Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Drought-stricken California cut its water use by 5% in August

- Tribune News Service Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — California­ns used 5% less water statewide in August than during the same month last year, an improvemen­t in conservati­on that state regulators said they hope to see redoubled to address one of the most severe droughts on record.

People saved more water in cities and towns across the state during August than in July, when they used just 1.8% less than the previous year.

The monthly water conservati­on figures, which were released Tuesday during a meeting of the State Water Resources Control Board, showed parts of the state already meeting or approachin­g Gov. Gavin Newsom’s call for California­ns to voluntaril­y reduce water use by 15%.

Water use decreased 18.3% in August in the North Coast region, and was down 9.9% in the San Francisco Bay Area.

In the South Coast region of Southern California, which is home to more than half the state’s population, people used 3.1% less water in August than they did in the same month in 2020. While still far from Newsom’s target, that was significan­tly better than in July, when the region’s water use was down a minuscule 0.1%.

“It is encouragin­g and heartening to see an over-doubling of the conservati­on effort from July to August, really demonstrat­ing that it does take time for… the message to spread, and for really the response to be seen,” said Joaquin Esquivel, chair of the state water board. “We’re seeing good signs, but we need to continue to ensure we’re conserving.”

The unrelentin­g dryness over the past year, which was compounded by extreme heat, ranks among the most severe droughts in more than a century of records in California.

Based on statewide precipitat­ion totals, the water year that ended Sept. 30 was the second driest on record, surpassed only by 1924. State officials say the past two water years have been the driest on record for a two-year period, surpassing the drought of 1976-77.

Scientific research has shown that the heating of the planet with the burning of fossil fuels is making droughts more intense in the West and reducing the flows of rivers beyond the decreases they would have seen without global warming.

Major reservoirs in Northern

California, from Shasta Lake to Folsom Lake, have dropped to extremely low levels. The federal government has declared a shortage on the Colorado

River for the first time, which is forcing substantia­l cuts in water supplies for Arizona, Nevada and Mexico.

Because California faces the potential for another dry winter, Esquivel said, it will be especially important for people to do more to conserve.

For part of the last drought between 2012 and 2016, then-gov. Jerry Brown ordered a mandatory 25% reduction in urban water use. Many California­ns responded and took steps, such as replacing lawns with drought-tolerant plants, that have had a lasting effect in reducing water use.

The difference­s in water-saving efforts that appear in the data, Esquivel said, “demonstrat­e just how effective and really needed conservati­on has been as a tool in so many of our watersheds, and will continue to be for the long term as we battle climate change, and recognize that we now have a permanentl­y changed hydrology and increasing­ly need to make sure we’re all acting accordingl­y.”

Esquivel said he and others at the water board will be watching the conservati­on figures going into the winter months, a time when less water is used due to lower temperatur­es and less outdoor watering.

“Certainly 5% isn’t 15. And we’re really needing to see a double-down on conservati­on,” Esquivel said. He said state water regulators will continue to “work with communitie­s to see that conservati­on way of life ethic really embraced.”

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