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Aquafornia
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 Writer Matt Jenkins.

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Aquafornia news USA Today

Friday Top of the Scroll: Lake Powell hits lowest summer level ever, raising risk of ‘dead pool’

Lake Powell ‒ the massive Colorado River reservoir that produces power for millions of homes across the West ‒ is the emptiest it has ever been entering the hottest part of the summer. And the worst is still to come. Although the lake’s levels have briefly fallen lower in years past, those low-water levels came in the spring, before melting snow refilled it. This year, that refill never happened. As a result, Lake Powell will next spring fall to “minimum power pool,” according to a newly released federal projection. If the water levels fall below that, the Glen Canyon Dam would stop generating electricity.

Other Colorado River management news:

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

House committee advances data center study bill

The House Science, Space and Technology Committee approved legislation Thursday that would standardize how the federal government studies data centers and their energy and water use. The committee passed H.R. 9372, the Data Infrastructure Energy Measurement and Standards Act, 34-1. Rep. Daniel Webster (R-Fla.) was the lone no vote. The bill, led by Rep. Suhas Subramanyam (D-Va.), would direct the Department of Energy and the National Institute of Standards and Technology to draw up standards and best practices for reporting the energy and water use of artificial intelligence data centers.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news Nevada Current

Workgroup crafting broad legislative proposal on state water policy

Nevada experienced record low snowpacks across northern Nevada this winter, while summer heat and low precipitation continues to exacerbate drought in eastern Nevada. Those factors make protecting Nevada’s limited water resources more pressing than ever, as legislators prepare to consider a broad reaching “Omnibus Water Bill” next year. On Wednesday, a workgroup tasked with evaluating policy updates to Nevada Water Law presented the Joint Interim Committee on Natural Resources a bill proposal that would cover a wide range of water related issues for the 2027 legislative session. … Several details from the proposed bill were provided to lawmakers on Wednesday and largely centered on the state’s groundwater, including a proposal to establish county groundwater boards and increase funding for the state’s groundwater retirement program.

Other water planning news around the West:

Aquafornia news KPBS (San Diego)

Tijuana, thirsty for water amid Colorado River crisis, turns to Oceanside

… To learn from a city already in the water reuse business, Mexican officials toured Oceanside’s Pure Water facility on Tuesday. … Four years ago, Oceanside becamethe first in San Diego County and the second in California to open a state-of-the-art purification facility. It turns 3 million gallons of recycled wastewater per day into drinking water for residents, accounting for 20% of the city’s drinking water. Mayor Esther Sanchez said years of severe drought forced Oceanside and other communities in the western U.S. to think about creating a local water supply, one that could help them rely less on the Colorado River and prepare for future droughts. … Sanchez said she believes a water-reuse approach for Tijuana will work, as it has for her city.

Other desalination and water recycling news:

Aquafornia news Active NorCal (Redding, Calif.)

The Klamath River dams are gone. Now comes the plan to bring steelhead home.

Two years after crews pulled the last of four dams off the Klamath River, the question has shifted from whether the fish would return to how far they can go. California Trout has answered part of that with a new recovery blueprint built around steelhead, the wild, sea-running trout that once climbed the river’s full length before concrete walls cut them off. The report lays out a long-term plan for rebuilding steelhead runs across the more than 400 miles of habitat reopened by the 2024 demolition, the largest dam removal in United States history. It draws on monitoring that has already produced surprises, including thousands of Chinook pushing past the old Iron Gate Dam site and salmon reaching Upper Klamath Lake for the first time in over a century.

Other Klamath River news:

Aquafornia news City News Service (Los Angeles)

High-severity wildfires burn 30 times more area than in 1985, UCLA study finds

High-severity wildfires that kill large numbers of trees are now burning far more acreage in California than they did four decades ago, according to a UCLA study published Monday. The study, appearing in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, found that the area burned by high-severity fires in California increased thirtyfold between 1985 and 2024, while overall forest acreage burned annually increased tenfold. Researchers said severe fires, which often kill entire stands of trees rather than allowing forests to recover naturally, have overtaken lower- severity fires as the dominant type of forest fire in California. … Researchers linked the trend to increasingly warm and dry conditions associated with climate change, as well as decades of fire suppression that have allowed dense vegetation and underbrush to accumulate in many forests.

Aquafornia news The Mendocino Voice (Calif.)

Feds take Potter Valley dam “public” comments privately Tuesday evening

People who came to the Ukiah Valley Conference Center on Tuesday evening wanting to weigh in on the future of the Potter Valley dams did not get to address a room. They got a ticket number. Most walked in expecting a hearing. What they found was a waiting room — rows of chairs, mostly empty, and a handful of federal staffers. … The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) is weighing Pacific Gas and Electric Co.’s application to surrender its license for the century-old Potter Valley Project and decommission it — a plan that calls for removing the project’s two Eel River dams. … Staff assured them that the transcript would go up on FERC’s website in about 10 days.

Other infrastructure news:

Aquafornia news KPBS (San Diego)

San Diego County Water Authority OKs 3% rate hike for 2027

The San Diego Water Authority approved a 3% wholesale water rate increase for 2027 on Thursday during a board meeting largely devoid of members of the public. The utility said an increase is necessary to meet revenue requirements, operational needs and fiscal goals. Leaders with the authority said the rate hike is nothing to celebrate, but the 3% overall increase in the coming year is below the national rate of inflation and down from earlier projections close to 6%. They said the lower increase is due to the impact of two water transfer agreements this spring.

Related:

Aquafornia news The Sacramento Bee (Calif.)

Lake Tahoe officials turn back boaters trying to skirt checks for golden mussels

Authorities have intercepted six watercraft that illegally attempted to launch on Lake Tahoe amid a campaign to keep golden mussels and other invasive species out of the iconic Sierra lake. The boaters stopped this summer by Tahoe Regional Planning Agency inspectors were attempting to enter the lake with tampered inspection seals. The wire seals certify a vessel had either been decontaminated and inspected for invasive species or was last launched in the Lake Tahoe basin, agency officials said in a news release. … Inspectors at the agency’s Meyers inspection station found four invasive golden mussels aboard a boat bound for Lake Tahoe from the Sacramento area in May, officials said. Agency officials turned the vessel over to the California Department of Fish and Wildlife.

Other aquatic nuisance species news:

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Not all boulders are equal – or wanted – on the Kern River

River enthusiasts are dismayed and alarmed by Kern County’s plan to use riprap – boulders and chunks of rock – to shore up the bank along Kernville’s Riverside Park, which was damaged during the 2023 flood. Dumping riprap on the bank of an otherwise accessible and heavily used section of the Kern River is a huge missed opportunity, according to local boaters and others. It can also be dangerous, they say. … The county’s position is that replacing riprap at Riverside Park is what the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) disaster recovery grant will pay for, so that’s the project it’s going to build.

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Thursday Top of the Scroll: ‘This is terrifying’: The Colorado River, a lifeline for seven states, is drying up at its source

High in the Rocky Mountains, spring-fed streams and ponds have vanished, leaving patches of cracked mud in what were once spongy meadows. This year has been so extremely warm and arid that the mountains have remained largely snowless. The water-generating source of the Colorado River, its headwaters, is drying up. … About three-fourths of the water that’s taken out of the Colorado River is used for agriculture, producing alfalfa, corn, lettuce, broccoli and other crops. In Colorado, farmers and ranchers are struggling with the immediate consequences. They’re leaving many fields and pastures dry, selling off cows, and bracing for tough economic times.

Other Colorado River management news:

Aquafornia news The New York Times

Utah senate president loses Republican primary after data center backlash

The president of the Utah State Senate, who championed a huge data center beside the Great Salt Lake, was defeated in his Republican primary on Tuesday night, one of the most high-profile signs of the voter backlash to data center projects. … Mr. Adams did not directly represent the 40,000-acre proposed site of the data center in Box Elder County, a fast-growing farming and industrial area about 60 miles north of Salt Lake City. But he became the focus of an anti-data-center groundswell because he served as chairman of a Utah agency that approved initial plans this spring to build the data center, known as Stratos. … They [voters] worried about how much energy it would consume and how its water usage would affect the drought-stricken Great Salt Lake.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news Monterey County Now (Seaside, Calif.)

It’s a critical year to pick a solution to save Monterey County’s aquifers. The questions are how, and who pays?

The sea wants to move inland, a fact that’s been known in the region for over 80 years as agricultural production increased. But over time, groundwater was pumped faster than could be replenished, exacerbating the inland march of salty water beneath Castroville toward Salinas. … Thanks to California’s Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, passed just over a decade ago, local water agencies need to decide on a plan to protect future water supply. … Now, 2026 marks a pivotal year. All of the groundwater modeling, the public meetings, the basin boundary decisions and feasibility studies of the last 10 years culminate in this moment, where local agencies must push plans across the line into implementation.

Other groundwater news:

Aquafornia news The Colorado Sun (Denver)

Key to predicting wildfires may be underneath Colorado

Western wildfires start and spread because of a whole host of factors — wind, temperature, drought, forest health. But scientists are finding that the most important indicator of where the next big fire might ignite isn’t held in the trees themselves, but in the soil their roots are buried in. Recent studies demonstrate how soil moisture data can help wildfire experts predict a potential fire’s location and severity. Those studies could eventually aid in developing more precise forecasts for fires across the country. This link, between how moist the ground is under a forest or grassland and fire risk, is gaining more traction among scientists due to an increasingly expansive network of monitoring equipment. 

Other water and wildfire news:

Aquafornia news Monterey Herald (Calif.)

State Water Board approves part of controversial desalination project

The California State Water Board approved the issuance of a general use lease to build slant wells on the former site of the the CEMEX sand mining operation in Marina. The decision took only a few minutes on Tuesday, but came after over four hours of public comment from both detractors and supporters. These wells will draw from seawater and a portion of Marina’s groundwater to supply California American Water’s desalination project, which they say will build climate resiliency and provide water to vulnerable Castroville. … Marina’s argument is simple, but multifold. Industrial development stands to compromise the delicate water table under the city and create permanent ecological damage, a concern the staff report from the water board addresses but does not expand on or further investigate.

Other desalination news:

Aquafornia news Navajo Times

Reclamation awards $75.5 million pipeline contract for Navajo-Gallup water project

The Bureau of Reclamation has awarded Flatland Energy Services LLC a $75.5 million contract to build a section of pipeline that will help deliver water to parts of the Navajo Nation in New Mexico. Flatland will install 10,000 feet of pipeline starting at the Frank Chee Willetto Reservoir 17 miles east of Shiprock as part of the Navajo-Gallup Water Supply Project, according to the bureau. When the project is finished, 300 miles of pipeline, two water treatment plants and at least 19 pumping facilities will carry water from the San Juan River to the southwestern portions of the Jicarilla Apache Nation and Gallup. This section will cross beneath the San Juan River, a major tributary of the Colorado River, and the Chaco River to avoid difficult terrain and existing infrastructure.

Other water infrastructure news:

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Iranian-linked hacker group did not access CalWater operational systems, investigation finds

A breach of California Water Service systems in Bakersfield, Visalia and Chico by an Iranian-linked hacking group that surfaced June 11 was limited to a one customer account and an external GPS website, according Cal Water spokeswoman Yvonne Kingman. She wrote in an email that CalWater immediately activated its cybersecurity response plan using Mandiant, a cybersecurity firm that specializes in these types of threats. “Mandiant did not identify evidence of threat actor activity in Cal Water’s internal information technology or operational technology environments,” Kingman wrote in an email. “The investigation determined that the threat actor accessed one active customer’s online Cal Water account using stolen user credentials.”

Related:

Aquafornia news NBC Palm Springs (Calif.)

Elevated chromium-6 detected in Coachella Valley drinking water exceeds strict new California limits

Chromium-6, a chemical compound known to cause cancer, has been detected in localized valley drinking water supplies, triggering notification letters to regional consumers. While local water officials stress that the trace amounts discovered do not constitute an emergency or an immediate public health hazard, the recorded concentrations do breach California’s newly established, highly aggressive state water quality benchmarks. Residents across the Coachella Valley recently received informational letters alerting them that water testing conducted in May 2025 found levels of hexavalent chromium, commonly referred to as Chromium-6, above the state’s drinking water safety threshold. … California’s new maximum contaminant level is 90% more stringent than the national restriction.

Other drinking water news:

Aquafornia news Arizona's Family (Phoenix)

Extreme heat, dust may be reshaping Phoenix monsoon storms, researchers say

Arizona State University researchers and scientists from across the country are studying whether extreme heat, rapid urban growth, dust and other airborne particles are changing how monsoon storms form and where rain falls across metro Phoenix. The project, called DUSTIEAIM, Desert Urban System Integrated Atmospheric Monsoon, kicked off this month on ASU’s West Valley campus. … The study is focused on three questions. First, researchers want to understand how Phoenix itself influences weather, including how buildings, roads, pavement and urban growth interact with the surrounding Sonoran Desert to affect heat, wind patterns, cloud formation and storm development. Second, scientists will investigate the role of dust, pollution and wildfire smoke. … Third, the team wants to better understand what controls where and when rain falls across the Valley.

Related:

Aquafornia news San Diego Red (Tijuana, Mex.)

Councilor Miguel Loza to lead CONAGUA delegation over Tijuana River cleanup

During the weekly meeting of the ANPAC Tijuana chapter, Councilor Miguel Loza announced plans to form a delegation in the coming days for a trip to Mexico City. The goal is to press the central offices of the National Water Commission (CONAGUA) for immediate action on the urgent cleanup of the Tijuana River channel. Beyond the immediate demand, Loza said he would also pursue the creation of a permanent working group, bringing together all stakeholders to address the issue on an ongoing basis through a dedicated collaborative roundtable. … The last major cleanup operation along the channel took place in 2019, carried out by the state administration and CESPT. However, due to a lack of civic awareness among some residents, the canal has since been repurposed as an illegal dumping ground.