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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 Nevada Current

Wednesday Top of the Scroll: California, the biggest water user in the basin, pitches Colorado River framework

California’s biggest water districts presented their own framework Tuesday for how to share the Colorado River’s dwindling water supply, including a commitment to conserve 440,000 acre-feet of water per year – enough to meet the needs of 1.5 million households annually. Last month, the seven western states that rely on the Colorado River missed a federally-imposed deadline to submit a preliminary agreement for a plan to replace the river’s operating guidelines set to expire at the end of 2026. Those negotiations continued Tuesday during the annual Colorado River Water Users Association’s conference in Las Vegas at Caesars Palace. … California is projected to cap water use at 3.76 million acre-feet in 2025 – the lowest annual use since 1949.

Other Colorado River negotiations news:

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

Westlands approves plan to convert a quarter of its Calif. farmland to solar

The board of California’s largest agricultural water district approved a master plan Tuesday to convert over a quarter of the land in its service area into solar farms, a sign that Central Valley growers are looking for new business as their water sources dry up. The board of the Westlands Water District approved the plan to develop 136,000 acres on the west side of the Central Valley into solar farms, complete with new transmission lines and substations at a Tuesday morning meeting in Fresno. The new master plan, called the Valley Clean Infrastructure Plan, would allow for the development of up to 20 gigawatts of new solar farms, which taken together would be the largest solar installation in the world.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Voice of San Diego

Mexicali farmers threaten to use their Colorado River water, putting Tijuana’s supply in jeopardy

If Mexicali farmers can’t cut a deal with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum’s administration, the city of Tijuana’s at risk of losing its water supply from the Colorado River.  For generations, these farmers – known as Irrigation District 14 – sold river water the Mexican government ceded to them for agricultural production to coastal cities like Tijuana and Ensenada. The Colorado River flows through Mexicali, but because of this deal, it’s diverted over 100 miles the coast via an aqueduct. But Mexico’s president has taken a hard stance on how the country’s constitution defines ownership of water: It belongs to the nation and cannot be privatized.

Other water rights news:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

During the January fires, L.A.’s hydrants ran dry. Residents are demanding solutions

… How did entire communities find themselves in the midst of raging fires without enough water on hand to fight them? The answers have exposed the weaknesses of Los Angeles’ water systems and prompted widespread calls to redesign Southern California’s water infrastructure. Water managers and experts said the water systems in Pacific Palisades and Altadena were never designed for wildfires that rage through entire neighborhoods, or for infernos intensified by climate change. In fact, their design effectively guaranteed that hydrants would lose pressure and fail during a giant fire. … So far, however, local officials in Los Angeles and L.A. County appear to have taken few, if any, concrete steps toward major changes.

Aquafornia news CalMatters

Trump administration commits to cleaning up Tijuana River. Will California step up?

As Tijuana River sewage has contaminated neighborhoods in southern San Diego County, the federal government has pledged two-thirds of a billion to clean it up. Now local lawmakers are calling on California to step up the fight against cross-border pollution, and one introduced a bill this week to revisit air quality standards for noxious gas from the river. … The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on Monday announced a new agreement with Mexico to plan for wastewater infrastructure to accommodate future population growth in Tijuana. On Wednesday State Sen. Steve Padilla introduced a bill to update state standards for hydrogen sulfide, a noxious gas with a rotten egg smell that’s produced by sewage in the river.

Other U.S.-Mexico water news:

Aquafornia news The Vacaville Reporter (Calif.)

Garamendi, Thompson bash Trump on Delta plan

United States Representatives John Garamendi and Mike Thompson, alongside five other California congressional representatives, penned a letter to Acting Commissioner of the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation Scott Cameron, blasting his plan to siphon additional water out of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. … The letter, penned in response to the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation’s Dec. 2 Notice of Decision on Executive Order 14181, argues that the delta is too ecologically, agriculturally and municipally important to convey for other purposes. The delta is the hub for California’s water supply, providing fresh water to approximately 30 million Californians and six million acres of farmland,” the letter reads.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

Lawmakers press EPA on water loan slowdown

Senate Democrats rebuked EPA on Wednesday for the sluggish pace of loan closings under a popular water financing program, accusing the Trump administration of putting up “red tape.” In a letter to Administrator Lee Zeldin, the lawmakers said the slowdown affecting the Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (WIFIA) program is stunting water projects in California, Florida, Maryland, Nebraska and other states. Led by Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) … “Our states and municipalities rely on WIFIA loans to finance large-scale projects to provide clean water to our constituents, and it is imperative that EPA use the resources Congress has provided to address the significant need for water infrastructure improvements,” the lawmakers wrote.

Aquafornia news UCLA Luskin Center for Innovation

News release: Phase 1 California wastewater study identifies at-risk systems

California has reached a major milestone in understanding the condition of its wastewater systems with the completion of Phase 1 of the statewide Wastewater Needs Assessment (WWNA). Led by UCLA’s Luskin Center for Innovation and partners, the effort established a first-ever comprehensive baseline evaluation of wastewater infrastructure performance, risks, and unmet needs—creating a foundation for more equitable sanitation policy and investment across the state. The WWNA was conceived to help answer a simple yet critical question: how well are California’s thousands of wastewater systems serving people and communities, especially disadvantaged and underserved areas? 

Aquafornia news Davis Enterprise (Calif.)

Putah Creek sees record salmon return

A record 2,150 king salmon (or Chinook salmon) returned to spawn in Putah Creek this fall. Timely water releases, habitat creation and regional collaboration among various public and private organizations are being credited with the successful run. Putah Creek, which runs along the border of Yolo and Solano Counties near Sacramento has historically supported a small, but vital salmon population. Estimates in 2016 put the salmon return at 1,700, but this year’s record-breaking number is the result of a precise, individual count conducted by biologists with UC Davis at the department of wildlife, fish and conservation biology.

Other salmon news:

Aquafornia news KUNC (Greeley, Colo.)

Colorado approves ‘first-in-the-nation’ water safeguards. Could they be a model for other states?

Colorado took a major step last week to protect wetlands and streams by finalizing rules for a new state-run permitting program. The new ‘dredge-and-fill’ rules address a gap by the U.S. Supreme Court’s Sackett decision two years ago, which drastically shrunk the number of waterways eligible for federal protections. The ruling left millions of acres of wetlands and miles of streams nationwide vulnerable to pollution. Under the new rules, businesses or landowners must obtain a state permit to dig ditches or fill wetlands that no longer qualify for federal protection. … New Mexico passed similar legislation this year and its environment department expects to hold a rulemaking hearing next summer.

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Contractor hired for $13.5 million water system but East Orosi residents waiting for state to pull trigger

More than 15 months after Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a trio of bills to bring clean drinking water to homes in East Orosi, residents are still waiting for the project to break ground. The 950 residents of the tiny northern Tulare County community got a bit of good news last month when the Tulare County Board of Supervisors voted to hire a contractor, West Valley Construction Company, to build the $13.5 million water system more than a decade in the making. But construction won’t start until the state Water Resources Control Board first issues a Notice to Proceed. 

Other drinking water news:

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Well registration efforts continue in Tulare and Fresno counties

Valley groundwater agencies are continuing their push for landowners to register wells, some by holding workshops and others by extending deadlines.  Landowners in the Mid-Kaweah Groundwater Sustainability Agency (GSA) can get help registering wells at two workshops on Friday, Dec. 19 and Friday, Jan. 16 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. … The board of directors of the North Kings GSA in northeast Fresno County, recently voted to extend the deadline to register wells to Jan. 30. Nearly 6,000 wells were registered by the original Nov. 30 deadline and the new grace period will allow well owners to register without penalty. Approximately 1,000 more wells need to be registered. 

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Fresno, Calif.)

Three vie for vacant board seat on powerful Kern water agency

Three people have put their hats in the ring for a Kern County Water Agency board seat that was left vacant when that board member was hired as the agency’s General Manager. Tamara Johnson, Director of California Water Service’s southern region; Greg Wegis, longtime farmer and farm manager; and Mark Mulkay, retired General Manager of the Kern Delta Water District, all submitted letters of interest for the seat. The board is expected to select the new board member at its meeting on Wednesday.

Aquafornia news Reuters

Desert storm: Can data centres slake their insatiable thirst for water?

Surging use of AI has led to a frenzy of construction activity to build new data centres, particularly in the U.S. Estimates put the total number of these facilities in operation worldwide this year at 6,111, with upwards of 2,000 more set to come online by 2030. There has been a lot of focus on the implications for power grids, but less on the toll this unbridled growth will take on a commodity that is in even shorter supply: fresh water. … Periods of prolonged drought, an over-allocation of water supplies from the Colorado River, as well as dwindling groundwater resources make Phoenix a “severely water-stressed region”, according to the Ceres report. If all the data centres now planned come online, the city will experience a 32% increase in annual water stress.

Aquafornia news University of Colorado Boulder

Blog: How contaminated mountain streams could power American-made technology

… [M]etal concentrations in Colorado are increasing over time as warming summer temperatures thaw previously frozen sites containing acid-forming bedrock. This result is alarming from an ecological perspective. If metal concentrations climb too high, they can kill aquatic species, as evidenced by one mountain lake that washed up hundreds of dead fish this summer. But, these increased concentrations may also present an opportunity. That’s according to Baolin Deng and Pan Ni, two distinguished researchers at the University of Missouri’s Missouri Water Center, who are now working to unlock an efficient process capable of extracting rare earths from acid rock drainage.

Aquafornia news Politico

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: The brawl over the Colorado River is about more than water

Western states are brawling over the future of the Colorado River — with President Donald Trump looming in the background. Talks kicking off Tuesday in Las Vegas will help determine whether the Trump administration has to step in and take the political heat of deciding how to divide the shrinking river’s water supplies among powerful industries and more than 40 million people — a fight that includes the swing states of Arizona and Nevada, politically influential farmers and ranchers, and burgeoning semiconductor and artificial intelligence companies. It’s the highest-stakes water fight the U.S. has seen in more than a century. 

Other Colorado River negotiations news:

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

Rain returns to California this week. Here’s the storm-by-storm outlook

After nearly four weeks without rain, Californians are finally seeing precipitation return to the forecast. The wet pattern arriving this week comes in pieces, and the Bay Area should see significant rain from the final storm, while temperatures will remain cool. … Unfortunately, neither of the first two storm systems will provide much relief for the snow-starved Sierra Nevada. Snow levels for both systems will remain high, hovering near 8,000 feet, meaning precipitation will fall as rain at most Sierra ski resorts. Only the highest elevations are likely to see light snowfall.

Other snowpack and water supply news around the West:

Aquafornia news NBC 7 (San Diego)

US and Mexico sign ‘Minute 333’ to push long-term fix for border sewage crisis

The United States and Mexico have signed a new binational agreement known as Minute 333, establishing a detailed plan to address the toxic sewage crisis that has polluted the Tijuana River Valley and repeatedly closed beaches in Imperial Beach and Coronado. … Under Minute 333, Mexico will, by December 2028, build the Tecolote-La Gloria Wastewater Treatment Plan, which will be able to process 3 million gallons per day. Mexico will also construct a new sediment basin in Matadero Canyon — near Smuggler’s Gulch along the border — before the 2026-27 rainy season to capture polluted runoff. In addition, Mexico will develop a Tijuana Water Infrastructure Master Plan within six months.

Other U.S.-Mexico water news: 

Aquafornia news CalMatters

The hydrants will run dry: Trump’s LA fire claims missed the mark, study shows

As firefighters battled catastrophic fires in Los Angeles last January, one question reverberated across the country: Where was the water? … A team of researchers, led by Gregory Pierce, director of the UCLA Water Resources Group, set out to uncover whether the intense focus on water supply meant that dry hydrants had uniquely hampered the Palisades firefight, or whether this was a common occurrence. In a policy brief published Monday, the researchers used media reports to confirm that when fires burn urban areas, hydrant flows often sputter out — the result of lost pressure as burnt homes hemorrhage water and too many hoses simultaneously draw on a limited supply.

Other fire and water news:

Aquafornia news Arizona Republic (Phoenix)

Colorado River deal could make or break crucial wetland habitats

The rusty observation tower at the edge of this wastewater-fed marsh offers an osprey-eye view of two possible futures for the parched and overworked Colorado River. To one side, the marsh spreads across more than 20 square miles of pools and islands choked with cattails and phragmites. … On the tower’s other side, boundless flats of sand and cracked mud spread to the horizon across what was, prior to the river’s damming a century ago, one of Earth’s great green estuaries. … The challenges are tremendous all along the Southwest’s most critical river, one that supplies water to 40 million people and feeds millions more. But here on the delta and across the mountains and deserts and wetlands from source to sea, people who refuse to watch the Colorado die are prioritizing its care and nursing it back to health.

Other wetland and watershed protection news: