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Water Crisis in America

Environment   Nov 27, 2015 by omiloscience-marianna

Here are five things you need to know about California’s water situation:

1. The state (and much of the West)relies heavily on snowpack each winterto resupply surface water streams and lakes. Because of a lack of winter storms and record high temperatures this past winter, snowpack in California is at an all-time low.This is the fourth consecutive year that the snowpack has been below normal. The state’s hydropower supply is also threatened when snowpack is scarce.

2. When surface water supplies are low,hidden water supplies beneath the surface in aquifers, or groundwater, are drilled to make up the shortfall.A large aquifer under the Central Valley is being rapidly depleted to make up for shortfalls in surface water supply. A 2011 study indicated that the Central Valley Aquifer is losing an amount of water each year equivalent to the nearly 29 million acre-feet of water found in Lake Mead, the nation’s largest surface reservoir on the Colorado River. (An acre-foot is one acre of ground covered one foot deep in water.)

California for the first time last yearpassed legislationregulating groundwater use, but those restrictions will not come into effect for years.

3.While the 25 percent water use restrictions announced last week are intended to help reduce demand,most of the water in California is used for farming, which was largely not included in Brown’s announcement on restrictions. California’s farms produce and export fruits and vegetables, hay for livestock, meat and dairy products. Surface water for farms is allocated from state and federal water projects.

Water supply restrictions for farmers may be announced soon by the state, but farmers have been drilling groundwater to compensate for surface supply shortages. Last week’s rules require only that agricultural operations improve their reporting of water use to the state.

4. California is not the only state in the West facing water supply issues. Winter snowpack in Oregon and parts of Washington was far below normal. The Colorado River Basin, which supplies water to Phoenix, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, and San Diego,has also been in a drought for more than a decade, and the riverbasin’s aquifers have been decliningtoo.

5. When California faced a major drought in the late 1970s, fewer than 20 million people lived in the state.Now nearly 40 million live there.While Californians have drastically improved the efficiency of their water use in recent years, if rain and snow do not arrive later this year, the supply of groundwater—much of which is non-renewable—will continue to decline as it is used to make up for surface shortages.


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