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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 WIRED

Wednesday Top of the Scroll: Data center operators are trying to fix their water use problems

On Monday, SpaceX amended its initial public offering to state that water conditions—including water scarcity, regulations around water, and drought—could constrain data center development. It isn’t the only tech company trying to assess how water scarcity might impact its business. Water use is emerging as one of the most contentious data center issues. A recent Gallup poll found that seven out of 10 Americans are opposed to data center development, with water scarcity ranking as the top resource concern. Facing increasingly fierce resistance, some tech companies are scrambling to assure the public that they’re facing the issue head-on. … Google is taking a different approach … the company rolled out a series of water-related commitments to communities where it has data centers, along with funding announcements for water-related projects in the US.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news The Colorado Sun (Denver)

Colorado officials call for more state actions to combat drought

Members of the Colorado Drought Task Force want Gov. Jared Polis to issue an emergency proclamation to unlock more help, potentially from state coffers, in face of worrisome drought conditions.  After a historically bad winter that ended a month early, Colorado is already feeling the impacts — whether that’s financial strain, tough business decisions or an overstressed environment. As part of the state’s response, the task force recommended Monday moving into the highest level, phase three, of the state’s drought response plan. The move could allow the state to tap more resources or seek a presidential declaration. … The officials gathered for their third meeting in Winter Park to hear updates about drought conditions and impacts on fisheries, water providers and wildfire risk. 

Other drought news around the West:

Aquafornia news KJZZ (Phoenix)

Colorado River leaders must act soon to avoid ‘devastating consequences,’ report says

A new report from a group of widely respected Colorado River experts says the region’s major reservoirs are sliding toward “devastating consequences” as water levels continue to drop. The authors write that another dry year, on the heels of last winter’s record-setting dry conditions, would send the nation’s largest reservoirs to “run-of-the-river” levels, meaning that they are unable to store water for the future, and simply pass water downstream. As a result, the paper’s authors — a group of academics and retired water officials — are calling on state water managers and the federal government to work quickly on new rules for sharing the Colorado River and avert infrastructure problems at Lake Powell and Lake Mead, the nation’s two largest reservoirs. 

Other Colorado River management news:

Aquafornia news San Diego Union-Tribune

County issues health warnings for Tijuana River Valley following sewage pipe collapse

A collapse in a major Tijuana sewage pipeline has sent millions of gallons of raw wastewater surging into the Tijuana River Valley, pushing a South Bay treatment plant far beyond its capacity and driving dangerous levels of hydrogen sulfide gas into surrounding neighborhoods overnight. The U.S. International Boundary and Water Commission reported the failure of Tijuana’s Parallel Gravity Line [last] Friday night. The line conveys wastewater across Tijuana and its collapse sent excessive flows to the South Bay International Wastewater Treatment Plant, which is designed to handle 35 million gallons per day. The plant sustained flows above 45 million gallons per day for 13 hours over the weekend and peaked above 60 million gallons per day for nine hours.

Other Tijuana River news:

Aquafornia news Active NorCal (Redding, Calif.)

Toxic algal blooms are getting worse in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. Scientists are trying to figure out why.

Harmful algal blooms were rarely observed in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta before 2000. Over the past two decades, they have become a regular summer event, and scientists are racing to understand why. DWR is co-leading a five-year, $3 million research project funded by NOAA to investigate what is driving the increase in harmful algal blooms across the Delta and San Francisco Bay. The effort, called MERHAB, brings together scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey, the San Francisco Estuary Institute, UC Santa Cruz, Cal Poly Maritime Academy and several regulatory agencies. … The research team is using remote sensing technology, continuous monitoring stations, laboratory analysis and community volunteers to track where blooms form, how they move and what conditions trigger them. 

Other aquatic nuisance species news:

Aquafornia news The Mendocino Voice (Calif.)

U.S. Congressman Jared Huffman calls the Trump cabinet’s Potter Valley letter ‘incoherent’

The water that keeps the upper Russian River flowing through the dry months — the flow farms and towns from Ukiah to Healdsburg lean on every summer — comes from a century-old diversion the federal government spent six years agreeing to shrink. On Friday, Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins told Congressman Jared Huffman in a letter dated May 29 she’s not done fighting to keep that system in place, dams and all. On Tuesday, Congressman Huffman, who represents the district in which the dams are located, told the Voice her letter was “incoherent.” … “Like most of the gobbledygook in that letter, it’s nonsense,” he said in an interview Tuesday, after his office gave the letter to The Mendocino Voice and Bay City News.

Other dam news:

Aquafornia news Smart Cities Dive

Cities push Congress to avert water infrastructure funding cliff

With the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act supplemental five-year water infrastructure funding set to expire Sept. 30, local government and water stakeholders are urging federal lawmakers to reauthorize core water programs and fully fund water infrastructure programs in fiscal year 2027. The 2021 IIJA allocated $50 billion for water infrastructure over five years, divided across five pots under the Clean Water State Revolving Fund and the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund, with specific funding to replace lead pipes and address PFAS and other contaminants. The National League of Cities is asking Congress to maintain the IIJA’s authorization amount — $5.85 billion each to the Clean Water SRF and the Drinking Water SRF — and reauthorize grant and technical assistance programs to address PFAS, lead pipes and other water infrastructure projects in FY27. 

Other Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act news:

Aquafornia news NPR

‘Forever chemicals’ are everywhere. 5 ways to reduce your exposure

“Forever chemicals” are everywhere — in our drinking water, in our food and in products like nonstick frying pans, raincoats and even some types of floss. … If your community has water contaminated by PFAS chemicals, drinking water could be your main source of exposure. According to the U.S. Geological Survey, they’re in nearly half of the nation’s tap water. Many cities and towns have already tested public water for these chemicals, so a good first step is to check with your water utility to see if they have published those results. To do that, you can call your utility’s customer service line or look online to see if they’ve published PFAS data in water quality reports. … Once you figure out the levels of PFAS chemicals in your water, you can compare them to the EPA’s regulations.

Other PFAS news:

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Kern agency releases details of deal to keep taps flowing to homes near Patterson

A reshaped agreement for the Kern County Water Agency to provide water to a housing development 200 miles to the north erased $14 million in debt, giving residents water certainty into the future just days before KCWA had threatened to shut off their supplies. … The letter of intent, provided to SJV Water Monday, was signed May 28, just days before the agency said it would cut off Western Hills. The water entities are still working out a formal contract. … The new, draft deal caps more than a year of back and forth between the entities over Western Hills’ skipped water payments. How a Kern County water agency ended up supplying a housing development 200 miles to the north is a complex, somewhat convoluted, deal going back 28 years.

Aquafornia news Sierra Club

Blog: Can a water renaissance put California on a sustainable path?

… The Water Renaissance Plan calls for a collective commitment to developing local water supplies. It outlines eight priority recommendations, from policy reforms to the creation of new sources of funding, such as a general obligation water bond focused on local water supplies. The group, composed of a variety of nonprofit and advocacy organizations, including the Sierra Club, claims that sustainable technologies like stormwater capture, wastewater recycling, and conservation could yield between 1.8 and 2 million acre-feet of local water supplied by 2045, at a lower price tag than the delta tunnel. And local water is much more reliable in the face of climate change. … Models predict at least an 8 percent reduction in imported water supplies by 2050. … Can they convince lawmakers and state agencies that have long favored engineered solutions?

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: Trump taps Democrats’ climate money for Western drought

… In recent weeks the Interior Department has contacted farm districts, cities, tribes and other water users in Arizona, California and Nevada looking to extend Biden administration contracts that paid out nearly $1.4 billion from Democrats’ signature climate law to entities that agreed to fallow fields, tighten conservation measures or otherwise forgo water deliveries. At the same time, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum ordered up a list of projects from the region’s seven governors to address the river’s long-term problems, for which the federal government could be a “potential cost-share partner.” The menu of proposals they delivered a week ago includes 85 projects totaling more than $50 billion — a price tag that far exceeds what Interior currently has in its coffers.

Other Colorado River Basin news:

Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

Trump administration doubles down on effort to stop California dam removal

The Trump administration has offered one of its most detailed explanations of why it wants to stop dam removal on Northern California’s Eel River, citing in a letter numerous concerns that include water, power, wildfire safety and even the state’s “radical leadership.” Still, big questions remain. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins sent the three-page letter Friday in response to a Congressional inquiry about her agency’s sudden interest in a pair of relatively obscure PG&E-owned dams. … The dams, in Lake and Mendocino counties, are part of the Potter Valley hydroelectric project, which Pacific Gas and Electric Co. is seeking to retire because of its age and expense. … In the letter obtained by the Chronicle, Rollins said her agency is actively looking for someone new to operate the project, to both continue power generation and maintain water supplies.

Other Potter Valley Project news:

Aquafornia news USA Today

El Niño is finally waking up. How it may reshape severe weather

A developing El Niño in the Pacific Ocean is showing its earliest atmospheric fingerprints, with scientists detecting shifts in pressure, wind patterns and ocean temperatures that could shape weather across the United States in the months ahead. … While California is not typically in the path of tropical systems, forecasters say warmer ocean waters and more favorable storm tracks can increase the risk of tropical moisture reaching the region. That can translate into heavy rainfall and flash flooding in parts of Southern California, particularly in late-season setups. AccuWeather also warns of an elevated flood risk across the broader Southwest, including Arizona and New Mexico, where remnants of Pacific storms can interact with monsoon moisture and produce intense rainfall far inland.

Other El Niño news:

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

How a deep-ocean desalination startup hopes to rewrite California’s water future

… Desalination plants are notoriously large electricity users. Some have natural gas pipelines running to them to fuel dedicated power plants. The company OceanWell estimates its technology will cut that electricity use by up to 40%. Its goal is to anchor an array of units 4.5 miles offshore, at a cost of $500 million to $1 billion, to deliver 60 million gallons of water per day. That’s enough for about 400,000 people. Prompted by severe water cutbacks four years ago, the Las Virgenes Municipal Water District has been working with Menlo Park-based OceanWell to develop a cheaper, less power-hungry way to turn saltwater into drinking water without sucking in tons of sea life. In a recent test at a local reservoir, it worked.

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

Rep. Ruiz calls for a freeze on local data center projects, citing environmental and economic risks

U.S. Representative Dr. Raúl Ruiz (D-CA) called for an immediate halt to proposed data center projects in his district, voicing sharp concerns over their potential impact on local utility costs, power grid stability, and public health. In a video statement released last week, Ruiz—a physician who represents California’s 25th congressional district, encompassing parts of the Imperial Valley and Eastern Riverside County—argued that the massive energy and water demands of these facilities pose an undue burden on an already vulnerable region. … The environmental footprint of these facilities extends to water consumption. Many data centers utilize evaporative cooling systems that consume millions of gallons of water daily—a logistics challenge that Ruiz argues is unsustainable given the state’s hydrology.

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news Active NorCal (Redding, Calif.)

A major fisheries bill just passed the California Senate with bipartisan support

A piece of legislation with real consequences for Northern California’s fishing communities cleared a major hurdle this week. Senate Bill 1393, carried by Senator Mike McGuire, passed out of the California Senate with bipartisan support and now heads to the Assembly for consideration. The bill targets three specific areas of the state’s fisheries management system. First, it strengthens the steelhead trout restoration program and directs more funding toward habitat projects that support the species’ recovery. Second, it updates the regulatory framework governing the Dungeness crab fishery, one of the most economically significant commercial fisheries on the entire West Coast. Third, it establishes clear rules for vessel transit through areas where crab fishing has been closed, giving boat operators a defined path forward when navigating restricted zones.

Other fishery news:

Aquafornia news KPBS (San Diego)

Sewage spike, odors worsen in San Diego’s South Bay after Tijuana pipeline collapse

People living and working near the polluted Tijuana River may have noticed more sewage flows and worsened sewer gas odors over the weekend. The U.S. International Boundary and Water Commission, or IBWC, said that’s because a 10-mile pipeline in Tijuana, dubbed the Parallel Gravity Line, collapsed Friday night. The line is supposed to transport wastewater to the San Antonio de los Buenos plant in Baja California, which is designed to divert flows from the Tijuana River by treating 18 million gallons per day before releasing them into the Pacific Ocean. Instead, the raw flows have been entering the river. According to IBWC data, flows in the river spiked from 10 million gallons on Friday to 34 million gallons on Sunday. … The IBWC also said that the Parallel Gravity Line has ruptured twice over the past two weeks. 

Other Tijuana River news:

Aquafornia news The New Lede

Report calls for stricter fertilizer rules as US nitrate pollution crisis grows

Lax regulations and mismanaged applications in the US are to blame for the tons of nitrogen fertilizer that runs off into waterways each year and contributes to water and air pollution, cancer and environmental damage, according to a report released Monday. US farmers annually apply over 11 million metric tons of nitrogen fertilizer, according to the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), making it the most used fertilizer in the country. The new report, published by the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), finds that an estimated half of these nutrients aren’t taken up by crops, but leach into the environment instead in ways that cost the US billions of dollars annually in water treatment costs, beach closures and habitat loss. Most of the costs hit small and rural farming communities, the report states.

Other water pollution news:

Aquafornia news Maven's Notebook

Blog: Sinking land, shrinking capacity — DWR confronts subsidence on the California Aqueduct

At Metropolitan Water District’s May Imported Water Subcommittee meeting, Christopher Martin, executive policy advisor for the State Water Project at the California Department of Water Resources, outlined the extent of subsidence along the California Aqueduct, the state’s response strategy, planned corrective measures, and the funding now being assembled for repairs. Subsidence occurs when groundwater pumping lowers water levels and reduces pore pressure in the aquifer system, causing the fine-grained clay and silt layers in the sediments to compact. … Because the sinking is often uneven from place to place, it creates differential subsidence that can distort the slope and freeboard of infrastructure such as the California Aqueduct, reducing conveyance capacity and increasing repair needs.

Other groundwater news:

Aquafornia news Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Blog: A plan to preserve wetlands without stopping development

Balancing economic growth and environmental protection is not easy. Consider wetlands, which provide flood protection, aid water quality, and are linchpins of larger ecosystems. How can we best preserve wetlands while enhancing economic activity?  According to a new study, one solution involves supplanting traditional conservation mandates, which require replacing affected wetlands locally, with tradeable offsets. Through this system, a developer can build on a wetland by purchasing credits representing an equivalent environmental value created by improving a wetland somewhere else in the same watershed, away from concentrated development. … The scholars say it would provide a better way of balancing wetlands preservation and economic gains, while lowering flood risk.

Other wetland news: