in California’s Central Valley, we see the need for massive investments in new water infrastructure to meet the needs of our growers and disadvantaged communities, yet we seem incapable of moving beyond the endless planning and discussion phases. … A clear example is the Los Banos Creek Detention Project in western Merced County. … Instead of being fast-tracked, the project, first proposed in 2012, has since wound its way through separate approval processes at the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, California Department of Water Resources and State Water Resources Control Board.
–Written by Rep. Adam Gray, who represents the 13th District of California in Congress.

Other infrastructure news:

Aquafornia news Steamboat Pilot & Today (Colo.)

Zebra mussels found in Colorado River, not Yampa, but threat looms

Colorado Parks and Wildlife has expanded the area of the Colorado River labelled “infested” with zebra mussels. The area extends from the confluence of the Eagle River down to the Colorado-Utah border. The designation comes after CPW sampled four Western Slope rivers — the Eagle, Gunnison, Roaring Fork and Colorado rivers — on Oct. 29. The Yampa River feeds the Colorado through the Green River, and faces threats of its own, apart from zebra mussels. …. Of the five main aquatic nuisance species closely monitored by CPW — Eurasian watermilfoil, ​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​New Zealand mudsnails, quagga mussels, rusty crayfish and zebra mussels — only the crayfish is identified in the Yampa, and has been since 2009.

Aquafornia news Colorado Public Radio

More than half the water use in the Rio Grande River Basin is unsustainable

Threats due to drought and overuse continue to threaten water availability in the Rio Grande River Basin in Southern Colorado and all along its entire 1,900-mile-long course. That’s according to a new study by the World Wildlife Fund, Sustainable Waters and various universities. … Researchers say 52 percent of the basin’s water used directly for human activities isn’t replenishable from renewable sources like snow melt. The study points to irrigated agriculture, which comprises about 87 percent of the use in the entire river basin, combined with lower snowfall, as the primary causes of depletion. 

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

Monday Top of the Scroll: Bay Area city adds new, drought-proof source of water

The city of Antioch is doing what many Bay Area communities have only talked about: turning salt water into drinking water. The city’s new $120 million desalination plant, which began operating in September, was built to ensure that the local water supply, from the vast Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, would remain drinkable despite its rising salinity. The city now can get up to 30% of its total water from desalination. … Across California, communities are looking to firm up their water supplies in the face of myriad climate pressures, including increasing droughts and decreasing snowpack. Several water agencies are turning to desal.

Other desalination news around the West: