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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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  • 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 Voice of San Diego

Reflecting pool contractor tried cleaning Tijuana River too

The president appears to be having a harder time cleaning the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool than the sewage-contaminated Tijuana River, even though he used the same contractor for both. The New York Times revealed over the weekend that Greenwater Services won a $1.7 million no-bid contract to install a water purification system in the pool located on the National Mall earlier this spring. But now that work has come under scrutiny after algal blooms overtook the pool, turning it a vibrant shade of green. Meanwhile, Greenwater executives claim their treatment of the Tijuana River went extremely well. Greenwater won a $2.5 million no-bid contract last year to do experimental water treatment on the Tijuana River. … The experiment didn’t go perfectly. An October 2025 storm swept away their equipment trailers and virtually ended the experiment. 

Other Tijuana River news:

Aquafornia news The Daily Sentinel (Grand Junction, Colo.)

Local students learn about water, rivers at annual Wellspring Project

Splashing through shallow water in Connected Lakes State Park, local kids were on the hunt Monday morning for all types of tiny invertebrate animals and insects that might tell them a bit about water quality and health of the local ecosystem. The kids are taking part in RiversEdge West’s annual Wellspring Project — a free four-day river education and art program for middle school students in the Grand Valley. … The rest of the week is full of activities centered around rivers and water, learning about agriculture and wildlife, creating art and capping it all off with a raft trip on the Gunnison River. “We learn all about water in the West and the Colorado and Gunnison rivers and we end our week with a float trip down one of the rivers — this year, the Gunnison River, because the Colorado is a little low,” [Education and Outreach Coordinator at RiversEdge West Nicole] Cook said.

Other water education news:

Aquafornia news KRCR (Redding, Calif.)

Lower water levels expected at Thermalito Afterbay through end of June

Boaters may notice lower water levels at the Thermalito Afterbay through the end of June as the California Department of Water Resources (DWR) works to support an endangered bird species. The Western Snowy Plover is a threatened shorebird that is native to Northern California. The species has been endangered since 1993, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Shallow water can be a hazard to boaters and jet skiers. DWR said the shallow-water hazard is located in a corner of the Thermalito Afterbay near the intersection of East Hamilton Road and Highway 99. A hazard buoy will be placed in the area to alert boaters to shallow water.

Aquafornia news Las Vegas Review-Journal

Monday Top of the Scroll: Aging dam tubes could make or break deliveries to Lake Mead. Do they work?

… To many, the functionality of Glen Canyon Dam’s river outlet works has been a slow-moving crisis. If levels at Lake Powell fall too low, water deliveries to Lake Mead could be cut off due to potential damage of those release tubes, spelling trouble for Southern Nevada and its neighbor states in the Lower Colorado River Basin. … In a Friday statement, the Southern Nevada Water Authority said the uncertainty of Glen Canyon Dam’s infrastructure is another reason for every state to take swift action to cut water use in order to protect reservoir storage. “While Reclamation has acknowledged the engineering feasibility exists to operate at these levels, the bypass tubes were not envisioned to be the sole release mechanism,” the statement said. “Gambling on how much we can safely release while the reservoir is near empty seems less than prudent.”

Other Colorado River management news:

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

Congressman urges federal review of controversial Mojave Desert groundwater project

U.S. Rep. Raul Ruiz called on the federal government Wednesday to launch a rigorous environmental and historic review of a controversial proposal to pump billions of gallons of groundwater from the Mojave Desert, framing the project as a threat to local communities, tribal sovereignty, and iconic national parks. In a formal letter to Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, Ruiz, D-Calif., urged the Bureau of Land Management to conduct a comprehensive assessment under federal environmental and historic preservation laws before deciding on a crucial pipeline right-of-way application for Cadiz Inc. The proposal by Los Angeles-based Cadiz, which is backed by foreign investors, seeks to extract 16 billion gallons of water annually for 50 years from an ancient desert aquifer. 

Other groundwater news around the West:

Aquafornia news The Fence Post (Paonia, Colo)

Forecast trending hopeful that El Nino, monsoon could help Intermountain West

Forecasts of summertime moisture will be some welcome relief for farmers and ranchers in the Intermountain West, after undergoing a rugged, widespread drought and record snowpack drought over the past year. Although not a guarantee, there are promising signs for moisture in the Intermountain West region (Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah and Wyoming) thanks to the El Nino climate phenomenon combined with monsoon moisture expected this summer, which was detailed on the latest Intermountain West Drought Update Webinar, Tuesday, June 16, 2026, hosted by the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration’s National Integrated Drought Information System. Not only is moisture critical for forage for rangeland, pastures and drinking water for cattle, but also for the major lakes and rivers supplying water to the western states.

Other El Niño news:

Aquafornia news SFGate

Deadly parasite is flourishing in a California river

Wildlife experts in both California and Oregon report they’re seeing a high number of newly released Chinook salmon sickened and killed by a parasite. The salmon have been found dead at multiple traps in Oregon and California in the Klamath River. The deaths, first reported by Oregon Public Broadcasting, are believed to primarily be due to a parasite called Ceratonova shasta. The parasite, which is linked to the salmon, has reached farther north in the river than ever before following the destruction of four dams near the Oregon-California border. … A recent count from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service found that almost half, or 46%, of nearly 700 salmon found in traps have tested positive for C. shasta.

Other fishery news:

Aquafornia news Summit Daily (Colo.)

What can humans learn from beavers when it comes to drought-proofing the landscape?

Amid a field of “zombie willows” in the Kawuneeche Valley within Rocky Mountain National Park, researchers and water providers are taking lessons from nature’s ecosystem engineers to build drought resilience and restore wetlands. … The Kawuneeche Valley exists just downstream from the Colorado River headwaters. … “A healthy and functioning wetland is a sponge,” said Jeremy Shaw, a research scientist with Colorado State University who has led wetland and stream restoration efforts in the valley. “It is a fire break. It is a drought resilience machine. It is a water quality plant. It’s a water treatment plant. So healthy, functional wetlands, particularly ones that support beavers, trap sediment nutrients, output clean, reliable water. It also slows down and spreads out the water.”

Aquafornia news SFGate

New study measures microplastics in Bay smaller than human hair

A pilot study by the San Francisco Estuary Institute captures plastic particles in the Bay that are 10 times smaller than measured before, the width of a human hair. These smaller microplastics may account for the vast majority of those present in the water. The study could inform broader research on plastics and human health, coastal ecosystems and the ability of the sea to trap carbon from the earth’s atmosphere. … [SFEI spokesperson Sierra] Garcia said a statewide plastics monitoring project will begin this summer under the California Ocean Protection Council. … Microplastics have flowed through the Golden Gate and entered the base of the food chain in the Greater Farallones and Cordell Bank National Marine Sanctuary.

Other Bay-Delta news:

Aquafornia news The New York Times

California needs water and clean power. It might have a fix for both.

In California, a sprawling 4,000-mile network of canals winds through citrus orchards and fields of tree nuts, delivering irrigation and drinking water to homes and farms across the state. The canals are critical in an increasingly arid part of the country. But what if they could help fulfill another urgent need: renewable energy? To test that idea, researchers, private enterprise and a public utility in the Central Valley are installing solar panels atop the man-made waterways. The pilot program, called Project Nexus, is testing solar canopies that researchers say could generate gigawatts of power and save billions of gallons of water by providing shade that slows evaporation. It could be transformational if scaled up, researchers say, in helping the state to meet its ambitious climate and biodiversity goals.

Aquafornia news ABC7 (San Francisco)

California’s water crisis driving higher interest in desalination of water collected from Pacific Ocean as a new source

From a fast-melting snowpack in the Sierra to over-pumped groundwater in the Central Valley and a drought on the Colorado River, California’s water supply is facing enormous pressure. Increasingly, some believe the only real alternative is to draw water from the Pacific Ocean offshore. Former Water Manager Tim Quinn believes he and his team at OceanWell can do it safely and more affordably. … The company just released data from an ongoing study on a reservoir in Southern California. They say the system produces water roughly 10 times purer than conventional drinking water, without damaging surrounding marine organisms. … It comes at a time of renewed interest in desal.

Other desalination news:

Aquafornia news Deseret News (Salt Lake City)

Fear of data centers outpaces knowledge about them

… [D]ata centers’ everyday utility has been lost in a haze of anxiety about new proposals. … In 2024, The Washington Post released a report claiming that a 100-word email written by ChatGPT consumes an entire bottle of water or 519 milliliters. … When Andy Masley, a former physics teacher turned writer, saw this report, it didn’t sit well with him. So he started looking into the article’s methodology, then reached out to the researcher tapped for the calculation, Shaolei Ren, an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of California, Riverside. … In a conversation with the Deseret News, Ren said the Washington Post’s report should not be considered an accurate measure of today’s artificial intelligence water demands. … “[I]t’s just never correct to say, ‘AI uses this much water,’” Ren said.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news Palo Alto Daily Post (Calif.)

Palo Alto officials say San Francisco’s PUC is hoarding water

Palo Alto officials say the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission is hoarding water based on unrealistic drought projections, driving up rates and killing salmon. … Utsav Gupta, a member of the city’s Utilities Advisory Commission, raised the alarm about the SFPUC planning rates based on a drought that hasn’t happened in 1,100 years, according to tree-ring data. Other agencies like Valley Water and the East Bay Municipal Utility District plan for a repeat of the worst drought on record from 1987 to 1992, but the SFPUC uses an unprecedented and severe 8.5-year drought, Gupta said in a letter to council. The SFPUC sells water to cities and water districts throughout the Bay Area from eight reservoirs near Yosemite. Palo Alto buys about 7% of the water.

Other water rates news:

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Water districts look at kill rates, ponder golden mussel emergency declaration

Golden mussels again dominated board discussions at several water district meetings. … Eric McDaris, water resources manager for Wheeler Ridge-Maricopa Water Storage District told his board  that the first step is for costs to hit $5 million. At that point the county would send a letter to the state Office of Emergency Services that would potentially result in some reimbursements to districts. … He said they were finding 100% mortality in mussel testing bags, as well as no mussel growth on settling plates. North Kern began its golden mussel treatments with Blue Tech. Ram Venkatesan, deputy general manager for the district reported they had 90% mortality in the district’s testing bags, the remaining 10% were starting to open up and would be dying off as well.

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

Editorial: The high cost of saving the Salton Sea

The search is officially underway for the inaugural leader of the newly established Salton Sea Conservancy. Created under California Senate Bill 583—introduced by state Senator Steve Padilla—the state agency is looking for an experienced executive officer to take the reins of an environmental rescue mission decades in the making. It is a monumental task: building durable partnerships, managing completed restoration projects, and shaping the long-term strategy for a shrinking, dust-yielding lake that threatens both public health and ecological stability in the region. … According to the state’s official job posting, the incoming executive officer will command a monthly salary between $11,812 and $13,165.

Aquafornia news Politico

Friday Top of the Scroll: Data centers get pulled into California’s water wars

… Local fights are flaring over proposed data centers in Kern and Imperial Counties, some of California’s most water-parched regions. The ratcheting up of tension comes as two bills from Assemblymember Diane Papan that would force earlier disclosure of data centers’ projected and actual water use are winding their way through the Legislature, with a first hearing in the Senate scheduled next Tuesday. AB 2469 would require data centers to provide more information on water supply, use and planning before cities or counties can approve new or expanded data centers. AB 2619 would require data centers to report projected and actual water use as a requirement for renewing a local business license. 

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news The Mendocino Voice (Calif.)

Tribe with senior Eel River water rights shut out of White House meeting

Federal agriculture and interior officials convened a meeting Monday at the White House with PG&E and a Southern California water district over the future of the Eel River — and the tribe with senior water rights on that river was not in the room. The Round Valley Indian Tribes said Wednesday that Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins had called the meeting, which also included Interior Secretary Doug Burgum and representatives of the Elsinore Valley Municipal Water District. The subject was the Potter Valley Project, a hydroelectric complex on the Eel River. … Round Valley has spent years at the negotiating table with Russian River water users working out what the parties call the Two-Basin Solution — a plan to allow salmon recovery on the Eel while keeping water flowing to communities that had come to rely on diversions from the north.

Other Potter Valley Project news:

Aquafornia news The Denver Post (Colo.)

How sports betting became Colorado’s ticket to funding $140 million in water conservation projects

For the 18 ranchers who rely on the Maybell Irrigation District’s canal to funnel water to their fields, the 127-year-old headgate that diverted flow from the Yampa River meant a two-hour round trip through a rocky canyon whenever they needed water. … Then legalized sports betting came along, and, with it, millions of dollars for Colorado water projects. … Since sports betting became legal in May 2020, the state has collected more than $154 million in taxes, and the Colorado Water Conservation Board has funneled $140 million to various projects that preserve and conserve Colorado’s precious water. Supporters say the gambling money is a godsend for ranchers, fishermen, paddlers and others who want to protect the state’s water and those who depend on it for their livelihoods. Critics, however, say legalized sports betting has come at a cost.

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

Mexican state urges farmers to crop-switch ahead of drastic 2027 Colorado River water cuts

Facing a looming water crisis that could slash deliveries from the Colorado River by hundreds of millions of cubic meters, agricultural officials in Baja California are urging local farmers to pivot toward climate-resilient crops. The warning comes as the region braces for sharp reductions in its water supply. According to Alfonso Cortez Lara, director of the El Colegio de la Frontera Norte (Colef) in Mexicali, Baja California expects its annual quota from the Colorado River to be cut by 350 million cubic meters by 2027, La Voz newspaper reported. Mónica Vargas Núñez, head of Baja California’s Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (SADER BC), said the state is working alongside Mexico’s federal agriculture ministry and the National Water Commission (Conagua) to mitigate the impact. 

Other Colorado River management news:

Aquafornia news Smart Water Magazine

California commits $268.9 million more to Sites Reservoir in bid to climate-proof its water supply

California has taken a significant step forward in its long-term water storage agenda, with Governor Gavin Newsom announcing that the California Water Commission has approved an additional $268.9 million for the Sites Reservoir project. The new tranche brings the state’s total eligible investment through the Water Storage Investment Program to $1.363 billion. … The facility is seen as a cornerstone of California’s strategy to cope with increasingly volatile precipitation patterns driven by climate change, which have produced sharper swings between drought and flooding in recent years. … Before funding can be formally disbursed, the project must still satisfy a series of voter-mandated conditions, including securing financing, obtaining permits, completing environmental review, and contracting with the relevant state agencies.

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