East Bay Times

Change California water deals to reflect climate realities

- By Tom Stokely Tom Stokely is a member of the board of the California Water Impact Network, a nonprofit working for the equitable distributi­on of water resources. He wrote this commentary for CalMatters.

California's salmon runs are on the verge of collapse. That's a tragedy, but this story is bigger than the extinction of an iconic fish that once fed millions and was the basis of thriving commercial, tribal and sport fisheries. Salmon are the canary in the coal mine for California's water and power ratepayers.

Salmon are flirting with extinction because they're not getting the cold water they need. Over the last few decades, that water mostly has been supplied from Shasta Dam on the Sacramento River, other dams on Sacramento and San Joaquin river tributarie­s, and Trinity Dam on the Trinity and Klamath river system.

The drought and resource mismanagem­ent have left cold water in short supply. State and federal water managers have drawn down reservoirs over the past three years, leaving cold water in short supply. Why? To provide water to a small subset of commercial growers.

Growers take 80% of California's controlled and managed water, while cities only receive 10% to 13%. During drought years, millions of residents endure water-use restrictio­ns. That burden isn't necessaril­y shared by some privileged growers. Long-establishe­d water rights claims see to that.

One example: The San Joaquin River Exchange Contractor­s are beneficiar­ies of a legal settlement with the U.S. Bureau of Reclamatio­n, a deal that cleared the way for the constructi­on of Friant Dam on the San Joaquin River. The four irrigation districts that participat­ed in the settlement traded their longclaime­d rights to divert water from the San Joaquin River for water from the Central Valley Project — the enormous federal conveyance system that sends water to Southern California farms and cities from the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta.

The deal assured the small group of San Joaquin River water claimants reliable, long-term and generous water allocation­s.

In average years, the exchange contractor­s are allocated about 865,000 acre-feet of water — more than Los Angeles uses in a year. In critically dry years, the contractor­s still receive generous allotments.

The West Coast is now struggling with its deepest drought in 1,200 years, and urban ratepayers are facing draconian restrictio­ns while the San Joaquin River Exchange Contractor­s are receiving 75% of their average deliveries.

Further, the draining of our reservoirs is contributi­ng to another state crisis: power shortages.

Hydroelect­ric production is down because of low reservoir storage levels and decreased head (energy from water flow) on the turbines. In 2020, the first year of the current drought, hydropower produced 11% of the state's electricit­y, compared with 2019, when hydropower produced 19%.

Hotter weather from climate change is expected to increase demand for air conditioni­ng and power. Rolling blackouts are a real possibilit­y this year.

We're in a new world — one that will be characteri­zed by multiple drought years punctuated by extremely wet winters. Stunningly, the agencies that control our water — the California Department of Water Resources and the federal Bureau of Reclamatio­n — have no formal long-term drought plans.

This is unacceptab­le, but there is a recourse. The contracts for the San Joaquin River Exchange recipients include a five-year renewal window, with the Bureau of Reclamatio­n

empowered to modify terms prior to contract extension.

Federal policy intersects directly with California's governance, economic stability and social well-being. State leaders must petition the Biden administra­tion to change the settlement contract to reflect climate realities. And because state policymake­rs often respond with alacrity to broad-based citizen demands, California­ns must urge our governor and legislator­s to act now — before the reservoirs run dry, the salmon disappear, and average people can't flush their toilets, wash their clothes, run their air conditione­rs or light their homes.

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