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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 NBC4 (Los Angeles)

Wednesday Top of the Scroll: Federal government helping add water to Lake Mead, SoCal water agency says

In an effort to address the historic-low water level at Lake Mead, the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California Tuesday approved an agreement with the federal government to help add water to the reservoir. On Tuesday, Metropolitan’s Board of Directors approved an agreement with the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, which will provide the agency up to $65 million to keep up to 200,000 acre-feet of its Colorado River supplies in the lake this year. … The board also approved two other agreements with the Quechan Tribe and Bard Water District, allowing the federal government to fund the addition of up to 19,000 acre-feet of conserved agricultural water to Lake Mead annually in 2027 and 2028.

Other Colorado River management news:

Aquafornia news The Sacramento Bee (Calif.)

California lawmakers seek more transparency on data center water use

As artificial intelligence fuels a new wave of data center development across California, lawmakers are grappling with how to support the growing industry while protecting the state’s limited water supplies. Two bills moving through the Legislature would give state and local officials a more complete picture of data centers’ water demands. AB 2469 would require developers to disclose projected water use before local governments approve new facilities, while AB 2619 would require operators to report actual water use annually once the facilities open.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news Lake Powell Chronicle (Miami, Ariz.)

The rise of tribal water power in Arizona

… Following the Bureau of Reclamation’s release of its formal Draft Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the post-2026 operational guidelines, the state [Ariz.] is locked in a strict era of limits. Under federal fallback models analyzed in the EIS, Arizona faces structural water cuts that could gut its Central Arizona Project allocation by as much as 77 percent. Because Arizona holds the most junior water rights on the river system, it must take the brunt of the reductions first. The resulting crisis is fundamentally shifting the state’s economy, forcing a direct collision between traditional legacy industries and a booming tech sector, while engineering a historic transfer of socio-political power back to Native American tribes. 

Other Arizona water supply news:

Aquafornia news SFGate

California I-5 commuter city can’t stop megadevelopment

A massive and much-anticipated housing development tied up in litigation could potentially be back on again in a small town that borders the Central Valley and Bay Area. The question remains, however: Will there be enough water for it and the surging population nearby?  … In 2024, local water agencies adopted the Delta-Mendota Subbasin Groundwater Sustainability Plan, which included Patterson. … [T]he city of Patterson decided to single out the Keystone Ranch development and attempted to impose the cost of building a groundwater recharge facility on the development, then later denied the project wholesale on April 1, 2025. The California Department of Housing and Community Development, or HCD, found that the city’s review of the project is inconsistent with the state housing agencies.

Other groundwater news:

Aquafornia news Smart Water Magazine

California voters rank water among top priorities for next governor

A new statewide survey shows that water reliability and affordability have become a defining issue for California voters ahead of the state’s November 2026 gubernatorial election. The poll, conducted by FM3 Research for the Association of California Water Agencies (ACWA), a group representing approximately 470 public water agencies that together deliver about 90% of the water used across the state, found that 77% of likely November 2026 voters are more inclined to support a candidate who makes water a priority, a view shared across the political spectrum. Support for a water focused candidate reaches 83% among Democrats, 77% among independents and 67% among Republicans, according to the memo.

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Kern County extends local mussel emergency declaration

Local water districts have spent $7.3 million, and counting, trying to eradicate the rapidly spreading invasive golden mussel, according to a report delivered during the Kern County Board of Supervisors July 14 meeting. Water districts are expecting those costs to balloon to $36 million a year, according to a report by the County Administrative Office. The board approved extending its local emergency declaration by another 60 days regarding the mussels and renewed pleas for the Governor’s office to declare a statewide emergency. … San Joaquin and Sacramento counties have also declared local emergencies. The Kern County Water Agency and Friant Water Authority both also have task forces to monitor the spread of the mussels, which have been found in those agencies’ critical infrastructure.

Other invasive species news:

Aquafornia news The Mendocino Voice (Calif.)

Potter Valley update: North Coast residents split on dams, united against Southern California

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission took its public comment period on the Potter Valley Project in Ukiah over two days in June. Comments were made in private, behind a closed door. Press was barred and recording forbidden. The transcripts of those comments were released Monday, 20 days after the first session, over 43,000 words, more than 70 speakers. … Janet Johnson drove down from Laytonville with a friend who had come to testify, and spent the evening where the public was made to spend it — in the waiting room, outside the closed door, unable to hear any of it. She was blunt about who she thought was on the other side of that door. They were “carpetbaggers scamming our water,” she told The Voice. As it turns out, according to the written testimonies, almost nobody disagreed with her. They just couldn’t agree on anything else.

Aquafornia news WaterWorld

EPA launches effort to accelerate water infrastructure funding for drinking water and wastewater projects

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has launched a new initiative aimed at accelerating the delivery of federal water infrastructure funding by bringing together states, utilities and industry organizations to identify ways to streamline key financing programs. EPA Assistant Administrator for Water Jess Kramer recently convened what the agency described as its first roundtable focused on improving implementation of federal water infrastructure programs, including the Drinking Water and Clean Water State Revolving Funds (SRFs), the Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (WIFIA) loan program and the Emerging Contaminants in Small and Disadvantaged Communities grant program. The discussion centered on reducing delays that can slow drinking water, wastewater and stormwater infrastructure projects.

Other federal water funding news:

Aquafornia news KRCR (Redding, Calif.)

Judge denies bid to halt Bureau of Reclamation’s Shasta Dam fall water releases

A judge has denied a request from several environmental groups to halt the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation’s planned water release schedule for Shasta Dam this fall, amid an ongoing lawsuit over concerns the releases could threaten Chinook salmon. The lawsuit challenges the bureau’s planned release amounts. Environmental groups argue the schedule does not account for protections needed to manage water temperatures for vulnerable fish, including salmon. … The judge denied the groups’ request for a temporary restraining order, finding they had not proved their interpretation of the Endangered Species Act was more valid than the bureau’s.

Other salmon news:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Opinion: The zombified Cadiz water project walks again

On July 9, the Trump administration delivered a gift to Cadiz Inc., a politically well-connected firm that has been trying for decades to win approval for a scheme to pump water out of the Mojave Desert and market it to water agencies across the Southland. The administration approved the company’s application to convert an abandoned 220-mile oil and gas pipeline crossing the desert to carry water instead. Susan Kennedy, the chief executive of Cadiz, called the approval “a pivotal milestone” that would enable the project to move into its construction stage. Here’s betting that Kennedy’s statement was somewhat premature. The project still faces significant opposition from environmentalists, local Indian tribes and the state of California.
–Written by Los Angeles Times business columnist Michael Hiltzik.

Aquafornia news Spectrum News

Adding soil to Seal Beach wetlands area has helped restoration, scientists say

Scientists said wetlands can slow down storm surges, absorb pollutants and even offer protection for infrastructure as a buffer between the ocean and roads. That’s why for the past decade, some scientists have been working on a solution for a wetlands area in Seal Beach that had often been underwater. … As part of a pilot project that began a decade ago, scientists started applying a thin layer of sediment (mud or sand to match the existing sediment) to the surface area of the marsh in an attempt to raise its elevation. The method is called “sediment (or soil) augmentation.” … After a decade, [Cal State Long Beach biology professor Christine] Whitcraft said the team is thrilled with the results of the pilot project. “There are plants, there’s birds. It’s out of the water at the highest tides.” she said.

Aquafornia news The Raincross Gazette (Riverside, Calif.)

Essay: The river in Riverside: an unseen inheritance

I find it curious when I hear “people in Riverside don’t know we have a river.” After all, it is the largest riparian ecosystem in Southern California, flowing nearly 100 miles beginning in the San Bernardino Mountains to the ocean at Newport Beach. Winding its way through 2/3rds of the state’s population under bridges and alongside freeways. For those paying attention, the river is a sustainer of life. An ecology that has been at the mercy of the dominant culture for over two centuries. This begs the questions; what does it mean to live alongside a river, what is our role in its caretaking and how do we balance infrastructure with restoration?

Aquafornia news The Salt Lake Tribune (Utah)

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: A new evaporation study launches in the Upper Colorado River Basin

As hot temperatures sweep across Utah and water supplies continue to drop, states and the federal government are launching a new effort to better measure how much water evaporates from major reservoirs upstream of Lake Powell. The Bureau of Reclamation partnered with scientists and Upper Basin states, including Utah, Colorado, New Mexico and Wyoming, to launch a new evaporation study at Flaming Gorge, Blue Mesa and Navajo reservoirs — key water storage projects in the Upper Colorado River Basin. … Reclamation is sending up to 1 million acre-feet of water from Flaming Gorge to prop up Lake Powell, which forecast models show will reach levels that threaten hydropower production and could damage dam infrastructure by early next year.

Other Colorado River management news:

Aquafornia news Arizona Daily Star (Tucson)

‘Zero flow’ recorded at key spot on Arizona’s drying San Pedro River

Where water normally flows continuously on the San Pedro River east of Sierra Vista, only ponds and puddles persisted last week. … The Charleston gauge, long considered a key indicator of the San Pedro’s health, dried up late last month for the first time in 21 years. And it stayed dry — or nearly dry — until water from a monsoon storm arrived Friday morning. It was the latest blow to a river whose lush riparian groves and very high bird populations have long made it a global treasure in the eyes of many ecologists. But the river’s declining flows and the lowering of neighboring groundwater wells over the years have also made it a political and legal battleground pitting environmentalists wanting to limit the area’s growth and groundwater pumping and government officials who seek to keep the river flowing without curbing economic development.

Other drought news:

Aquafornia news Imperial Valley Press (El Centro, Calif.)

County hits pause on data centers to scrutinize energy and water disputes

Facing legal challenges and growing industrial pressures, the Imperial County Board of Supervisors will vote Tuesday on whether to freeze new data center developments across all unincorporated lands for nearly another year. The proposed 10-month and 15-day extension of an urgency moratorium underscores a deepening regulatory anxiety over how these power-hungry facilities will affect the region’s strained electric grid and vital water resources. Beyond the data center freeze, Chairwoman Peggy Price will advance the framework for a new data center advisory committee. The group will attempt to bring order to the gold rush by appointing an 11-member advisory panel representing a cross-section of conflicting interests.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news Marin Independent Journal (San Rafael, Calif.)

MMWD seals agreement for pipeline project

The Marin Municipal Water District is entering a $2.65 million deal with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to advance a major drought resiliency project. The water district board voted unanimously Tuesday to approve the partnership agreement, charging the Army Corps to support the “atmospheric river capture” project. The project is a proposed pipeline that would replenish Marin reservoirs with Sonoma County rainwater during droughts. Under the agreement, the Army Corps will design a section of the pipeline that is 18,000 feet long. The agreement is a necessary step for the district to use federal funding from the 2022 Water Resources Development Act, or WRDA, slated for the project. … Estimated at $214 million, the planned 13-mile, 36-inch pipe would tap into an aqueduct system that runs along Highway 101, carrying water from the Russian River into Marin.

Aquafornia news The Sacramento Bee (Calif.)

When and where to expect monsoon showers for the Central Valley as temps surge

Sunday was an unusual summer day for much of Central and Southern California, bringing clouds and even sparse rain showers across much of the state as a monsoon was full steam ahead. The North American monsoon – a weather pattern that invites tropical moisture into the region during the summer months – doesn’t always make its way all the way to Central and Northern California. The fact that is has is a sign of the strength of the weather pattern. … With a strengthening El Niño at play, more moisture will be available to crash into California from the south over the summer months. There are hints that more monsoonal moisture could return later this weekend or next week as the atmosphere attempts to adjust to El Niño’s influence.

Other weather and water forecast news:

Aquafornia news The Press Democrat (Santa Rosa, Calif.)

Salmon fishing resumes off California coast for first time since 2022. Here’s what that means

Commercial and recreational salmon fishing has resumed off the North Coast after a three-year statewide closure, marking a long-awaited milestone for a troubled industry that has endured historic losses in revenue and resources. Charter captains are reporting abundant catches out of Bodega Bay, and commercial boats up and down the coast are again unloading hauls of the prized West Coast staple for the first time since 2022. Still, the reopening is far from a return to normal, industry veterans say. This year’s season is heavily restricted with staggered openings and closings designed to limit the take on rebounding Chinook salmon returns. And fewer boats may be around to cash in, as some fishermen say years of lost income from curtailed and closed fisheries have driven some away from the water for good.

Other fishery and fish restoration news:

Aquafornia news CalMatters (Sacramento, Calif.)

Sewage pollution keeps kids out of the water in this beach town

… Cross-border sewage pollution has plagued Imperial Beach, Coronado and other parts of South San Diego for decades, and worsened in recent years. As Tijuana’s population grew and wastewater plants on both sides of the border failed, hundreds of millions of gallons of raw sewage poured into the ocean. That has sickened swimmers and surfers, and led to near continual beach restrictions for the past three years. Imperial Beach residents describe waking up to headaches, asthma and rashes after exposure to the water, or airborne pollutants from the Tijuana River. Schools invoke “rainy day schedules” when pollution levels spike. Struggling to breathe, sleep and swim, many residents of the largely working class, majority Latino community think their environmental burdens are overlooked. 

Other pollution news:

Aquafornia news Arizona Daily Star (Tucson)

Southern Arizona mine’s quick approval worries jaguar advocates

The U.S. Forest Service has approved a fast-tracked critical minerals mine in Southern Arizona despite years of pushback from nearby communities The $3 billion South 32 Hermosa project will unearth deposits of zinc, manganese, lead and silver. … Already, discharged water from the mine has been flagged by the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality for exceeding allowable levels of heavy metals. … Each year, it’s expected to remove 2,790 acre-feet of water from the aquifer, amounting to 195,000 acre-feet over the course of its operations. Though some water will be recharged, the final environmental impact statement notes that net water loss from the aquifer will be 34,000 acre-feet, equivalent to over 1 billion gallons. Nearby residents in the project’s 50-mile cone of depression worry that groundwater pumping could cause their wells to run dry and that the overall dewatering could affect the surrounding ecosystem.

Other water and mining news: