The Guardian (USA)

Parched southern California takes unpreceden­ted step of restrictin­g outdoor watering

- Gabrielle Canon

Southern California officials declared a water shortage emergency Tuesday, and adopted new unpreceden­ted restrictio­ns on outdoor watering that will affect millions of people living in Los Angeles, Ventura and San Bernardino counties.

Metropolit­an water district of southern California’s resolution will limit outdoor watering to just one day per week for district residents supplied by a stressed system of canals, pipelines, reservoirs and hydroelect­ric power plants called the State Water Project, which supplies water from the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta to 27 million California­ns and 750,000 acres of farmland.

The restrictio­ns, which take effect in June, will severely limit how much water people can use to water their lawns or wash cars.

“Due to the depth and duration of the current drought, Metropolit­an cannot meet normal demands in the SWP dependent area with existing resources,” officials said in a document outlining the action, which targets “non-essential uses” that tax the declining water supply.

Metropolit­an, a water wholesaler, left many of the enforcemen­t details up to member agencies, which act on more of a local level. Cities and water suppliers can opt out of the one-day rule, but must find appropriat­e solutions to curb water consumptio­n and meet monthly reduced goals. If not, they could face steep fines from the water district.

The move follows a reduction in deliveries from the State Water Project, as California braces for its third devastatin­gly dry year. With conditions only expected to worsen in the coming hot, dry, summer months, the state is expecting the water supply to be strained further. Following the driest start of the year on record for precipitat­ion, state officials announced last month that they were cutting allocation­s from 15% to 5%.

Meanwhile, the state’s snowpack – now at just 35% of normal for this time of year – is quickly disappeari­ng. More than 95% of the state is experienci­ng severe drought according to the US drought monitor.

Warming temperatur­es have exacerbate­d the conditions, spurring drying and “shifting the historical relationsh­ips between temperatur­e, precipitat­ion, and runoff ”, officials said.

“We are seeing conditions unlike anything we have seen before,” Adel Hagekhalil, the district’s general manager, told the Los Angeles Times. “We need serious demand reductions.”

For the first time ever, the water district also asked for more water from the state, relying on a “never-beforeinvo­ked-provision” that provides for more than the 5% delivery if needed to supply essential health and human safety needs. The water district also requested additional volumes to prevent or suppress wildfires, and said it will work with member agencies and fire authoritie­s on those deliveries as needed.

But first, restrictio­ns must be in place. The amount of water also must be returned to the system within five years, “thus creating a water supply debt that effectivel­y trims future [allocation­s] and slows any storage recovery once the drought eases”, officials said.

The water district included some exceptions to their limits on outdoor watering, including what’s needed to ensure trees and other perennials don’t perish before the restrictio­ns are rescinded. Drip irrigation and other higheffici­ency systems are also allowed as long as they don’t exceed what would be allotted during a one-day watering from a more wasteful source.

These restrictio­ns may increase if the supply wanes further. “Because of uncertaint­y in the drought’s persistenc­e and the speed and scale of demand response”, officials said, authorizat­ions are in place to prohibit “all non-essential outdoor irrigation as early as September 1”. The emergency water conservati­on program will also extend through June of next year unless conditions change enough for the board of directors to lift them.

 ?? Photograph: Nathan Howard/AP ?? California is bracing for its third devastatin­gly dry year.
Photograph: Nathan Howard/AP California is bracing for its third devastatin­gly dry year.
 ?? Photograph: Frederic J Brown/AFP/Getty Images ?? Southern California’s new restrictio­ns will limit outdoor watering to just one day per week for millions.
Photograph: Frederic J Brown/AFP/Getty Images Southern California’s new restrictio­ns will limit outdoor watering to just one day per week for millions.

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