Aquafornia

Overview

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 News & Publications Director Chris Bowman.

Subscribe to our weekday emails to have news delivered to your inbox at about 9 a.m. Monday through Friday except for holidays.

For breaking news, follow us on Twitter.

Check out our special news feeds devoted to:

Please Note: Some of the sites we link to may limit the number of stories you can access without subscribing. Also, 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 California Water Impact Network

News release: Repeat of massive sturgeon die-offs likely

Huge die-offs of white sturgeon in the San Francisco Bay/Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta estuary over the last two years were so devastating that the California Fish and Game Commission recently moved to list the iconic gamefish under the state Endangered Species Act. But that decision is hardly an adequate substitute for meaningful action, said Tom Cannon, a fisheries expert and consulting biologist for the California Water Impact Network. The reasons adult white sturgeon died by the thousands in 2022 and 2023 were warm water and algae blooms, conditions caused by excessive state and federal water diversions for corporate San Joaquin agriculture. “The one meaningful thing the Newsom administration could do to avoid another kill is increase cool water flows down the Delta,” said Cannon. “But they aren’t doing that, and now we’re seeing the same conditions in the Bay/Delta that we saw in 2022 and 2023 just prior to the die-offs.”

Aquafornia news UC Riverside

News release: Microbes found to destroy certain ‘forever chemicals’

AUC Riverside environmental engineering team has discovered specific bacterial species that can destroy certain kinds of “forever chemicals,” a step further toward low-cost treatments of contaminated drinking water sources. The microorganisms belong to the genus Acetobacterium and they are commonly found in wastewater environments throughout the world. Forever chemicals, also known as per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances or PFAS, are so named because they have stubbornly strong carbon-fluorine chemical bonds, which make them persistent in the environment. … Using bacteria to treat groundwater is cost effective because the microorganisms destroy pollutants before the water reaches wells. The process involves injecting the groundwater with the preferred bacteria species along with nutrients to increase their numbers. 

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

California’s billion-dollar hydrogen hub project is approved

The leaders of California’s embryonic hydrogen hub announced Wednesday that they have signed a contract with the U.S. Department of Energy worth billions. The California hub is part of a $7-billion federal project to build the infrastructure for a “clean” hydrogen economy to replace fossil fuels and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The California hub — known as ARCHES, or the Alliance for Renewable Clean Hydrogen Energy Systems — will net $1.2 billion of that federal money, with plans to bring in another $11.2 billion in private investment. California was awarded hub status in October.

Aquafornia news Desert Sun

Asbestos-lined pipes exposed near New River in Calexico

Large, aging asbestos pipes have been left sitting on the ground in an open lot next to the badly polluted New River in Calexico near the Mexico border seven months after they were discovered by a state inspector, according to California toxics staffers and documents obtained by The Desert Sun. Asbestos in various forms is a known carcinogen, but must be “friable” or released to the air and inhaled over time to cause harm. While there is no clear evidence of immediate risk, state toxics staff told The Desert Sun some of the pipes are cracked or broken, and appear to have been there a long time. Published research shows old tiles, pipes or other materials containing forms of the potential carcinogen can degrade into the air or soil and release dangerous fibers.

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

These are California’s dirtiest beaches. Where are you swimming?

As Mother Nature continues to turn up the heat this summer, those looking to cool off along the California coast might want to reconsider where they’re swimming. Ten California and Baja California beaches, including around the Santa Monica Pier and a stretch of Mother’s Beach in Marina del Rey, received the poorest water quality grades based on measurements taken last year during dry periods between April and October. Four locations in San Diego County, two in Baja and two in San Mateo County also made the list, which was part of Heal the Bay’s 34th annual report card of the state’s beaches released Wednesday.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news CBC News

Flushing the ‘ick’ factor

They’re three words that make any water engineer shudder. “Toilet to tap.”  It’s the alliteration credited with sinking major water-recycling projects. Headline writers around North America just can’t seem to resist using the phrase when describing projects that convert wastewater into clean, drinkable water. Despite the successful adoption of such projects in places like drought-prone California, water reuse hasn’t yet entered the conversation in the same way north of the border. But in places like semi-arid Alberta, still weighing its next moves as surging populations put new pressures on a taxed water supply, some expect embracing more reuse is the next critical step to take.

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Why Los Angeles can’t afford to go third on clean energy

“Utilities race to be second. And sometimes it’s better to be third.” So said Fred Pickel, the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power’s in-house ratepayer advocate, at a DWP board meeting in December 2019, a few months before the pandemic brought everyday life to a screeching halt. He was discussing the city’s first-of-its-kind plan to convert a coal plant to green hydrogen — a key piece of L.A.’s plans to reach 100% clean energy by 2035. Pickel was intrigued. But he was also concerned that the coal-to-hydrogen conversion would be expensive, driving up electric bills for DWP customers. Five years later, he’s singing the same song. … Pickel now recommends that the city delay its 100% clean energy goal beyond the 2035 target established by former Mayor Eric Garcetti and supported by current Mayor Karen Bass, and endorsed by the City Council. 

Aquafornia news California State Parks

News release: California State Parks initiates collaborative planning process for Delta Meadows Park property

California State Parks today announced the department is classifying and developing a comprehensive general plan for Delta Meadows Park Property, which includes the Locke Boarding House, in Sacramento County. The plan will enrich the visitor experience, address critical resource management and infrastructure needs, and incorporate public input into decisions about the park’s future direction. An initial step to gathering public input is an online survey that is now open. The approximately 500-acre park property is one of California’s natural gems and is located in the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta, approximately 30 miles northwest of Stockton and 25 miles south of Sacramento.

Aquafornia news San Mateo Daily Journal

Regional plan to fight sea-level rise underway

A plan to unite the Bay Area’s shoreline cities in preparing for sea-level rise and climate change is underway — and San Mateo County environmental agencies have suggestions.  A recent state law mandates cities on the shoreline, both ocean and Bayside, create substantial plans to prepare for inevitable sea-level rise.  On the Bayside, these plans will be guided and approved — or denied — by the San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission, the regulatory agency currently developing a substantial regional strategy designed to lead upcoming shoreline adaptation. 

Related article:

Aquafornia news National Review

Opinion: California water crisis: Better supply solutions ignored

Chronic water scarcity in California is indeed the new normal, but it’s not because of climate change. Even if the state is destined to experience lengthier droughts and reduced snowpack, most scenarios also forecast an abundance of years when the state is inundated with a series of so-called atmospheric rivers. That diluvian scenario was experienced by Californians this past winter, and even more so in the winter of 2022–23. Yet water remains scarce. Water is scarce because Californians have been living off a previous generation’s investment in the State Water Project, a remarkable system of reservoirs and aqueducts built in the 1950s and ’60s that were designed for a state with 20 million people but that is now inhabited by a population nearly twice the size. 
—Written by Edward Ring, co-founder of the California Policy Center and author of The Abundance Choice: Our Fight for More Water in California

Aquafornia news CalMatters

Wednesday Top of the Scroll: Judge temporarily blocks state order to growers who depleted groundwater

A Kings County judge today issued a temporary restraining order against the state that pauses its unprecedented move to crack down on groundwater depletion in California’s agricultural heartland. The decision by Superior Court Judge Kathy Ciuffini grants Kings County growers a temporary reprieve from a state mandate to monitor and report how much water they pump from heavily over-pumped aquifers. The order will last through a hearing in August, when the judge will consider issuing a preliminary injunction. The State Water Resources Control Board in April put Kings County water managers on probation under the state’s landmark groundwater law — a first step towards wresting control of the severely depleted Tulare Lake groundwater basin in the San Joaquin Valley. 

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Colorado Public Radio

Signs of invasive zebra mussel confirmed in Colorado River near Grand Junction

Colorado Parks and Wildlife announced Tuesday that it has discovered zebra mussels in the Colorado River and the Government Highline Canal, nearly two years after the invasive species was first detected in the state.  The small, freshwater mussels are native to lakes in Russia and Ukraine, but they are known globally for their rapid reproduction rate. Wildlife officials say the species poses an extreme risk to local ecosystems because zebra mussels kill off native plankton that native species rely on for food. Infestations can also devastate water infrastructure because the mussels attach themselves to surfaces in large clusters, clogging waterways and drainage systems.  CPW said they discovered the newly confirmed zebra mussel population through routine plankton samples taken in early July.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news Pacific Sun

Warming waters: Chinook salmon in hot water

… Once abundant, Chinook have been devastated by habitat loss, water diversions from the rivers where they spawn and drought. If they are to recover, the salmon will need improved spawning grounds and more floodplain nursery habitat. They also need more cold water. And in 2023 and 2024, both exceptionally wet years, they got it—until, that is, they didn’t. Water temperatures in the middle Sacramento River soared to lethal levels this spring, exceeding basic environmental objectives and threatening salmon born last summer and fall. The temperature troubles can be traced upstream to Lake Shasta, California’s largest reservoir. The lake is almost full—typically a great boon for fish downstream. But its water is also unusually warm this year, according to local irrigation districts, who say this has produced similar, and unavoidable, temperature profiles in the river downstream.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news UCI News

News release: UC Irvine Earth system scientists discover missing piece in climate models

As the planet continues to warm due to human-driven climate change, accurate computer climate models will be key in helping illuminate exactly how the climate will continue to be altered in the years ahead. In a study published in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, a team led by researchers from the UC Irvine Department of Earth System Science and the University of Michigan Department of Climate and Space Sciences and Engineering reveal how a climate model commonly used by geoscientists currently overestimates a key physical property of Earth’s climate system called albedo, which is the degree to which ice reflects planet-warming sunlight into space.

Related water science articles:

Aquafornia news Sacramento Bee

Commentary: Sacramento water agencies must merge to prepare for drought

The Sacramento region’s big climate change threat is water - either too much during floods or not enough to satisfy regional demands. Our biggest problem in preparing for a drought is pretty simple. It’s local government, way too much of it. Surviving long droughts means jointly preparing to store more water underground in wet years because our rivers will provide less. And that demands a seamless regional water plan to start preparing. But Sacramento County alone has 14 water districts north of the American River. … And none have agreed to merge for nearly a generation, endangering the future water reliability of their ratepayers while driving up costs created by way too many fiefdoms.
— Written by Tom Philp, editorial writer, columnist for the Sacramento Bee

Related article: 

Aquafornia news The Colorado Sun

Colorado River officials explore “credit” for conserved water

Four states in the drought-stricken Colorado River Basin, including Colorado, want credit for conserving water, but water users and officials have big questions about how to make it happen. … Cutting back on water use is a big topic of conversation in the Colorado River Basin, which supplies water to 40 million people and is enduring warmer temperatures and a two-decade megadrought. Officials from each of the seven states in the basin are weighing who might have to cut their use and how to manage the basin’s reservoirs in high-stakes negotiations over the river’s future after the current rules expire in 2026.

Aquafornia news Tahoe Daily Tribune

No harmful algal bloom detected at Lake Tahoe sites purported to be responsible for dog’s death

The agencies that sampled water at El Dorado Beach and Nevada Beach last week have detected no toxins associated with harmful algal blooms in the lake. These are sites viral social media posts purported could be where a dog ingested harmful cyanobacteria and later died. “The agencies involved in water-sample testing cannot draw conclusions about the cause of death for the dog from these results;” the California State Water Resources Control Board and Nevada Department of Conservation and Natural Resources’ announcement reads, “they can only speak to evaluating water quality and the presence of HABs.” Last week, the Lahontan Regional Water Quality Control Board told the tribune that the California Department of Fish and Wildlife attempted to reach the dog owner to get information on veterinarian who treated the dog.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news SJV Water

New(ish) Kern groundwater authority gets underway

A somewhat new groundwater authority held its first meeting Monday with a mandate to represent Kern County lands not covered by existing water districts. The so-called “non-districted lands” within the Kern subbasin (the San Joaquin Valley portion of Kern) had sort of been previously represented by the Kern Groundwater Authority KGA. But the KGA has been disintegrating over the past two years as member water districts left to form their own groundwater sustainability agencies. The KGA held its final meeting on May 22 and has since morphed into the Kern Non-Districted Lands Authority (KNDLA).

Related article:

Aquafornia news Capital Press

Klamath irrigators ask for more water for farms, wildlife

A Klamath Basin irrigation organization is seeking more water for farmers and expressed concern about the impacts of hot and shallow water on birds and fish. The Klamath Water Users Association requested “immediate action to prevent unnecessary disasters” in a letter Saturday to Commissioner Camille Calimim Touton of the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. Paul Simmons, the association’s executive director, asked the agency to embrace a spirit of cooperation “to address all interests and needs in the Klamath Basin, including those of farms and ranches.”

Aquafornia news Ag Alert

Cover crops offer water-holding benefits

As farmers statewide prepare for anticipated cutbacks to groundwater under the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, or SGMA, they are trying to stretch every drop of water to stay in business. Merced County farmer Benina Montes, owner of Burroughs Family Farms, planted cover crops between rows of almond, walnut and olive trees at her farm near Snelling to improve soil health and attract beneficial insects. She is now seeing water savings. … Cover crops, any non-income generating crop planted to cover the soil and enrich soil diversity, hold great potential for water conservation such as improved water-holding capacity and infiltration, according to a report, “Cover Cropping in the SGMA Era,” published in May by a group of more than 30 authors.