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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 News & Publications Director Vik Jolly

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  • 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 Gov. Gavin Newsom

News release: 2.9 billion gallons of clean drinking water added to California’s supply with new investments

Governor Gavin Newsom has made significant strides in securing and enhancing water supplies, including improving the state’s ability to capture stormwater. Fortified by state investment to strengthen and expand California’s local water infrastructure, eight major, state-funded projects completed or broke ground across California this fall—including water recycling, wastewater treatment and desalination facilities—that benefit over 1 million people. Collectively, the projects add about 2.9 billion gallons annually to the state’s water supplies, enough water for roughly 20,000 homes per year. 

Aquafornia news KTAR (Phoenix)

Colorado River water allocations cause of governor debate

Colorado River water negotiations are ongoing as the basin states now face a Feb. 14 deadline to submit a final agreement to the U.S. Department of the Interior and Bureau of Reclamation. At the Western Governors Association winter meeting in Paradise Valley, Gov. Katie Hobbs accused the upper basin states of running out the clock by not putting proposals on the table as the previous Nov. 11 deadline passed without a deal. … In the meantime, Hobbs said she will continue to fight for the water Arizona needs. … “Our users will not accept a deal where we are waiving our rights to the water that the upper basin owes us,” Hobbs said.

Other Colorado River news:

Aquafornia news Phys.org

Rapid weather shifts govern how plants influence climate and air quality, study finds

A new study shows that during drought, it’s not how hot or how dry it is that determines gas emissions from plants—but how quickly conditions change. This discovery reshapes our understanding of the relationship between drought, vegetation, and air pollution. The research … reveals a striking phenomenon: when the weather shifts rapidly—for example, a sharp increase in humidity or a sudden drop in temperature—vegetation responds immediately by changing the rate at which it emits naturally occurring biogenic volatile organic compounds (BVOCs) into the air. … The paper is published in the journal Science of The Total Environment.

Other drought and climate science news:

Aquafornia news FOX5/KUSI (San Diego)

Loveland Reservoir water levels spark local concerns

Residents who frequent Loveland Reservoir are again raising alarms about water being drained from the area’s largest public open-space reservoir. The concerns come three years after the reservoir was lowered to deadpool levels, killing off the fish population and severely impacting recreation. … Anglers say the fish population was just beginning to recover from the previous draining. … Residents also worry the lower water levels will affect firefighting resources. … A spokesperson for Sweetwater Authority confirmed the agency is conducting controlled water transfers to “continue providing safe and reliable water to our South Bay ratepayers.” 

Aquafornia news SJV Water (Bakersfield, Calif.)

Clean drinking water harvested from tomatoes at Los Banos processing plant

A gadget capable of extracting evaporation from tomato pulp is producing 120,000 gallons a day of “new water” clean enough to drink in Los Banos in Merced County. The “water harvesting” unit was developed by Australian company Botanical Water Technologies, which moved to the United States around five years ago. The Ingomar Packing Company in Los Banos processes tomato products such as tomato paste and diced tomatoes. … Greg Pruett, Ingomar CEO, says in a promotional video about the program that the company had a large volume of condensate water from the tomatoes that was “…not being used in a valuable way.” So when it learned about Botanical and its work extracting and purifying such water, it was a good fit.

Aquafornia news Capitol Weekly (Sacramento, Calif.)

Opinion: More collaborative operational solutions for affordable water

… From small, rural regions to low-income urban communities, those with the fewest resources are supported by some of the smallest water systems with limited resources. This year, however, brought some welcome relief. Thanks to Governor Newsom and legislative champions like Assemblymember Blanca Rubio, California passed Assembly Bill 428, a new law tackling one of the most painful, and familiar, cost pressures Californians face: skyrocketing insurance premiums. …  The measure now allows water corporations to join with mutual water companies and public water agencies to pool resources and buy insurance together.
– Written by Adán Ortega, executive director of CalMutuals.

Aquafornia news UC ANR

Blog: Invasive pest spotlight — nutria

The invasive pest spotlight focuses on emerging or potential invasive pests in California. In this issue we are covering nutria. The nutria is a large semi-aquatic rodent introduced to California in the early 1900s to be farmed for their fur. … Nutria have since spread into waterways within the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta and the Central Valley. … Nutria severely damage the environment, roads, levees, and crops. They burrow into banks of waterways, weakening or collapsing them. As they feed, they damage the native plant communities and soil structure of wetlands. Nutria feeding and burrowing damage both increase the risk of erosion and flooding.

Aquafornia news The Sacramento Bee

Tuesday Top of the Scroll: California announces 10% initial water allocation

The Department of Water Resources said Monday the State Water Project will supply 10% of the water that local agencies requested for the new water year. The initial number is based on current weather and water conditions, how much water is stored in reservoirs and the assumption that the rest of the year could be drier than normal, the state agency said. The allocation is then adjusted month-to-month based on new data, with a final number typically set in May or June. … In Monday’s statement, the agency added that the reservoirs statewide are slightly above normal, at 114% of average typical for this time of year.

Related articles:

Aquafornia news E&E News by Politico

WOTUS ‘wet season’ test would further shrink US regulatory reach

A Trump administration proposal to reduce the scope of the Clean Water Act would exclude more waters than at any other point in the past 50 years. But it also left open the possibility of going even further. Administration officials last week unveiled their plan to define “waters of the U.S.,” a frequently litigated term that delineates which waters and wetlands are regulated by the 1972 law. … [The proposal] suggests including only rivers, streams and other waterways that flow at least for the duration of the “wet season.” The proposal also floats an alternative approach: exclusively regulating perennial waters and wetlands. 

Other environmental regulation news:

Aquafornia news The Conversation

Blog: Winter storms blanket the East, while the U.S. West is wondering, where’s the snow?

… The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is forecasting La Niña conditions for this winter, possibly switching to neutral midway through. … When we look at the consequences for snow, La Niña does tend to mean more snow in the Pacific Northwest and less in the Southwest. … This winter’s forecast isn’t extreme at this point, so the impact on the year’s water supplies is a pretty big question mark. … The West’s water infrastructure system was built assuming there would be a natural reservoir of snow in the mountains. California relies on the snowpack for about a third of its annual water supply. However, rising temperatures are leading to earlier snowmelt in some areas. 

Other snowpack and water supply news around the West:

Aquafornia news All Things Considered (NPR)

Podcast: Data centers are thirsty for water. This Nevada region is prepared, at least for now

… A 2024 federal report found that U.S. data centers consume 17 billion gallons of water a year, but that’s a drop in the bucket compared to industries like mining or farming, which use billions of gallons every day. But demand from data centers is expected to double or even quadruple soon, according to that report. … By 2027, AI is expected to account for 28% of the global data center market, according to Goldman Sachs. … This data center boom is not just happening in northern Nevada. Across the West, including Colorado, Wyoming and Arizona, states have rolled out major tax incentives to attract data centers, but rising concern over their water use is fueling public pushback. 

Other data center water use news:

Aquafornia news Water Education Foundation

Announcement: Giving Tuesday is your chance to support Water Education in California and the West

Today on Giving Tuesday, a global day of philanthropy, you can support impartial education and informed decision-making on water resources in California and the West by making a tax-deductible donation to the Water Education Foundation. Your support ensures that our legacy of producing in-depth news, educational workshops and accessible and reliable information on water reaches new heights in 2026. In 2025, your gifts helped make many WEF projects possible, including Project WET workshops, our Water Leaders programs, the online magazine Western Water and more. Please donate today to help us make an even greater impact in 2026.

Aquafornia news Colorado Springs Utilities

News release: Colorado Springs Utilities stores some of its Colorado River Basin supplies in reservoirs on Hoosier Pass

A major November deadline for Colorado River negotiations passed without resolution, though hope remains for an agreement to avoid federal intervention. … What’s being negotiated are the future operating guidelines for the two large storage reservoirs. The guidelines must be realistic and resilient and not allow one reservoir to be drained to shore up the other, as has happened in recent years. Both reservoirs have hovered near critical levels for a few years. These talks are critical for Colorado Springs. Half of the city’s water comes from the Colorado River Basin through trans-basin diversions that cross the Continental Divide. 

Other Colorado River Basin news:

Aquafornia news San Luis Obispo Tribune (Calif.)

With no water tax, Paso Robles basin managers ask for money

The Paso Robles Area Groundwater Authority needs help funding its operating costs next year. On Monday, the agency’s Board of Directors approved a budget of $944,952 for fiscal year 2025-26 — with a $300,000 shortfall for costs planned for January to June of next year. The agency’s Board of Directors was forced to abandon water use fees after a majority of property owners objected to them this year. Now, the agency is looking for other ways to cover its operating costs. … On Monday, the board voted unanimously to ask the four participating Groundwater Sustainability Agencies to contribute a combined total of $300,000 to bridge the funding gap.

Other water rate news:

Aquafornia news Arizona's Family (Phoenix)

University of Arizona researchers test new ways to grow lettuce with less water

University of Arizona researchers are testing natural plant additives called biostimulants to help lettuce farms in Yuma grow more crops with less water during the peak growing season. The research comes as drought threatens the Colorado River, Arizona’s primary water source. Yuma County supplies about 90% of the leafy greens Americans eat from November through March. … [Assistant Professor Ali] Mohammed found that pairing biostimulants with smart irrigation sensors and organic farming techniques significantly boosted crop yields. He estimates this combination could allow Yuma’s organic farms to skip a few watering cycles during the growing season, potentially saving 1 to 2 inches of water per acre. 

Other agricultural innovation news:

Aquafornia news The Conversation

Blog: Iran’s president calls for moving its drought-stricken capital amid a worsening water crisis – how Tehran got into water bankruptcy

… Iran’s escalating water and environmental problems are the predictable outcome of decades of treating the region’s finite water resources as if they were limitless. … Iran has relied heavily on water-intensive irrigation to grow food in dry landscapes and subsidized water and energy use, resulting in overpumping from aquifers and falling groundwater supplies. … The country needs to start to decouple its economy from water consumption by investing in sectors that generate value and employment opportunities with minimal water use. Agricultural water consumption can be reduced by producing higher-value, less water-intensive crops, taking into account food security, labor market and cultural considerations. 

Other Iran water crisis news:

Aquafornia news KRCR (Redding, Calif.)

FEMA releases preliminary flood maps for Butte County

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has unveiled preliminary flood maps for Butte County and the City of Chico, highlighting revised flood hazards along various sources in the region. These maps aim to assist building officials, contractors and homeowners in making informed mitigation decisions, fostering safer and more disaster-resilient communities. Before the new Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs) take effect, a 90-day appeal period will run from Dec. 3, 2025, to March 3, 2026. During this time, residents or businesses with technical and scientific data, such as detailed hydraulic or hydrologic information, can challenge the flood risk details on the preliminary maps.

Other FEMA news:

Aquafornia news Native American Rights Fund

Blog: Klamath Tribes challenge orders based on secret agreement between irrigator group and state

On November 19, 2025, the Klamath Tribes filed a motion to amend their petition in the Circuit Court of Klamath County. The amended petition seeks to reverse recent illegal orders that replaced a long-time administrative law judge in the Klamath Basin Adjudication (KBA) on the heels of a secret deal cut between the Oregon State Office of Administrative Hearings and certain water users in the Upper Klamath Basin. … The KBA is a several-decades-old lawsuit pending in the Circuit Court of Klamath County. It is quantifying the federal reserved water rights of the Klamath Tribes in the Klamath River Basin. 

Aquafornia news NOAA

Blog: Anglers catch salmon for science as tracking reveals risks facing adult fall chinook

Many thousands of fall-run Chinook salmon migrated beneath the Golden Gate Bridge into the upper Sacramento River to spawn this fall. About 100 of the adult fish carried small tags that signaled their location as they went. A monitoring network tracked the fish, showing their progress online in real time as part of a joint project by scientists at NOAA Fisheries and UC Santa Cruz. They followed adult salmon through the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta into Central Valley Rivers and their tributaries. … The research is funded by California’s State Water Board to learn more about how water temperatures influence the salmon that support valuable commercial and recreational fisheries. 

Other salmon news:

Aquafornia news Border Report

Community garden in Tijuana River Valley thrives despite environmental ‘disasters’

Deep in the heart of the Tijuana River Valley is a small commune of growers who thrive despite being in an area that has been described as “an environmental disaster.” The site is known as the Tijuana River Valley Community Garden, which is owned by the County of San Diego and managed by a private contractor. … One concern is whether the food grown by [grower Ed] Whited and the others is safe for consumption, considering the amount of contamination in the area, especially with the heavily-polluted Tijuana River next door. “Our worst problem here is the flooding,” he said. “The river runs right by here; if a plant is touched by water or potentially touched by water, it’s no longer edible or considered edible and it’s a complete loss.”