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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 News & Publications Director Vik Jolly

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Aquafornia news The Colorado Sun (Denver)

Wednesday Top of the Scroll: What do nearly 200 people say about a plan to buy powerful Colorado River rights? Go for it.

Western Slope communities and water agencies want to be able to use powerful Colorado River water rights tied to the Shoshone Power Plant to help the environment. Over 170 members of the public weighed in on the process — and all but one said they liked the idea. The Colorado Water Conservation Board, a state water agency, gathered the public comments in preparation for a hearing about whether to incorporate the water rights into the state’s Instream Flow Program. The program aims to keep water in rivers to help aquatic and riparian ecosystems. The proposed change is part of a larger plan on the Western Slope to permanently maintain the historic flows around Shoshone. 

Other Colorado River Basin news:

Aquafornia news Mortgage Professional

California court rules Sandton can claim 4-S Ranch groundwater in foreclosure

A California court just confirmed that groundwater rights pass with the land in foreclosure, settling a major question for commercial mortgage professionals statewide. … The dispute began in 2017, when 4-S Ranch Partners, LLC secured a $33 million loan from Sandton Credit Solutions. … However, by 2019, 4-S Ranch had defaulted on the loan. … Sandton sought a court declaration that all rights to the groundwater passed with the land at foreclosure. 4-S Ranch continued to argue that the groundwater was personal property and should not have transferred with the land. The trial court ruled in Sandton’s favor. … On August 8, 2025, the Fifth District Court of Appeal affirmed the trial court’s decision. 

Other groundwater news:

Aquafornia news Active NorCal (Fresno, Calif.)

PG&E outlines timeline to tear down two Eel River dams after 100 years

Pacific Gas & Electric has begun the lengthy federal process to decommission and dismantle the century-old Potter Valley Project — a two-dam hydroelectric system that has diverted water from the Eel River to the Russian River for more than 100 years. Removing the Potter Valley Project’s dams would release the Eel River, connecting crucial habitats for salmon and steelhead and making it California’s longest free-flowing river. 

Other Potter Valley Project news:

Aquafornia news East Bay Express (Oakland, Calif.)

Suburban landscapes confront a wild new future driven by rising water bills and a desire for more sustainable landscaping

… A quiet revolution is unfolding across Bay Area suburbs. In cities like Berkeley and San Jose, the meaning of a “nice yard” is being redefined. With water bills rising each summer—by an average of 6.5% in the East Bay and 5.5% in the South Bay, according to East Bay Municipal Utility District and San Jose Water—more residents are putting down the hose and embracing a wilder approach to residential landscaping. These so-called “feral lawns” take many forms. Some are carefully planned native gardens filled with drought-tolerant California flora, while others look like an HOA citation waiting to happen. But one thing is clear: Those who stray from traditional lawn culture often face pushback from nosy neighbors and city officials for their decision to disrupt the suburban status quo.

Other water conservation news around the West:

Aquafornia news Fox Weather

Why are frogs being released at a national park site in California?

Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks in California’s Sierra Nevada mountains are now home to more than three dozen yellow-legged frogs recently released by staff from the Oakland Zoo. During the first week of August, the zoo said 43 mountain yellow-legged frogs were flown by helicopter to their release site near Laurel Lake.  The event marked the 1,000th yellow-legged amphibian released by the zoo during conservation efforts designed to save the species from disappearing entirely. Biologists said the frogs are part of a broader recovery program designed to pull the species back from the brink of extinction. Scientists attribute much of the population collapse to chytridiomycosis, a deadly fungal disease that has impacted animal populations worldwide.

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Kern agency doesn’t shut door on water sale as possible solution for homeowners 200 miles away

Residents of the Diablo Grande housing development in the foothills west of Modesto hope a possible water sale could keep water flowing to their own homes, but they need buy-in from the Kern County Water Agency. For its part, KCWA hasn’t said yes. But it hasn’t said no. In a July 29 letter to the attorney for Western Hills Water District, which serves Diablo Grande exclusively, KCWA states it is willing to work with the district “…if an economically, logistically and regulatorily feasible solution can be found.” Given the complexity of the 24-year deal that first brought KCWA and Western Hills together, that could be tricky.

Other local water management news:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

California has more cattle feedlots than any state, new map shows

In a first, researchers have identified the nation’s roughly 8,700 cattle feeding operations, and the map shows California has more of them than any other state. California also has the most feedlot acreage: over 85,000 acres. … For decades, such operations have been associated with degraded air and water quality. … The lack of precise location data has meant that local governments, academics and nonprofit organizations have struggled to document the effects of these facilities on the environment and community health. So the researchers decided to build a database and map combining existing data sets. … The study was published Tuesday in the journal Communications Earth & Environment. 

Other agricultural water news:

Aquafornia news Inside Climate News

Can Colorado recycle toxic water from oil and gas drilling without increasing emissions?

… This March, Colorado’s Energy and Carbon Management Commission (ECMC), which regulates the oil and gas industry, passed new rules requiring drillers to recycle more of their wastewater—a caustic, brackish and chemically laden byproduct of the drilling and fracking process known as “produced water.” The new rules were set in motion by HB23-1242, passed in 2023, which requires oil and gas extraction companies to use more recycled water, but do not address another key provision of the law: the increased recycling of produced water cannot cause more oil and gas emissions, which can contain CO2, methane, benzene, a known carcinogen, and other volatile organic compounds. Regulators across the state are trying to figure out whether meeting one requirement of the new law requires violating the other.

Other produced water news:

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

EPA to push back deadlines on coal plant water pollution rule

EPA is preparing to extend key deadlines set by the Biden administration for reducing coal-fired power plants’ water pollution, according to a court filing Monday. A proposal to amend the Biden administration’s water pollution rule for coal plants is undergoing review by the White House, per the filing from the Trump administration and a notice Monday from the Office of Management and Budget. EPA expects the new proposal, focused on compliance deadlines for plant owners, to be issued “shortly” and finalized before the end of the year, the filing said. … Last spring, EPA strengthened pollution standards for coal wastewater, requiring plant owners to install new technologies to virtually eliminate heavy metals and other harmful pollutants from three major waste streams.

Other EPA news:

Aquafornia news The Independent (London, U.K.)

Five dogs have died and more than 20 fell sick in California. Researchers suspect a toxic algae is to blame

Five dogs have died and more than 20 have fallen sick in California as researchers suspect a toxic algae is to blame. Los Angeles County health officials are warning residents to keep their furry best friends away from the Venice Canals as they work to figure out what’s behind the mysterious illnesses of multiple neighborhood dogs. The county’s Department of Public Health said in an alert last Friday that there have been 26 local dogs that have suddenly fallen severely ill, including five that have died as a result. … California water officials tested the canal water, algae and scum, finding the presence of algal toxins. But a definitive link between the toxins and the dog illnesses has yet to be confirmed.

Other algal bloom news:

Aquafornia news KRCR/ABC7 (Redding, Calif.)

Yurok Tribe celebrates Klamath River’s renewal at 61st annual Salmon Festival

The Yurok Tribe is inviting the community to celebrate the Klamath River’s renewal at the 61st annual Klamath Salmon Festival on Saturday, August 16. The tribe said this year’s theme is “Celebrating the Spectacular Start of the Klamath River’s Renewal,” highlighting the river’s remarkable recovery following the removal of the last of four dams in August 2024. … Despite the festival’s name, the tribe said no salmon will be served this year due to a below-average fish forecast. However, the tribe remains optimistic about the future of the Klamath’s salmon runs, citing ongoing large-scale river restoration projects throughout the basin.

Other tribal water news:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Water now safe in L.A.’s West Valley; residents urged to flush pipes

The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power lifted a “boil water” notice Tuesday afternoon for Granada Hills and Porter Ranch, ending a weeklong episode that saw residents’ taps run dry or slow to a trickle. The DWP urged residents to flush out all water pipes and appliances before using the water. About 9,200 households in the west San Fernando Valley were affected by a water service outage that started last week after DWP workers discovered a faulty valve, according to the agency. The valve, which was installed in 1967 and located 20 feet underground, was stuck in a nearly closed position and could not be opened, which impeded the flow of water. … The agency said in a news release that those customers affected by the “boil water” notice would receive a $20 credit.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Monterey Herald (Calif.)

Opinion: Why desalination is essential

… The Monterey Peninsula is a water island, disconnected from the vast state and federal water delivery systems that serve other parts of California. This isolation means our fate rests entirely on limited local resources. The state’s order, 30 years ago, to reduce pumping from the river is not just a regulatory hurdle; it’s a critical environmental mandate to protect endangered species and restore the health of one of our most important natural assets. Without a new, reliable source of water, we cannot meet this mandate while also providing for the needs of our community. The desalination project represents the most comprehensive and shovel-ready answer to this challenge.
–Written by Adam Pinterits, the government and community affairs director for the Monterey County Association of Realtors.

Aquafornia news The Maritime Executive

Coast Guard contractor removes derelict minesweeper from San Joaquin Delta

A contractor working for the U.S. Coast Guard has finished removing the oil-soaked hull of a wooden minesweeper from Little Potato Slough, completing the last large vessel removal of the cleanup for the wreck-ridden waterway near Stockton, California. The Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta has long been a catch basin for derelict vessels, some larger than others. For decades, the Suisun Bay area of the Sacramento River was home to dozens of decaying government ships maintained by MARAD, almost all of which have been towed off to the scrapyard to resolve an environmental lawsuit. But many more private vessels litter the narrow waterways upriver, and Little Potato Slough – a meandering waterway on the outskirts of Stockton - has become notorious for its wrecks. 

Aquafornia news The New York Times

Kabul, Afghanistan’s capital, could run out of water by 2030

… Kabul is running dry, withered by scarcer rainfalls and snow melts and drained by unregulated wells. It has become so dry that its six million people could be without water by 2030 — and are now fighting about it. Its water reserves are emptying nearly twice as quickly as they are getting replenished. The Taliban administration, short of cash, has so far been unable to bring water from nearby dams and rivers to the choking city. Now, Kabul risks becoming the first modern capital to be depleted of underground water reserves, the nonprofit Mercy Corps warned in a recent report.

Aquafornia news CBS Sacramento

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: Sinking land is driving down home values in California’s Central Valley, study shows

Sinking ground in California’s Central Valley is causing property values to sink, according to a new study by UC Riverside. ”When we see droughts, we see larger subsidence, we see more extraction of groundwater, we see larger subsidence, and that’s a sign for many other problems, like water availability, job availability and so on,” said Mehdi Nemati, author and UC Riverside Enviro Economics and Policy assistant professor. … To determine how this sinking is impacting home values, researchers used satellite-based radar data to measure ground-level changes. … They estimated that losses totaled $1.87 billion across the region from 2015 to 2021.

Other groundwater news:

Aquafornia news The Sonoma County Gazette (Santa Rosa, Calif.)

Potter Valley project’s end: How will this impact winegrowers?

Here’s the plain‑English version of what’s about to happen — and what it means if you grow grapes or buy fruit in Sonoma County. … FERC just approved PG&E’s 2025 flow variance, which prioritizes holding more water back on the Eel to protect fish and manage dam‑safety risks. Practically, that means lower (and more variable) Potter Valley/Russian River diversions this year, with releases allowed to dip below 25 cfs when needed. … Second, the long‑term geometry of our supply changes from “year‑round trickle” to “catch it in the rain.” ERPA’s New Eel‑Russian Facility (NERF) is a pump station that only runs when the Eel is up — fall through spring — pushing water through the existing tunnel to the East Branch and, ultimately, Lake Mendocino. … [I]n plain terms: load up in winter, live off storage in summer. 

Other Potter Valley Project news:

Aquafornia news Stocktonia (Stockton, Calif.)

Coast Guard wraps up 25-day operation to remove sunken Canadian ship

The last remaining piece of the HMCS Chaleur, a Cold War-era Canadian Navy minesweeper, was lifted from Little Potato Slough on Thursday morning, concluding a 25-day demolition effort by the U.S. Coast Guard and partner contractors. The operation, which began in mid-July, cleared more than 400 tons of oil-saturated hull from the Delta waterway. … Submerged since 2021, the Chaleur had become a slow-moving environmental hazard in one of California’s most ecologically fragile and economically important river systems. Its deteriorating Guardstructure leaked oil into a channel that supplies drinking water to Stockton and irrigates vast tracts of farmland across San Joaquin County. 

Other Delta news:

Aquafornia news The Sacramento Bee (Calif.)

Opinion: California’s water system must be prepared for climate change

… Updated modeling this spring found that Sites [Reservoir] could have stored more than 550,000 acre-feet in just five months of the current water year. … South of the Delta, the proposed Del Puerto Canyon Reservoir … could store up to an additional 82,000 acre-feet of new storage every year. … [B]ut when the House debated an energy and natural resources package earlier this year that included $2 billion dollars for Central Valley water storage, I was the lone Democrat to vote yes because reliable water is critical to my district and the state. Most of the $1 billion that ended up in the final bill is expected to support the enlargement of existing facilities, such as Shasta Dam and San Luis Reservoir. This is a good start, but many more projects are needed.
–Written by Rep. Adam Gray, who represents California’s 13th Congressional District and serves on the House Natural Resources Subcommittee on Water, Wildlife and Fisheries.

Aquafornia news Colorado Newsline

Opinion: A paradigm shift on the Colorado River is the only way to confront the water crisis

For millions of years, water flowing through the Colorado River shaped the geography of the West, carving out features like the Grand Canyon. Now, the Colorado River sustains the cities, farms and industries of the southwestern U.S., providing 40 million people with water. … The Colorado River is remarkable in and of itself, it lays the foundation for remarkable habitats, and, apparently, can precipitate remarkable political alliances. This month, all 10 of Colorado’s U.S. legislators, from the most progressive representatives to MAGA Lauren Boebert, sent a letter to President Donald Trump calling for the release of funding for Colorado River water projects.
–Written by Colorado Newsline columnist Sammy Herdman.

Other Colorado River Basin news: