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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Thousands were left without power after a gigantic wall of dust
and a monsoon slammed through Phoenix, causing damage and
flight delays. On Monday, Aug. 25, a haboob, a huge dust storm
caused by strong winds from a thunderstorm, barreled through
Phoenix. Photos and videos show a massive cloud of dust
consuming homes as it engulfs Phoenix and the surrounding
areas. … A flood advisory was also
issued, according to AZ Central.
This is the final video in our series exploring how the Kern
River is divided up. Several local groups sued the City of
Bakersfield demanding it look at its river operations under the
Public Trust Doctrine. That doctrine requires water in
California to be used for the highest beneficial use, which
includes the environment and public access, according to the
lawsuit. There’ve been a lot of twists and turns in this
lawsuit. Now the trial date has been pushed back to 2027 as the
California Supreme Court has agreed to review one portion of
the case.
A long-planned water storage project benefitting cities in the
western Inland Empire is getting a big infusion of cash. The
Inland Empire Utilities Agency’s Chino Basin Project is
intended to recycle more water in western San Bernardino County
to reduce demand for water imported from Northern California.
On Wednesday, Aug. 20, the California Water Commission approved
an additional $53.9 million in funding.
As part of restoring the Bolinas Lagoon watershed, the
Watershed Stewards Program, San Francisco Bay Area Inventory &
Monitoring Network, Point Reyes National Seashore, and Audubon
Canyon Ranch partnered for a volunteer event at Volunteer
Canyon Creek. With over a dozen volunteers we removed hundreds
of pounds of invasive Cape ivy from the banks of the creek, a
sensitive tributary of Bolinas Lagoon. Bolinas Lagoon, a
Wetland of International Importance, supports large numbers of
harbor seals and migratory birds, and has served as the heart
of surrounding communities for thousands of years.
Utah wildlife officials are allowing anglers to collect more
fish every day at three reservoirs across the state because of
low water levels tied to a mix of drought and upcoming
projects. Utah Division of Wildlife Resources upped the daily
limits at Nine Mile Reservoir in Sanpete County and Vernon
Reservoir in Tooele County late last week amid low reservoir
levels. … The agency typically orders emergency daily
increases at bodies of water when levels drop to a point that
leaves fish species prone to illness.
Despite progress over the last decade, billions of people
around the world still lack access to essential water,
sanitation, and hygiene services, putting them at risk of
disease and deeper social exclusion. A new
report: Progress on Household Drinking Water and
Sanitation 2000–2024: special focus on
inequalities –launched by WHO and UNICEF during World
Water Week 2025 – reveals that, while some progress has been
made, major gaps persist. People living in low-income
countries, fragile contexts, rural communities, children, and
minority ethnic and indigenous groups face the greatest
disparities.
Tensions between the town of Firestone and the Central Weld
County Water District have reached a boiling point as the
directors voted unanimously on Friday to cancel the town’s
water service. … After Aug. 21, 2028, Firestone will be
responsible for all water service operations to its residents
and businesses, the water district said. … The water district
said that there have been disputes over billing practices and
noted that in May, the town owed the water district over
$155,000.
A major ocean temperature index in the North Pacific has
plunged to record low levels signaling a shift that tends to
lock in coastal fog, delay California’s rainy season
and reroute storms to the north. This summer already
bears the stamp of this setup. … New research suggests this
isn’t just a temporary phase. The persistent sea surface
temperature anomalies driving this cool phase pattern may
reflect a longer-term shift in the Pacific’s ocean and
atmosphere, one that climate change appears to be reinforcing.
Three years after an obscure Arizona agency was charged with
finding new water supplies for the state, it has received six
proposals from groups that hope to tap more than $375 million
in state money to develop new water sources. The proposals
include three to create desalination plants using ocean water —
likely from the Sea of Cortez in Mexico. But exactly what
is being proposed — and how much it will cost — remains
confidential as the Water Infrastructure Finance Authority says
state law keeps it so until its board members award one or more
contracts to move ahead with more detailed plans.
Imperial Irrigation District (IID) Water Manager Tina Shields
began her report to the IID board Tuesday, Aug. 19, saying,
“Hydrology never has good news, lately.” … California,
therefore the Imperial Valley, is spared from mandatory cuts in
2026 under the Tier 1 shortage, maintaining its full allocation
of 4.4 million acre-feet, due to its senior water rights.
… If conditions worsen, further reductions could be
triggered, potentially affecting all Lower Basin states. …
She [Shields] said this year was the sixth-worst year in a
64-year recording. “We had a decent snowpack, but the dry soil
and fire damage circumvented the runoff entering the
reservoirs.”
… The Darden Clean Energy Project, approved by the California
Energy Commission in June, is the first development to be
fast-tracked under a 2022 state law that allows large renewable
energy projects to be reviewed and permitted without sign-off
from county and municipal governments. … The nearby
towns struggle with poor drinking water and
air quality. … It will be built on 9,500 acres sold by
the Westlands Water District. … [T]he district’s uncertain
water supplies have made the land impractical
for farming, prompting Westlands to divert water to more
productive land. … Eight other projects, from Imperial
County in the south to Shasta County in the north, currently
are pursuing approval through the opt-in process.
… [Beavers] are praised for bringing lands alive with lush
threaded wetlands that offer resiliency in droughts and
wildfires. On the other hand, a rancher or streamside
homeowner might counter that they are just smelly rats — rats
with a single-minded penchant for property damage. They gnaw
down landscaping and cause floods. … This month, CPW is
having to wade into the middle of the contentious beaver debate
and come up with a management strategy for an animal considered
a keystone species. That means an entire ecosystem would change
drastically without the presence of beavers.
Governor Gavin Newsom is advancing the Sites Reservoir project
to expand California’s water storage capabilities, as the state
braces for water shortages impacting western states and the
looming threat of a hotter and drier future. The California
Water Commission has approved a nearly $219 million funding
increase for the project to ensure it progresses swiftly. The
additional funding is necessary due to increased costs from
delays, including inflation and anticipated construction cost
hikes.
… AI is largely powered by data centers that field queries,
store data and deploy information. As AI becomes ubiquitous,
the power demand for data centers increases, leading to grid
reliability problems for people living nearby. … The
data centers also generate heat, so they rely on fresh water to
stay cool. Larger centers can consume up to 5 million
gallons (18.9 million liters) a day,
according to an article from the Environmental and Energy Study
Institute. That’s roughly the same as the daily water demand
for a town of up to 50,000 people.
To improve sustainability in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta,
the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California this
week secured agricultural partners to cultivate rice on two
district-owned islands in the Delta – the heart of California’s
water supply system and one of the state’s most vital
ecosystems. In two separate actions, Metropolitan’s 38-member
board on Tuesday (Aug. 19) approved two lease agreements to
convert current agricultural lands to rice farming on Webb
Tract in California’s Contra Costa County and on Bacon Island
in San Joaquin County.
… [M]any people in the poorest county in the state have opted
for cisterns, reservoirs buried underground and covered with a
plastic lid or cement slab. To fill them, residents drive 20
minutes or so to town, often weekly, with tanks in their pickup
trucks or on their trailers to buy water at 10 cents a gallon,
or they have it delivered for an extra fee. … [I]n Fort
Garland [Colo.], the system was abruptly cut off this month —
without warning or notice. … Underneath it all is a deep
concern about whether this is a preview of the water wars ahead
as the West deals with unprecedented drought and its residents
compete for a resource that is finite yet essential to life.
… This week, the City Council for Rancho Palos Verdes, a
small, upscale city along the coast, formally approved an
ordinance that permanently bans new residential construction in
an area known as the Portuguese Bend Landslide
Complex. … Part of the issue, the city said, has
(ironically for a drought-ridden state) been water. The area
has been soaked with rain for much of the past
half decade, which seeped into and destabilized the precarious
hillside soil.
A northern Fresno County groundwater agency is ramping up
efforts to help landowners register their wells by hosting the
first in a string of workshops on Aug. 27. Dates for future
workshops are still in flux. Owners of water wells in the
greater Kerman, Biola, Easton, Fresno and Clovis areas are
invited to the workshop, from 3-6 p.m. at the Kerman Community
Center, 15101 W Kearney Blvd. The North Kings Groundwater
Sustainability Agency board of directors issued a
mandatory well registration policy in April. All well owners
must register by Nov. 30, 2025 to avoid a $100 penalty per
well.
Last week I attended a tour of the Tijuana River Valley,
organized by 11 organizations for the 30×30 Partnership Summit,
a statewide meeting of groups committed to achieving
California’s conservation goals. … A vast array of
entities oversee and advocate for the river valley. On the U.S.
side alone, the land is stewarded by federal, state, county and
city agencies. Advocacy groups with a stake in the river’s
future — and in resolving the public health crisis caused by
billions of gallons of untreated wastewater pouring into the
watershed — hail from both sides of the border.
A study on rats suggests that exposure to microplastics may
impair the blood–brain barrier, induce oxidative stress in the
brain, and damage neurons. The microplastic exposure involved
oral administration of low-density polyethylene (LDPE)
suspended in water for 3 and 6 weeks. The research was
published in Molecular Neurobiology. … Study author
Ghasem Forutan and his colleagues note that freshwater
contamination is a major route by which microplastics
can enter the human body.