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Auggie

(31,798 posts)
Fri Aug 12, 2022, 10:05 AM Aug 2022

Fearing climate-related water loss, California acts to bolster its water supplies

FINALLY!

San Francisco Chronicle / August 11, 2022

With California facing a hotter, drier future — and up to 10% less water by 2040 — Gov. Gavin Newsom released a new state water plan Thursday that calls for increasing water storage, stepping up water recycling, capturing stormwater runoff and building more desalination plants.

SNIP

Newsom said the plan capitalizes on existing resources, including expanding supply by 4 million acre-feet to create room to capture more water that now flows out to sea in large storms. The plan calls for expanding the capacities of 120 reservoirs throughout the state. But it also counts on underground water storage to replenish depleted groundwater supplies, particularly in the San Joaquin Valley, where so much water has been taken from the aquifers that the ground is sinking.

The plan also calls for eliminating water waste by 500,000 acre-feet in urban areas and modernizing water management and forecasting plans, including reforming water rights.

SNIP

It’s not clear how much the program would cost — though Newsom said that money is not the main obstacle — or how long it would take to implement. None of the actions in the plan require voter funding or approval, he said, though the governor did announce that former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa will be his new “infrastructure czar” and will be tasked with finding money, particularly federal infrastructure funds, to help pay for water and other infrastructure projects.

LINK (paywall): https://www.sfchronicle.com/climate/article/California-acts-to-bolster-its-water-supplies-as-17367325.php

Article reports mostly positive feedback, though an environmental group, Food & Water Watch, called desalination “a wasteful boondoggle” that harms marine life and "called on Newsom to instead focus 'big water abusers' such as oil and agriculture industries.

Article reports there are currently 37 desalination plants in the state.

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Martin68

(24,604 posts)
1. Working in conservation, one of my jobs was rainwater harvesting and storage education. The
Fri Aug 12, 2022, 11:28 AM
Aug 2022

interesting thing is that some of the driest Western states have laws against capturing rooftop runoff because their historical approach has been to manage the use of surface water such as streams and rivers. People's water rights are determined by who has been historically using a particular source of water the longest, and the most recent users are the first to be cutoff from such a source during a drought. Capturing rainwater theoretical reduces the amount of water that reaches surface water, and is thus a short-circuit of the process, and therefore illegal.

hunter

(38,931 posts)
4. California residents are allowed to capture rainwater.
Sun Aug 14, 2022, 10:02 AM
Aug 2022

Furthermore, certain kinds of gray water systems can be installed without permit.

I've occasionally experimented with water from our washing machine in our garden, but not recently. I don't feel guilty about the water that goes down the drain. Sewage is recycled here into near-potable and potable water. The near-potable water is used on certain high value crops and for groundwater recharge. Some of it is further treated by reverse osmosis, etc., to make high quality potable water. This sort of recycling costs less and uses less energy than desalinating ocean water.

Most new construction here, which is generally built on farmland or old industrial sites, now includes catchments that hold runoff from roofs, roads, and parking lots, allowing rainwater time to percolate into the ground.

Catching rainwater is something that can be accomplished at any scale, from a small single family home to a huge apartment complex.

One of the problems in California is ridiculously high property values. Developers don't like "wasting" valuable land for catchment basins. There's a large new shopping center in a city near us that has the catchment basins underneath the parking lots. That wasn't cheap!

The problem of runoff from roads and parking lots will be much less severe in the future when we finally get our shit together and abandon car culture, rebuilding our cities in such a way that most people can't be bothered to own a car.

Martin68

(24,604 posts)
5. I'm aware of the many good points you make here, hunter. I live in Virginia, where private homes can
Sun Aug 14, 2022, 06:05 PM
Aug 2022

use rainwater, but businesses and public entities cannot. Our office spent several years negotiating worth the state Public Health Department to set standards that would make rainwater harvesting available to everybody in the state. After reaching agreement with the officials in our work group, some higher-up vetoed the plan.Even the federal government declared that rainwater could not be used for livestock, in spite of the fact that water in ponds and other surface water are much more likely to be contaminated by runoff. Using grant money, we installed one model whole-house rainwater harvesting system that could be used for drinking, cooking, etc. in each of the four counties we service. But it's an uphill battle. It should be a no-brainer that public schools should harvest rain from their enormous roofs for toilets at least, but the resistance to it is very strong. It's an uphill battle.

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