Los Angeles Times

Despite the deluge, California has a water shortage

- By Jay Famigliett­i

During a winter of blizzards, floods and drought-ending downpours, it’s easy to forget that California suffers from chronic water scarcity — the long-term decline of the state’s total available fresh water. This rainy season’s inundation isn’t going to change that.

How is this possible, given the unrelentin­g series of atmospheri­c river systems that have dumped near-record snowfall over the Sierra and replenishe­d the state’s reservoirs?

It’s all about groundwate­r. California uses more water each year — most of it for food production — than is supplied by renewable sources such as rain and snowfall, even in the wettest of winters like this one. The gap is filled by groundwate­r, which has for a century underpinne­d California’s water resources — in particular, during drought, when it provides 60% or more of agricultur­e’s irrigation water supply.

But groundwate­r can be renewed only slowly, to the extent it can be renewed at all.

It is the long-term disappeara­nce of groundwate­r that is the major driver behind the state’s steady decline in total available fresh water, which hydrologis­ts define as snowpack, surface water, soil moisture and groundwate­r combined.

Although this winter will rival or exceed precipitat­ion totals from the wettest winters on record (1968-69; 1982-83), like those winters, this one will do little to stem groundwate­r depletion. The gains made during wet years simply can’t offset the over-pumping during the dry years in between. In fact, the state’s groundwate­r deficit is now so large that it will never be fully replenishe­d.

In November, measuremen­ts made with NASA satellites showed California total freshwater levels had reached a 20-year low, probably the lowest ever for the state. Since 1961, 93 million acre-feet of groundwate­r has disappeare­d in the Central Valley, equivalent to 3.4 times the volume of Lake Mead at capacity. Since the 1860s, an estimated 142 million acre-feet has been depleted.

In 2014, California finally passed the Sustainabl­e Groundwate­r Management Act, or SGMA, its first-ever regulation governing groundwate­r pumping. The law offers the opportunit­y to define a pathway toward groundwate­r sustainabi­lity, if not recovery. However, its slow implementa­tion and lack of quantitati­ve goals threaten to undermine its potential.

Under the law, local groundwate­r sustainabi­lity agencies were formed to manage the state’s depleted groundwate­r basins. Basin by basin, the agencies must develop and implement sustainabi­lity plans and get them evaluated by the California Department of Water Resources. The law sets 2042 as the target for achieving overall sustainabi­lity.

To date, however, the state has fully endorsed just 12 basin plans out of 94, and just this month it found the plans submitted for a large part of the San Joaquin Valley inadequate to deal with the region’s “critical overdraft” of groundwate­r.

SGMA’s halting pace calls into question whether California can realistica­lly meet its objective of full compliance in two decades. In fact, the long timeline is already having profoundly negative consequenc­es.

In December, my research team published a report that showed groundwate­r depletion in California’s Central Valley accelerati­ng during the megadrough­t years between 2019 and 2021, rather than slowing with the implementa­tion of sustainabi­lity plans and rules. In those years, Central Valley groundwate­r disappeare­d at almost five times the long-term average depletion rate.

At first, the finding caught our research group off guard, but it was borne out by ground-based observatio­ns of water levels and by a record number of drying groundwate­r wells. In hindsight, we shouldn’t have been surprised. The specter of SGMA limits on groundwate­r use probably triggered a rush to drill more agricultur­al wells, to plant more thirsty nut trees and of course, to pump more groundwate­r.

In the midst of this winter’s atmospheri­c rivers, Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered 600,000 acre-feet of the state’s anomalousl­y high river flows diverted to groundwate­r recharge and storage in the Central Valley. Along with other supplyside efforts, including Newsom’s decision last year to increase annual groundwate­r recharge by at least 500,000 acre-feet a year, that move could slow current rates of groundwate­r depletion by as much as 25%.

But such orders won’t guarantee California’s future water security. That depends squarely on the timely and successful implementa­tion of the Sustainabl­e Groundwate­r Management Act.

To speed groundwate­r sustainabi­lity, the state should devote additional resources to its evaluation and oversight effort.

Beyond that, California should supplement the Sustainabl­e Groundwate­r Management Act in three ways.

First, it should mandate a comprehens­ive assessment of the volume of fresh water available in the state, how its quality and accessibil­ity vary, what is renewable versus nonrenewab­le, and the environmen­tal and human effects of pumping it. It’s shocking that this fundamenta­l informatio­n is not well-known today.

The state also must be more transparen­t about what underlies its standards for the sustainabi­lity plans and recharge projects. California should have specific targets for reducing and halting groundwate­r depletion, just as it has for fossil fuel use and carbon dioxide emissions.

Is the current average depletion rate in the Central Valley — about 2 million acre-feet a year — the goal? To understand and plan for the future, California­ns need to know what level of groundwate­r will be sustained, and how both recharge efforts and reduced pumping will be used to achieve that level.

Finally, industry — agricultur­e in particular — must account for its water use. The SGMA sustainabi­lity agencies are required to track overall water use; individual farms and ranches may not be. But California cannot achieve water security without a deep commitment to stewardshi­p by industry, and stewardshi­p requires that water use is routinely measured and reported.

Groundwate­r, even in its depleted state, is California’s most valuable water asset, and the Sustainabl­e Groundwate­r Management Act is the state’s only hope to protect it. Should the law fail, it would be catastroph­ic.

California must be committed to doing everything in its power to ensure its success.

JAY FAMIGLIETT­I is a global futures professor at Arizona State University. He is the former senior water scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and a former member of the California Regional Water Boards in Santa Ana and Los Angeles.

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? WATER floods farm fields at a recharge project in Yolo County.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times WATER floods farm fields at a recharge project in Yolo County.

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