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.
Subscribe to our weekday emails to have news delivered to your inbox at about 9 a.m. Monday through Friday except for holidays.
Please Note:
Some of the sites we link to may limit the number of stories you can access without subscribing.
We occasionally bold words in the text to ensure the water connection is clear.
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.
Gov. Mark Gordon joined fellow governors from other Colorado
River headwater states Thursday to announce that a significant
extra water release from Flaming Gorge is imminent. Dire water
conditions in the region will likely require reducing water
use, he warned. “Because of such diminished runoff,
existing state laws in the Upper Division States
[Wyoming, Utah, Colorado and New Mexico]
require water users to face cuts to water rights dating back to
the 1800s — these cuts are mandatory, uncompensated, and will
have significant impacts on water users, including Upper Basin
tribes, and local economies,” Gordon said Thursday afternoon in
a joint press release with Govs. Spencer Cox of Utah, Michelle
Lujan Grisham of New Mexico and Jared Polis of Colorado.
Flush with water supplies amid dry conditions statewide, the
San Diego County Water Authority‘s board on Thursday voted to
approve the second long-term sale to customers in Riverside
County. Last month, the Water Authority signed 21-year deal
with Western Municipal Water District in southwest Riverside
County to supply 10,000 acre-feet of water — enough for 30,000
households — for $13 million annually. Now the Water Authority
has approved a similar deal with Eastern Municipal
Water District of Southern California, which serves nearly 1
million residents in Perris, Hemet, San Jacinto and
the Elsinore Valley. … Thanks to three decades of
investment in aqueduct improvements, increased dam capacity and
desalination, the Water Authority projects ample supply through
2050.
You’re going to hear a lot about El Niño this year. The term
refers to warmer-than-average waters along the equatorial
Pacific that can influence weather across the globe,
raising the odds of searing drought in some regions and
torrential rain in others. Indicators increasingly
suggest such an event will develop later this summer, and it’s
possible it could be the strongest of the century to affect
Southern California. … In Southern California, strong El
Niños increase the likelihood of wet winters that replenish
water supplies and tamp down wildfire risk but can also unleash
flooding, debris flows and coastal erosion. Still, the exact
effects are impossible to predict.
… Glenn Merrill, hydrologist with the National Weather
Service’s Salt Lake City office, can sum up this year’s spring
runoff, which peaked on March 9 about a month early, with one
four-letter word: weak. … One bright spot in the
otherwise cheerless forecast is the summer monsoon season. Due
to the lack of snowpack … the season is expected to arrive
early and be more active than normal due to warm surface
temperatures in the Gulf of California in the Baja region of
northwestern Mexico.
Attorneys for conservation and Indigenous rights groups filed
an appeal Wednesday in the effort to stop an open-pit
lithium-boron mine from being built on the only known habitat
of an endangered wildflower. … The Western Shoshone
Defense Project, who are represented in the appeal by the
Western Mining Action Project, said the mine’s water use could
also potentially dry out Cave Spring, a sacred site less than a
mile from the proposed mine quarry. According to the project’s
final environmental review, if Cave Spring is fed by
groundwater the mine could potentially decrease the amount of
water discharged from the spring.
The Trump administration on Thursday proposed weakening rules
for the disposal of ash produced by burning coal that
can contain hazardous heavy metals and contaminate
groundwater. Those regulations were strengthened under
the Biden administration as part of a wider crackdown on
pollution from coal-fired power plants. The Trump
administration proposed easing standards for monitoring and
protecting groundwater near some coal ash sites, and rolling
back rules that require the cleanup of entire coal properties
rather than just the sites where ash was dumped. The revisions
would also make it easier to reuse coal ash for other purposes.
The sewage runoff affecting the Tijuana River is the result of
repair work being carried out by the United States, not Mexico,
according to Víctor Manuel Amador, head of Baja California’s
Secretariat for Water Management, Sanitation, and Protection
(Seproa). Speaking during the state government’s morning
conference, Amador explained that the runoff stems from repairs
to the JB-1 gate, which began in November. The gate is located
on the U.S. side of the border. Over the weekend, U.S.
authorities issued an alert regarding high concentrations of
hydrogen sulfide in the Tijuana River Valley. That gas, which
is associated with the decomposition of wastewater, has been
linked to structural issues involving discharges into the river
basin.
A newly published study by California Department of Fish and
Wildlife scientists offers the clearest picture yet of how
nutria — a destructive, invasive rodent —
reappeared in California after being declared eradicated
decades ago. Using advanced genomic analysis, researchers
determined that nutria discovered in Merced County in 2017 are
most closely linked to a population in central Oregon, rather
than descendants of animals believed wiped out in California in
the 1970s. … Nutria can eat up to 25% of their body
weight in plants each day, and their feeding often destroys far
more vegetation than they consume, leading to erosion that can
permanently convert marshland into open water.
The fallout and potential exposure from Iran’s state-backed
targeting of U.S. critical infrastructure extends to more than
5,200 internet-connected devices, researchers at Censys said in
a threat intelligence brief Wednesday. Of the programmable
logic controllers manufactured by Rockwell
Automation/Allen-Bradley that Censys identified
as potentially exposed to Iranian government attackers,
nearly 3,900, or about 3 out of every 4, are based in the
United States. The cybersecurity firm identified the
devices based on details multiple federal agencies shared in a
joint alert Tuesday. … The operational technology
devices are deployed across the energy sector, water
and wastewater systems, and U.S. government services
and facilities.
Last year, Long Beach celebrated a deal Synergy Oil & Gas
negotiated with a regional wetlands authority in Southern
California. A former oil field, 154 acres of land in the city
of Long Beach would become public wetlands;
the company would gain a more valuable property and
environmental credits. But a state law meant to keep wells away
from homes and schools thwarted the company’s plan for more
drilling – and now the wetlands deal has become fodder for the
Trump administration’s war against California Democratic energy
policies. U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright traveled to
the property, owned by Synergy Oil & Gas, on Wednesday with a
message to Gov. Gavin Newsom: state policies are increasing
costs for Californians, and the Trump administration will be
challenging them.
Our tribes — the Chemehuevi Indian Tribe and the Fort Mojave
Indian Tribe — have lived and stewarded lands in the California
desert since time immemorial. … For over 40 years, our
traditional territories have been targeted for the corporate
extraction of vulnerable desert water resources by Cadiz, Inc.,
a foreign investor-backed company. We have successfully opposed
their efforts to extract and sell desert ground water, but
still they continue to pursue an unrealistic scheme to drain
the desert to make a profit for their shareholders. Today, we
write to urge others – both tribal nations and tribal allies to
stand with us – in solidarity against Cadiz’s efforts. –Written by Daniel Leivas, chairman of the Chemehuevi
Indian Tribe, and Timothy Williams, chairman of the Fort Mojave
Indian Tribe.
California’s dismal snowpack is about to get a
late-season boost. A weekend storm is forecast to drop feet of
snow across the Sierra Nevada, prompting the National Weather
Service to issue a winter storm watch. The watch is
in effect from Friday evening through Saturday evening above
4,500 feet for the west slope of the northern Sierra, including
Interstate 80 and Highway 50. … Forecast snowfall totals
were trending higher, with 2 feet of snow possible
along I-80 over Donner Summit above 4,500 feet. The
highest peaks, including ski resorts, could pick more than 3
feet of snow, with localized totals up to 4
feet.
The USDA has declared natural disaster areas in Inyo County, as
well as three counties in Nevada, over what they say is an
extreme drought. The agency says the disaster area encompasses
areas in the states of California, Nevada and
Arizona, and includes Clark, Esmeralda, and Nye
counties in Nevada. The declaration allows the USDA and the
Farm Service Agency to extend emergency credit to producers
recovering from natural disasters through emergency loans. The
loans can be used to meet recovery needs, such as replacing
essential items, reorganizing farming operations, and
refinancing debts.
… By some measures, 2026 is shaping up to be the worst year
the river has seen since records began. Flows are down 20
percent from 2000 levels. Lake Powell, the reservoir straddling
Utah and Arizona, may drop below the threshold for generating
hydropower before the year is out. The negotiations between the
seven states over how to share what’s left have collapsed
twice, and the U.S. federal government is threatening to impose
its own plan. While the states argue and the river shrinks, a
growing set of machine learning tools is being deployed across
the basin. Federal water managers are running millions of
simulations to stress-test reservoir strategies against
different possible futures.
A groundwater subbasin in western Stanislaus and nearby
counties is no longer threatened with state probation, thanks
to a water board decision Tuesday. The state Water Resources
Control Board took action to move the Delta-Mendota
Subbasin back to the jurisdiction of the California
Department of Water Resources. … Twenty-three agencies,
including the cities of Patterson and Los Banos and many water
districts, are in the Delta-Mendota Subbasin, which was
referred to the state Water Resources Control Board in 2023 for
intervention because their sustainability plans were
inconsistent and would not result in stable groundwater levels.
Along the shores of the shrinking Salton Sea, desert winds
regularly kick up dust and send it drifting through nearby
neighborhoods. New research indicates that living there may
affect kids’ lungs. Scientists from the University of Southern
California tested the lung capacity of 369 children between the
ages of 10 and 12 for about two years and found that those who
live less than 6.8 miles from the Salton Sea have diminished
lung development compared with kids farther away. … The
saline lake has been shrinking rapidly since the early 2000s,
when the Imperial Irrigation District began selling some of its
Colorado River water to growing urban areas under an agreement
with agencies in San Diego County and the Coachella Valley.
Assemblymember Rhodesia Ransom warned Wednesday that California
is running out of time to contain the rapid spread of invasive
golden mussels, urging immediate state action to protect water
systems, agriculture and consumers. Speaking during a state
budget subcommittee hearing, Ransom called for funding
to establish five decontamination centers in the Sacramento-San
Joaquin Delta, which she said is critical to slowing
the species’ expansion into other waterways. … Golden
mussels, first detected in California in 2024, spread by
attaching to boats and water systems, clogging pipes and
damaging infrastructure.
The Bureau of Reclamation released water from Keswick Dam just
after midnight Wednesday, causing water levels to rise along
the Sacramento River. The flow reached about 10,000 cubic feet
per second by 1 a.m. The increase is part of a spring pulse
flow, a short-term release designed to mimic natural river
conditions. The release helps juvenile Chinook salmon migrate
safely to the Pacific Ocean. … While the pulse flow
benefits salmon, officials warn it may also create dangerous
river conditions for anyone nearby.
Local, state, and federal agencies this week marked the
completion of the Los Banos Creek Detention Dam Project, an
upgrade to an existing flood-control facility designed to
improve water management in western Merced County. The Los
Banos Creek Detention Dam, originally constructed in 1966 by
the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, was built to capture
floodwaters and protect the San Luis Canal, Delta-Mendota
Canal, and nearby communities, including Los Banos.
… Under the updated operations plan, natural flows from
Los Banos Creek can be released downstream during certain
periods to create storage capacity. The reservoir can then be
refilled with water conveyed from other sources using newly
installed infrastructure.
Funding from a 2021 settlement agreement between the Central
Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board and Pacific Gas and
Electric Co. is supporting the Drinkable Rivers Program in San
Luis Obispo County, a program that puts elected officials,
students and others on the water to witness the benefits of
beaver dams and ponds. … Once viewed as pests, beavers
are now recognized for their many ecological benefits and their
ability to help revitalize creeks and rivers. Research has
shown that beaver dams can boost groundwater levels,
improve water quality, provide drought resiliency, support
biodiversity and even reduce wildfire risk.