Lodi News-Sentinel

After storms, state raises State Water Project allocation to 30%

- Hayley Smith

LOS ANGELES — California water agencies that serve 27 million people will see an increased allocation of supplies from the state after a series of winter storms boosted reservoirs and snowpack, officials announced Thursday.

Less than two months after the Department of Water Resources said it could only give 5% of requested supplies to the 29 agencies that rely on the State Water Project, the department increased its allocation to 30%. The State Water Project is a complex system of reservoirs, canals and dams that acts as a major component of California’s water system.

Officials said the allocation could change as the rest of the wet season develops. But the news marks a significan­t turnaround for California, which has been mired in extreme drought conditions for more than three years. Last year’s final allocation was just 5%.

“We are pleased that we can increase the allocation now and provide more water to local water agencies,” DWR Director Karla Nemeth said in a statement. “These storms made clear the importance of our efforts to modernize our existing water infrastruc­ture for an era of intensifie­d drought and flood. Given these dramatic swings, these storm flows are badly needed to refill groundwate­r basins and support recycled water plants.”

The storms came as something of a surprise after officials warned residents to brace for another dry winter driven by La Niña, a climate pattern in the tropical Pacific often associated with arid conditions in California.

Instead, a series of nine powerful atmospheri­c rivers dropped a deluge on the state, spurring floods and landslides but also increasing reservoirs and snowpack levels. As of Thursday, the statewide snowpack was 216% of normal for the date.

The state’s largest reservoirs also saw some drought recovery, with Lake Shasta at 55% of capacity on Thursday and Lake Oroville at 63% — up from 32% and 30%, respective­ly, just one month ago, state data shows.

The reservoirs gained a combined 1.62 million acre-feet of water in storage as a direct result of the winter storms, or roughly enough to provide water to 5.6 million households for a year, according to the DWR.

But officials warned that there are two more months in California’s wet season, and dry conditions could develop once again.

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