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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Gov. Gavin Newsom’s administration launched a planning effort
Wednesday to identify enough new water to fill up two Shasta
Reservoirs, or 9 million acre-feet, by 2040 to offset expected
losses to climate change. The 2028 Water Plan, a result of last
year’s SB 72, will lay out a blueprint for new reservoirs,
groundwater recharge and conservation projects. “Climate
change is reshaping life in California through historic
droughts and record storms that threaten the farms that feed
the nation, communities that depend on reliable water, and the
environment we all share,” Newsom said in a statement.
Despite a strong start to California’s wet season, snowpack
conditions remain below average. A deficient snowpack
could mean less water available for summer irrigation,
threatening to cut surface water deliveries to farmers. …
State officials reported the snowpack was at 59% of
average by the end of last month. San Joaquin
Valley farmer Aaron Barcellos said he’s concerned about what
water supplies he will be able to get from this winter’s
snowpack, especially since about two-thirds of his farm’s water
comes from snowpack storage. The uncertainty has already
begun to impact his planning—particularly with cotton, which he
has grown since 1988.
Other snowpack and water supply news around the West:
The latest news about the Colorado River is dire. Since 2000,
the river’s flow has shrunk about 20%. An extremely warm winter
has brought very little snow in the Rocky Mountains. Reservoirs
are declining to critically low levels. And the leaders of
seven states are still at loggerheads over the water cutbacks
each should accept to prevent reservoirs from falling further.
… Officials are talking about what they will do if no
deal is reached. Representatives of Arizona, Nevada and
California already offered cuts of 27%, 17% and 10%,
respectively. But that hasn’t been enough for negotiators
representing Colorado, Wyoming, New Mexico and Utah.
An unlikely coalition of farmers and water managers, who in the
past would be at loggerheads over the Sacramento-San
Joaquin River Delta, are banding together in an effort
to move the needle on how to better manage this unique
resource. … The Great Valley Farm Water Partnership,
formed two years ago, includes members from the delta and San
Joaquin Valley, regions that have historically advocated for
delta operations from their own silos. By seeking unity and
practical outcomes for both farmers and the environment, the
partnership is gaining traction.
California’s water managers have long looked for ways to adapt
to a hotter, drier future where the impacts of climate change
leave less water to meet the state’s needs. At our annual
Water
101 Workshopon March 26 in
Sacramento, participants will hear from
Joel Metzger, deputy director for statewide water
resources planning, on efforts underway by the
California Department of Water Resources to achieve a target of
identifying 9 million acre-feet of additional water
supply by 2040, roughly equal to the capacity of two
Shasta Reservoirs. Seating is limited and filling up quickly,
so don’t miss out!
The Mendocino County Inland Water and Power Commission,
local organizations, engineers, politicians, and community
members have been exploring long-term water supply options
ahead of PG&E’s plan to decommission the Potter Valley
Project. The commission’s most recent
meeting this month looked at proposals such as
raising Coyote Valley Dam at Lake Mendocino. … Raising
the dam could increase water availability, storage, and allow
water to be pumped to Potter Valley and other areas that would
be most impacted by the decommissioning. However, raising the
dam would also require altering nearby structures at Lake
Mendocino.
In an effort to prod stragglers, a Kings County groundwater
agency approved charging penalties to Lemore-area well owners
who don’t register with the agency by April 30. … The
board agreed and approved a $100 per well late fee for
landowners who aren’t registered by the deadline. So far, the
GSA has received well registrations from about 67% of
landowners. The registration and penalty policies apply to
wells that pump more than two acre feet per acre of land.
Owners of domestic or abandoned wells won’t be subject to the
penalty for registering late.
A groundbreaking partnership between farmers and fishermen aims
to save salmon in the Sacramento River. More than 500,000
juvenile fall-run salmon are now part of an imprinting project
in Red Bluff to help improve their survival. The project, known
as the “Bridge Group Project,” introduces juvenile salmon from
the Coleman National Fish Hatchery into large,
predator-protected net pens within the Tehama-Colusa Canal
Forebay in Red Bluff. During a three to four-week period,
the fish are exposed to the chemical and olfactory cues of
Sacramento River water, allowing them to imprint on these
signals.
The rapid expansion of data centers in Arizona has set off a
chorus of residents and lawmakers focused on the question of
water use in a drought-prone state. But one environmental
analyst argues the concern over water is misplaced, and that
electricity demand poses the more significant long-term risk.
Andy Masley is a former high school science teacher turned
environmental blogger whose fact-checking of a bestselling book
about AI’s environmental footprint earned him a polite
correction from the author and an interview with the New York
Times. … His conclusion on water use is blunt: critics are
relying on outdated or incorrect numbers that don’t tell the
full story.
A mammoth solar farm is moving forward in the heart of
California. If built, which seems increasingly likely, it would
cover 200 square miles of land and generate 21,000 megawatts of
electricity, enough to power entire cities. Huge batteries will
store some of that power until it’s needed most. Farmers are
among the project’s backers. … These farmers are now
facing a new water crisis. The canal has been delivering less
water in recent years because of droughts and competing claims
on that water. Until recently, the farmers had a backup water
supply: They could pump water from aquifers a thousand feet
underground. Now, though, a new state law is coming into force
that bans overpumping from the aquifer.
Nearly 6.5 million people in Somalia are facing severe hunger
as worsening drought, conflict and global aid cuts intensify
the country’s humanitarian crisis, the federal government and
U.N. agencies said Tuesday. … Officials said that the
food security situation is deteriorating because of water
shortages, insecurity, conflict and historically low levels of
humanitarian assistance linked to global funding cuts. The
intensified drought, linked to lower-than-average rainfall, has
triggered widespread food insecurity, crop failures, livestock
losses, food price increases and displacement.
A warm, dry winter is beginning to create concerns for Aurora’s
water supply. Snowpack across Colorado continues to lag and
reservoir levels sit below what the city typically
expects at this time of year. Aurora Water says it now has
more frequent internal meetings and closer monitoring of
storage levels, runoff projections and short term weather
patterns. … Denver Water is also closely watching its
supply after a season that began weak and has stayed that way.
Other winter storm and water supply news around the West:
More than half a million young Chinook salmon are part of a new
imprinting project aimed at getting the fish back to the
Sacramento River as parts of the Northstate salmon fishery
remain closed for a third year. The Bridge Group is working to
speed up the return of salmon by placing 500,000 young Chinook
salmon into protective net pens instead of trucking them away.
The effort is a multiyear experiment designed to increase
survival and ultimately boost the number of salmon that return
to the Sacramento River. … Half of the fish will be
released into the Sacramento River, while the other half will
be trucked into San Francisco Bay.
Fears are growing in the Colorado River basin about the
prospect of painful water cuts, prolonged court battles and
other dire impacts after negotiators from seven states missed a
second key deadline Saturday to reach a conservation deal.
… Conservation groups want the states in the basin to
start using tools like conservation pools, which would offer
new incentives to voluntarily cut back and save water, and a
climate response indicator to help determine how much water
should be released from Lake Powell. Releases would be
curtailed in response to drought conditions. But those ideas
aimed at protecting the river’s health could be stalled if
states don’t come up with an agreement to implement before the
current operating guidelines at Lake Powell and Lake Mead
expire this fall.
Meghan Hertel was officially sworn in to lead the California
Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW), bringing a background
in biodiversity conservation, habitat restoration, and
science-based resource management to the role. As director,
Hertel will oversee management of California’s fish and
wildlife populations, habitat restoration efforts, and
sustainable hunting and fishing, while working with Tribes,
rural communities, landowners, and outdoor stakeholders across
the state. Hertel most recently served as deputy secretary
of biodiversity and habitat at the California Natural Resources
Agency. (Hertel is a graduate of the Water Education
Foundation’s California Water Leaders
program).
The infrastructure of water control looms large across the
history of the American West. Western rivers and watersheds
have long been and remain fundamental sites of contest and
power, hope and disappointment. The fifth season of Western
Edition — the podcast from the Huntington-USC Institute on
California and the West (ICW) — digs into the complex history
of how humans dammed, diverted, and exploited water resources
in the region across several hundred years. … Across its
six episodes, the new season invites us all to consider if we
are due for a paradigm shift in how we think about our most
precious resource.
California has taken a further step to strengthen its water
resilience strategy by accelerating the authorization of
stormwater capture and groundwater recharge projects ahead of
the current wet season. The State Water Resources Control Board
has approved nine temporary groundwater recharge permits,
allowing local agencies to store significant volumes of excess
surface water underground during wet periods. Approved just
before a new round of winter storms reached the state, the
permits authorize the recharge of nearly 43,000 acre-feet of
water across several major watersheds.
California State Parks’ Division of Boating and Waterways (DBW)
today announced the availability of grant funding to help
prevent the further spread of quagga and zebra mussels that
threaten California’s waterways and cause negative impacts to
recreational boating, fishing and the ecosystem. Funded by the
California Mussel Fee Sticker (also known as the Quagga
Sticker), the Quagga and Zebra (QZ) Mussel Infestation
Prevention Grant Program expects to award up to $2 million
across eligible applicants. Applications open Monday, March 9,
and must be received by Friday, April 17, 2026, by 5 p.m. PDT.
San Diego will pay more than $6 million to a group of insurance
companies that paid out property owners’ claims from January
2024 floods, after the City Council granted final approval
Tuesday to a settlement. It’s the first major settlement as the
city litigates dozens of lawsuits over flooding that destroyed
homes and displaced residents, most in the Chollas Creek
watershed. Separately from the insurers, thousands of San
Diegans have sued the city, saying it caused the flooding and
damage by failing to maintain its stormwater system. City
lawyers have filed cross-complaints against some of them. Under
the settlement, 17 insurance carriers in four subrogation
lawsuits will get a total of $6,326,330.75 from the city.
A new, modernized water technology classroom is in final
planning stages for the Santiago Canyon College campus that
will feature state-of-the-art equipment to help train students
for well-paying careers in water districts throughout Orange
County and beyond. … The new lab will enhance SCC’s
substantial Water and Wastewater Technology
program. Students completing classes offered by the
department are prepared to take and pass state certification
exams, which can lead directly to employment with regional
utilities and water districts such as the Orange County Water
District.