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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 News & Publications Director Chris Bowman.

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Please Note: Some of the sites we link to may limit the number of stories you can access without subscribing. Also, the headlines below are the original headlines used in the publication cited at the time they are posted here and do not reflect the stance of the Water Education Foundation, an impartial nonprofit that remains neutral.

Aquafornia news Courthouse News Service

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: Clean air, water, environment amendment passes first hurdle in California Assembly

California lawmakers want to establish the state’s position on environmental health, taking a first step Monday in their proactive approach to ensure processes for the state’s environmental management remains secure, regardless of any federal changes. … The Los Angeles Democrat is propositioning a constitutional amendment that would enshrine into law the Californian’s right to clean air, water and the environment. Assembly Constitutional Amendment 16, authored by Bryan, passed Monday out of the Assembly Natural Resources Committee and into his chamber’s Appropriations Committee. It must pass both houses by at least two-thirds and then secure a majority vote at the polls.

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Aquafornia news Newsweek

California’s Lake Shasta set to fill completely

Lake Shasta could reach its full capacity this spring, following a high amount of rainfall in California. The largest reservoir in California has been steadily rising since the beginning of March. It has gone up sharply since the start of the year, which saw its levels at 1,012 feet, compared to its current level on April 5 of 1,058 feet. The lake has risen by about 19 feet since the beginning of March alone. “Shasta Reservoir is currently 121 percent of the 15-year average and 93 percent full as of April 4. Unlike other Central Valley Project reservoirs, Shasta is predominantly filled by rainfall rather than snowpack runoff,” a Bureau of Reclamation spokesperson told Newsweek. … The reservoir, located in Shasta County, California, was in a dire situation due to drought in 2022.

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Aquafornia news E&E News

Reclamation slows flows through Glen Canyon Dam to address damage

The Bureau of Reclamation announced Monday that recently uncovered damage to the Glen Canyon Dam will require it to reduce flows through portions of the structure as it looks to repair the site and prevent future problems at one of the nation’s major reservoirs. Wayne Pullan, the Bureau of Reclamation’s Upper Colorado Basin regional director, said that the agency — which is responsible for delivering water to Arizona, California and Nevada — is investigating damage to the lowest level of pipes at the dam, four structures known as the “River Outlet Works.” “In nearly 60 years of operation in Glen Canyon Dam, we didn’t need to address the issues that we’re facing now,” Pullan said in a news conference. “We didn’t need to consider the possible sustained operation of the River Outlet Works at low elevations.”

Aquafornia news Politico

Newsom’s Delta pitch: It’s for the climate

Gov. Gavin Newsom has a new sales pitch for a tunnel to move more water south from the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta that past governors have tried and failed to build for five decades. “The Delta conveyance is an adaptation project,” he said last week in a snowy field in the Sierra Nevada, where a winter that started out dry eventually delivered a just-above-average snowpack that will soon melt into the Sacramento River and its tributaries. … Long-skeptical Delta lawmakers aren’t convinced by the latest rationale. “He’s searching for a reason,” said Representative John Garamendi, a Democrat from the western part of the Delta.

Aquafornia news SJV Water

A Tulare County groundwater agency on the hot seat for helping sink the Friant-Kern Canal holds private tours for state regulators

As the date of reckoning for excessive groundwater pumping in Tulare County grows closer, lobbying by water managers and growers has ramped up. The Friant Water Authority, desperate to protect its newly rebuilt –  yet still sinking – Friant-Kern Canal, has beseeched the Water Resources Control Board to get involved. Specifically, it has asked board members to look into how the Eastern Tule Groundwater Sustainability Agency (GSA) has, or has not, curbed over pumping that affects the canal. Meanwhile, the Eastern Tule groundwater agency has been doing a bit of its own lobbying. It recently hosted all five members of the Water Board on three separate tours of the region, including the canal. Because the tours were staggered, there wasn’t a quorum of board members, which meant they weren’t automatically open to the public.

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Aquafornia news The Hill

US West hydropower production plunged to 22-year low last year

Hydropower generation in the U.S. West plunged to a 22-year low last year — dropping 11 percent from the year before, according to a new federal data analysis. The total amount produced in the region amounted to 141.5 million megawatt-hours, or about 60 percent of the country’s total hydroelectricity output in the 2022-23 “water year,” per the data published by the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). … On the other hand, a series of atmospheric rivers in California spurred an increase in hydroelectricity production in the Golden State — nearly doubling it in comparison to the previous water year, the analysis noted. 

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Aquafornia news Fortune

Water-guzzling chipmaker TSMC and drought-plagued Arizona are an unlikely pair

The Commerce Department announced Monday it pledged up to $6.6 billion to Taiwanese semiconductor manufacturer TSMC, which will add a third chip manufacturing facility in Arizona to the two in the works. The grant will go down in Washington as one of the crown jewels of the Biden administration’s initiative to bring the supply chain for ubiquitous—and strategically vital—computer chips back to the United States. But in Phoenix, where the factories are going to be built, TSMC faces a lingering question: where’s the water going to come from in one of the driest cities in the country?

Aquafornia news Inside Climate News

Lithium companies fight over water in the arid great basin

Over the past few decades, the United States has imported most of its lithium from Chile and Argentina, but there’s one major domestic source of the mineral—Nevada. Clayton Valley, a remote basin in the nation’s driest state, is home to the Silver Peak mine, where lithium is extracted in gridded ponds that turn neon blue as they recover one of Earth’s lightest elements through solar evaporation. … Mining operators across the West have faced major barriers in the global race for lithium. Mines come with large footprints that can disrupt wildlife habitat, harm cultural sites and put pressures on communities. On top of all that is another major challenge posing a barrier for lithium projects in the western U.S. and Clayton Valley: Competition for limited water supplies.

Aquafornia news Marin Independent Journal

MMWD narrows Sonoma-to-Marin pipeline options

Aiming to boost the county’s water supply, the Marin Municipal Water District is exploring the idea of connecting pipelines in Petaluma and Cotati to its reservoirs. District staff presented three main potential projects — narrowed from 13 — at Tuesday’s board of directors meeting. … The pipelines would transport water from the Russian River into Marin reservoirs. Treated Russian River water is transported to Marin through a 9-mile aqueduct along the Highway 101 corridor from Petaluma to North Marin Water District in Novato. The district then sends the water directly to the Marin Municipal Water District’s water distribution system. Board members expressed concern over cost estimates, which ranged between $140 million and $380 million.

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Aquafornia news SJV Water

High schoolers deepen their water knowledge at Sacramento conference

Acronyms are so prevalent in the water industry that stringing several together can form an impressive-sounding sentence.  That’s exactly what Hanford High School junior Morgan Carroll did at an April 5 workshop in Sacramento called Water 101 put on by the Water Education Foundation. After winning a game of bingo no less. The bingo game kept the audience of water managers and government and nonprofit employees on its toes during a talk on what could be a very dry topic, especially after lunch: The role of regulatory agencies in state and federal water law. … Part of being on the team is keeping tabs on current events in the water industry. Students subscribed to Aquafornia, the foundation’s daily news summary, and found out about the workshop that way.

Aquafornia news The New York Times

PFAS ‘forever chemicals’ are pervasive in water worldwide, study finds

They’re in makeup, dental floss and menstrual products. They’re in nonstick pans and takeout food wrappers. Same with rain jackets and firefighting equipment, as well as pesticides and artificial turf on sports fields. They’re PFAS: a class of man-made chemicals called per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances. They are also called “forever chemicals” because the bonds in their chemical compounds are so strong they don’t break down for hundreds to thousands of years, if at all. They’re also in our water. A new study of more than 45,000 water samples around the world found that about 31 percent of groundwater samples tested that weren’t near any obvious source of contamination had PFAS levels considered harmful to human health by the Environmental Protection Agency.

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Aquafornia news The Conversation

Opinion: Coastal wetlands can’t keep pace with sea-level rise, and infrastructure is leaving them nowhere to go

Wetlands have flourished along the world’s coastlines for thousands of years, playing valuable roles in the lives of people and wildlife. They protect the land from storm surge, stop seawater from contaminating drinking water supplies, and create habitat for birds, fish and threatened species. Much of that may be gone in a matter of decades. As the planet warms, sea level rises at an ever-faster rate. Wetlands have generally kept pace by building upward and creeping inland a few meters per year. But raised roadbeds, cities, farms and increasing land elevation can leave wetlands with nowhere to go. Sea-level rise projections for midcentury suggest the waterline will be shifting 15 to 100 times faster than wetland migration has been clocked.
-Written by Randall W. Parkinson, Research Associate Professor in Coastal Geology, Florida International University.

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Aquafornia news Pasadena Now

Pasadena Water and Power launches “The Ripple Effect” water conservation campaign

Pasadena Water and Power (PWP) has launched a new multi-year campaign called “The Ripple Effect” aimed at promoting water sustainability and resilience in the community. Acting General Manager David Reyes urged all PWP customers to become local water stewards for Pasadena and the region by participating in the campaign. “We invite every member of our community to embrace their role as local water stewards,” said Reyes. “Each one of us holds a vital place in shaping Pasadena’s water future.” About one-third of Pasadena’s water supply comes from local groundwater, with the remaining two-thirds imported from other sources. PWP emphasized that understanding where the community’s water comes from helps foster a greater appreciation for this critical resource.

Aquafornia news Caltrans

News release: Caltrans to construct trash capture device near Tuolumne River in Modesto

The California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) begins construction this month to install a trash capture device along northbound State Route 99, preventing trash in storm water runoff from entering the Tuolumne River at Zeff Road. The trash capture system will be located at the inlet of two existing culverts on the southeast side of SR-99 and the Tuolumne River, a location identified as a significant trash generating area. The project will help the department achieve zero trash from stormwater discharge into the lower reaches of the Tuolumne River. It is consistent with the Caltrans’ Statewide Trash Implementation plan and in compliance with the State Water Resource Control Board water quality objectives for trash pollutants. 

Aquafornia news Mountain Journal

Can a groundwater recharge program save Teton Valley’s farmers?

… U.S. Geological Service data shows Teton Valley’s aquifer steadily declined in recent decades as development increased and crop watering systems became more efficient, reducing infiltration by replacing flood irrigation with pivots and sprinklers. In addition, the area’s transition from agricultural valley to recreation hub has meant less acreage being watered: farms replaced by subdivisions full of houses with domestic wells, each one a straw guzzling from the valley’s all-important aquifer. … Recharge has benefited farmers and fish in western communities like Idaho’s Eastern Snake River Plain and California’s Central Valley, and the group believes the data shows it can work in the Teton Basin. They hope it can. In addition to providing a bulwark against future water shortages or legislative changes to water rights laws, they want to do something groundbreaking: create a market-based system to pay farmers for incidental recharge.

Aquafornia news California Rice News

News release: Application period closing for nesting bird habitat incentive program

The Nesting Bird Habitat Incentive Program is still accepting applications for the Delayed Cereal Grain Harvest and Fallow Agriculture programs until end of day Wednesday, April 10. If you have winter planted cereal grains, winter planted cover crops or farm fields that will be left fallow this growing season, these programs could be a great fit for your operations. You must be willing to leave them undisturbed and or delay harvest until at least July 15th. Below are key details for each of the program.

Aquafornia news FishBio

New study: Stranger in a strange river – The genetics of hatchery steelhead in California

Genes are the blueprints that inform development and behavior, and over time they are molded by evolution into adaptations that allow species to persist in an ever-changing world. However, animals adapted to one environment sometimes find themselves suddenly dropped in another. Such is the case for certain hatchery-raised steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss) in California’s Central Valley. The genes of steelhead play an important role in determining their life history, and may influence the timing of migration and maturation. To evaluate how such genes may be impacted by hatchery practices, researchers from UC Santa Cruz and the National Marine Fisheries Service dove into the genetics of steelhead from four hatcheries in the Sacramento River Basin (Goetz et al. 2024). The findings of their investigation show just how influential genes are in determining the path that a steelhead’s life will take.

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Monday Top of the Scroll: As fish deaths increase at pumps, critics urge California agencies to improve protections

Powerful pumps that supply much of California’s population with water have killed several thousand threatened and endangered fish this year, prompting a coalition of environmental groups to demand that state and federal agencies take immediate steps to limit “alarming levels” of deaths. In a letter to state and federal water managers, leaders of five fishing and environmental groups said the estimated losses of threatened steelhead trout and endangered winter-run Chinook salmon have exceeded maximum annual limits for water intakes in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta. 

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Aquafornia news Salt Lake Tribune

Colorado River states get a wet winter, but Lake Powell will get below-average runoff, forecast says

Spring storms brought more snow to mountains across the Western U.S., bringing water for struggling Lake Powell with them. The National Weather Service Colorado Basin River Forecast Center on Friday estimated that Lake Powell will receive 5.7 million acre-feet of water between April and July as snow melts off the mountains. An acre-foot is roughly enough water to sustain two houses for a year. That volume is 89% of the normal runoff for that time period recorded between 1991 and 2020. Facing extreme drought and climate change since the turn of the century, Lake Powell dropped to a historic low of 22% full in Feb. 2023. The reservoir currently stands at about 32% full.

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Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

California moves to ban use of the weedkiller paraquat

New California legislation seeks to permanently ban paraquat, a powerful and widely used weedkiller that has been linked to Parkinson’s disease and other serious health issues. Assembly Bill 1963, introduced recently by Assemblymember Laura Friedman (D-Glendale), would sunset the use of paraquat beginning in January 2026. The herbicide, which is described by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency as highly toxic, is regularly sprayed on almonds, grapes, cotton and other crops in the state. … California is the nation’s top user of paraquat …