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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 Writer Matt Jenkins.

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Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

Monday Top of the Scroll: The West’s water war arrives in Washington

The high-stakes brawl over the drought-stricken Colorado River comes to Capitol Hill this week. The Trump administration’s top Western water official is set to appear before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee on Wednesday as the Interior Department is preparing to wrest control of the waterway later this summer. The department already invoked emergency authorities in April when it became clear that the river would see the lowest flows on record this summer, threatening the ability to produce hydropower and release water out of one of the country’s largest reservoirs, Lake Powell. … Scott Cameron, Interior’s acting Bureau of Reclamation commissioner, last week said the department plans to release a draft plan for operating the waterway unilaterally in the “mid-to-late summer.”

Other Colorado River management news:

Aquafornia news Bay City News (Berkeley, Calif.)

Federal agencies green-light Newsom-backed Delta tunnel, but just construction

The construction, though not the long-term operation, of a proposed 45-mile extension to the State Water Project, backed by Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, has received permission from two key federal wildlife agencies. On Friday, the California Department of Water Resources received permits known as biological opinions from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Marine Fisheries Service concluding that construction can proceed under conditions designed to protect endangered species and sensitive habitat. … The opinion of the Fish and Wildlife Service orders builders to take measures to avoid harming endangered or threatened species. 

Other Delta tunnel news:

Aquafornia news Lost Coast Outpost (Eureka, Calif.)

Bill that would make state agencies consider tribes during water policy decisions passes state assembly

An Assembly Bill sponsored by the Karuk Tribe, which seeks to expand consultation between state water agencies and tribes during water policy decisions, passed through the California Assembly last week. … If signed into law, Assembly Bill 2218 would declare, as statewide policy, recognition of “the inequities regarding access to, and control over, water caused by state-sanctioned acts of termination, removal, and assimilation inflicted upon all California Native American tribes.” … A key provision of the bill is requiring consultation with tribes when certain water policies are revisited by state agencies. The State Water Board, when investigating the basis of a water right, would need to consult with a California Native American tribe whose ancestral territory includes the water body, when requested.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Kings County judge considering whether to advance groundwater lawsuit

A Kings County Judge may decide [this] week whether to allow a lawsuit by the Kings County Farm Bureau to move to the next phase in its quest to prove the State Water Resources Control Board overstepped its authority when it placed the region on probation in 2024 for lacking an adequate groundwater plan. The Farm Bureau is also disputing what it says was an improper blanket denial by the Water Board of exemptions for some local agencies from those probationary measures, which require farmers to meter and register wells at $300 each, report extractions and pay the state $20 per acre foot pumped. At a June 3 hearing, Kings County Superior Court Judge Robert Burns said he may rule by June 11 on whether to start the discovery process, where both sides seek documents. If he does not issue a ruling, the parties will meet July 2 to determine next steps.

Other groundwater news:

Aquafornia news Engineering News-Record

California water agency ramps up novel deep-sea desalination plan

Los Angeles area water agencies were hard hit in 2022 by successive years of drought and an unprecedented meager State Water Project allocation, but none was more impacted than Las Virgenes Municipal Water District, which serves about 70,000 users in an upscale section of the city with virtually no other supply alternatives, in-state or out. The severe per-person water-use limit prompted officials to come up with a plan to create new supply through a novel in-ocean desalination process. … The nine-month pilot “exceeded expectations,” says Mark Golay, OceanWell director of engineering projects. … The goal is to scale to an ocean-based “farm” system of multiple pods about 4.5 miles offshore of Malibu that could produce, when operating by about 2028, up to 50-60 million gallons per day.

Other desalination news:

Aquafornia news The Guardian (U.K.)

Majority of US’s new AI datacenters to be built on drought-hit land

A record-shattering drought has racked much of the US. But the artificial intelligence industry is pushing ahead regardless, with the majority of planned datacenters set to be built in drought-ridden locations, a Guardian analysis has found. About two-thirds of upcoming datacenters, which typically require a large amount of water to operate, are set to be built in places that have been among the driest in the country over the past year. … Datacenter developers say the industry’s current water use is still just a fraction of what much larger consumers, primarily agriculture, already take, causing growing strain on key sources such as the Colorado River. … Yet the public backlash has been so strong – polling shows 70% of Americans don’t want to live next to a datacenter – that some states are considering new restrictions.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news NBC7 (San Diego)

Coronado Beach closed for swimming despite the latest Tijuana sewer break repairs

Warning signs lined the sand at Coronado Beach this weekend as elevated bacteria levels linked to another sewage spill from Tijuana forced swimming closures along parts of San Diego County’s coastline. County health officials extended water-contact closures from Imperial Beach north through the Silver Strand and into Coronado after a recent break in a Mexican wastewater pipeline sent millions of gallons of sewage-contaminated water toward the Pacific Ocean. The closure comes despite emergency repairs completed this week on the cross-border sewer line that collapsed for the second time in recent weeks. … Mexican repair crews worked around the clock to seal the damaged international wastewater pipeline. The break increased flows through the Tijuana River Valley, where polluted runoff eventually reached the ocean.

Other Tijuana River news:

Aquafornia news Times-Standard (Eureka, Calif.)

CalTrout gets $4 million for Cannibal Island, Eel River estuary restoration

A project to restore habitat on the Cannibal Island unit of the lower Eel River estuary has received a financial boost from the Wildlife Conservation Board (WCB). At its May 28 meeting in Sacramento, the WCB awarded the project a $4 million grant under Proposition 4, the Safe Drinking Water, Wildfire Prevention, Drought Preparedness and Clean Air Bond Act, passed by California voters in 2024. The property in question is owned by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, and the grant was awarded to CalTrout. … CalTrout is working with researchers and state and federal agency partners to collect scientific data and develop restoration plans to transform the area from a largely diked and drained salt marsh into a diverse mix of working agricultural lands and thriving natural habitats.

Other habitat restoration news:

Aquafornia news NPR

Turf war: Water scarcity pits Las Vegas residents against water managers

Like many communities in the American Southwest, Las Vegas is facing a prolonged drought that is forcing policy leaders to make tough decisions about how best to mitigate the declining water supply. In 2021, state lawmakers passed a measure that ostensibly banned all irrigation of so-called “non-functional turf.” The law officially goes into effect next January, but the Southern Nevada Water Authority has already begun working to replace that grass with more drought-tolerant landscaping, mostly through rebates for customers who choose to re-landscape. A lawsuit is now challenging the Southern Nevada Water Authority’s grass removal program in federal court. The suit claims that the program’s enforcement is overzealous and is potentially causing environmental harm.

Other water conservation news:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Water spills at GKN Aerospace; testing underway for toxic chemical

About 50 gallons of water spilled into a storm drain at GKN Aerospace in Garden Grove, and testing is underway to see if the water contained any toxic chemicals, Orange County health officials said Friday. Specifically, officials are searching for any trace of methyl methacrylate, or MMA. Approximately 7,000 gallons of that same chemical were in a tank at the facility that went into crisis in late May, creating a risk of explosion that forced the evacuation of 50,000 people in portions of Garden Grove, Stanton, Anaheim, Buena Park, Cypress and Westminster. The threat subsided on May 26 after officials confirmed that the tank had cracked and was no longer pressurized. The water spill occurred during a routine effort to empty what the Orange County Health Care Agency called an “onsite stormwater/condensation tank located in an area unrelated to the incident site.”

Other water pollution news:

Aquafornia news The Colorado Sun (Denver)

Friday Top of the Scroll: Colorado declares statewide drought emergency

Gov. Jared Polis on Thursday issued a statewide drought emergency declaration, potentially freeing up additional state funding for the state’s response to record-low snowpack and prolonged warm temperatures across Colorado. Colorado’s snowpack peaked in early March about a month earlier than usual and at the lowest level since 1987. Farmers, ranchers, fishing and rafting outfitters, and cities and reservoir managers are already feeling the impacts of tight water supplies this year on their wallets and water supply budgets. Polis’ declaration follows recommendations Monday from the Colorado Drought Task Force and the Water Conditions Monitoring Committee.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Polluted rain runoff from big box parking lots could get a crackdown

When rain falls on California shopping centers and warehouses, the water runs off parking lots carrying metal dust and chemicals from vehicle tires and brake pads, oil and grease from engines, and bacteria from trash. The gunk washes into storm drains and pollutes creeks, rivers and beaches. Now environmental advocates are pushing state regulators to crack down by requiring stormwater permits. … Groups that represent the businesses say they are already paying property taxes that in L.A. County include a special tax for cleaning up stormwater, and that imposing new regulations in this way doesn’t make sense. But California Coastkeeper Alliance and other nonprofit groups submitted petitions to regional water officials across the state this week demanding they begin regulating commercial propertiessuch as big-box stores, auto dealers and industrial parks.

Other water quality news:

Aquafornia news KJZZ (Phoenix)

Federal officials target ‘mid to late summer’ for a new Colorado River plan

The top federal official on the Colorado River said his agency is targeting the middle of this summer to formalize a new water-sharing plan. Scott Cameron, the acting commissioner of the Bureau of Reclamation, the federal agency which manages the nation’s largest reservoirs, addressed a crowd of water experts in Boulder, Colorado. “I can’t give you exact dates,” he said, “But I would expect mid to late summer, and as we get closer, we’ll try to signal a bit more precision around that.” … Federal water officials have urged the seven states that use the Colorado River to agree on a plan for sharing its water. If they don’t, Reclamation will likely install its own, but risk getting sued by states that could accuse the federal government of overstepping its authority.

Other Colorado River management news:

Aquafornia news AP News

AI and data centers leave goliath-sized environmental footprints globally

The environmental footprint of data centers already rivals some of the world’s largest countries, according to a United Nations University report, which also predicts their water and energy use and pollution will double in just four years as use of artificial intelligence grows. Last year, global data centers used 448 trillion watt-hours of electricity, more than all but 10 countries of the world, said the report issued Wednesday. That electricity use produced about 208 million tons of carbon dioxide, about the same amount as Argentina, and producing that much energy consumed about 1.2 trillion gallons of water, according to the report on the environmental consequences of AI’s energy use.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news CBS8 (San Diego)

Mexico completes emergency repairs to ruptured Tijuana sewage line after massive spill

Mexico completed emergency repairs Thursday to a ruptured sewage line in Tijuana that spilled tens of millions of gallons of raw sewage into San Diego’s South Bay waterways over the weekend, but residents may continue smelling lingering odors. The Tijuana parallel gravity line break sent an estimated 40 to 50 million gallons of sewage into the Tijuana River, according to Chris Helmer, Environmental and Natural Resources Director for Imperial Beach. The massive spill caused hydrogen sulfide levels to spike in communities near the Tijuana River Valley, creating a strong rotten egg smell. … Helmer warned that similar infrastructure failures will likely continue, especially during storm events. With El Niño conditions expected this winter, he anticipates more potential breaks in Mexico’s aging sewage systems.

Other Tijuana River news:

Aquafornia news CBS Colorado

From shower water to toilet flushing: Colorado researchers showcase new ways to stretch every drop

As Colorado continues to navigate recurring drought and growing water demands, researchers and water experts are looking beyond traditional conservation measures and finding innovative ways to reuse water that would otherwise go down the drain. At the center of that effort is Water TAP, a technology accelerator located at CSU Spur in Denver, where new ideas are being tested to help communities make the most of every gallon. … One of the facility’s flagship projects is called GRETA, Colorado’s first commercial and legal graywater collection and reuse system. Water from showers and handwashing sinks on the building’s second floor is collected, treated, and reused to flush toilets throughout the facility.

Aquafornia news Active NorCal (Redding, Calif.)

The Klamath Fish Hatchery just reopened after a five-year rebuild. It can produce 3 million fish a year.

The Klamath Fish Hatchery near Chiloquin, Oregon, is back in business after a five-year rebuild that turned a devastating fire into a fresh start. The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife reopened the hatchery to visitors on June 1, marking the end of a long recovery from the 2020 Two Four Two Fire that destroyed the facility’s 100-year-old main building and killed approximately 50,000 triploid brown trout. Volunteer firefighters saved staff residences and outbuildings by using the hatchery’s own water pumps to fight the blaze. Reconstruction took far longer than expected. … The result is a new concrete, noncombustible building that is slightly larger than the original and includes expanded fish-rearing capacity.

Other Klamath Basin news:

Aquafornia news Daily Republic (Fairfield, Calif.)

Delta Cross Gates to open for boating access

Boaters will have enhanced access between the Sacramento River and the central Delta this weekend. The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation announced it will open the Delta Cross Channel Gates “to improve recreational boating access in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.”  The gates are scheduled to open at 10 a.m. Saturday (June 6), and will remain open through 10 a.m. Monday (June 8). … The Delta Cross Channel facility is a gate-controlled diversion channel on the east bank of the Sacramento River, about 30 miles downstream of Sacramento. It facilitates the diversion of fresh water from the Sacramento River into the interior Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta to the Central Valley Project and State Water Project conveyance.

Other Delta news:

Aquafornia news The Log

CDFW launches new ocean salmon harvest tracking tools for California anglers

As California’s ocean salmon season returns, anglers now have a new way to monitor catch progress and stay informed throughout the season. The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) recently announced the launch of new digital tracking tools designed to provide real-time visibility into both recreational and commercial in-season ocean salmon harvests. Available through CDFW’s Ocean Salmon Fishery Information webpage, the new tools allow anglers to track the number of salmon landed and monitor how much remains under each region’s harvest guideline. The information is intended to help anglers better plan trips while supporting in-season fishery management and sustainable harvest goals.

Aquafornia news Nevada Current

Thursday Top of the Scroll: Nevada signs water sharing agreement with Arizona, California

Lake Mead could soon benefit from the nation’s largest desalination plant thanks to an agreement that would allow water agencies in Nevada, Arizona, and California to explore ways to exchange water supplies across the drought-challenged Colorado River Basin. On Wednesday, the federal government and water agencies in the three states signed a memorandum of understanding to develop a framework for an interstate pilot program that could let agencies in Arizona and Nevada tap San Diego’s Claude “Bud” Lewis Carlsbad Desalination Plant. … The plan would not directly send desalination-treated water to Lake Mead, but would allow “paper” transfers and exchanges between states using existing infrastructure and credits.

Related articles: