California
Governor Jerry Brown declared a drought
A declaration from Brown serves to alert the public to the growing crisis, said Tim Quinn, executive director of the Association of California Water Agencies.
California
Governor Jerry Brown declared a drought emergency in the most
populous U.S. state after three years of little rain, including the
driest on record, left some reservoirs and rivers at critical levels.
17
January, 2014
The
declaration may make it easier to divert water from fisheries and
ecologically sensitive areas to farms and ranches and lead to calls
on residents to curtail use. If the drought persists, mandatory
rationing may be ordered in some areas.
“This
is voluntary conservation at this point,” Brown told reporters
today in San Francisco. “But as we go down the road, January,
February, March, we will keep our eye on the ball and intensify even
to the point of mandatory conservation.”
The
drought threatens California’s $44.7 billion agricultural industry
that produces almost half of all the fruits, nuts and vegetables
grown in the U.S. Residents and businesses may face billions of
dollars in higher water rates and energy costs, stunting the 10th
largest economy in the world that has struggled to rebound from the
longest recession since the 1930s.
California’s
water managers say that unless the state gets strong winter storms in
the next few months, they will be able to deliver only 5 percent of
the slightly more than 4 million acre-feet of water requested by
agencies that supply more than 25 million Californians and almost a
million acres of irrigated farmland. An acre-foot is the volume
needed to cover an acre of land one-foot deep with water.
Running
Dry
Last
year, the state was able to deliver just 35 percent of water
requested, down from 65 percent in 2012 and 80 percent in 2011. The
last time the state was able to deliver all the water requested was
in 2006.
“We
are in an unprecedented, very serious situation and people should
pause and reflect on how dependent we are on the rain, on nature and
on one another,” Brown said.
About
two-thirds of Californians get at least part of their flow from
northern mountain rains and snow through a network of reservoirs and
aqueducts known as the State Water Project, according to the Water
Resources Department, the state’s largest water supplier.
The
system supplies households and businesses from the San Francisco Bay
area to Southern California and irrigates crops in the San Joaquin
Valley near the center of the state -- the world’s most productive
agricultural region.
Los
Angeles, which normally gets almost 15 inches (38 centimeters) of
rain a year, got less than 4 inches in 2013, according to the
National Weather Service. San Francisco, where 22 inches is typical,
got 6. Severe or extreme drought grips 85 percent of California, a
federal monitor reported Dec. 24.
The
National Weather Service predicts that rainfall amounts in California
during the next three months will remain below normal.
The
U.S. Agriculture Department this week said almost half of
California’s 58 counties were disaster areas because of the
drought, making farmers and ranchers in those place eligible for
disaster assistance such as low-interest loans that can be used to
help cover losses.
A declaration from Brown serves to alert the public to the growing crisis, said Tim Quinn, executive director of the Association of California Water Agencies.
‘Powerful
Messenger’
“The
governor is a very powerful messenger,” Quinn said before Brown
spoke. “He can send the message that this is a crisis. The governor
has a big symbolic stick that he can use so that people change their
ways.”
The
Water Resources Department sent scientists into northern mountains
Jan. 3 to measure how much snow was on the ground. When the crews
arrived, they found more bare ground than snow. They reported that
the snow pack was 20 percent of average for this time of year and a
mere 7 percent of the average the state typically has around April 1,
when the snow pack typically is at its highest.
The
state’s two biggest population centers, Los Angeles and San
Francisco, have built up water reserves and won’t be as hard hit as
places such as Sacramento and California’s central valley farming
region.
Hydro
Power
Still,
the drought could cause a drop in hydroelectric generation used by
power companies such as PG&E Corp. (PCG:US) as stream flows
dwindle. That could force utilities to sell higher costing -- and
higher polluting -- fossil fuel generated power, including natural
gas.
In
2012 hydro-power production in California decreased to about 13.8
percent because of drier conditions, Fitch Ratings said in a report
earlier this month. That led to an increase in natural gas-fired
generation, which rose from 45.4 percent in 2011 to 61.1 in 2012.
The
agricultural industry can withstand a short-term drought. In fact,
when the last drought struck from 2007 until 2009, farm income
actually rose to its highest ever at the time, in part because of
high crop prices and strategies farmers and ranchers used, such as
fallowing or idling fields, shifting cropping patterns and temporary
water transfers, according to a report by the Pacific Institute, a
non-profit environmental research group.
Cut
Use
Farmers
would have a hard time lasting through a sustained drought like the
one that struck between 1987 and 1992, when some communities were
forced to cut water use by as much as half.
State
emergency disaster planners are bracing for a record wildfire season
as the lack of snow and rain has left most of the state with
tinderbox conditions. California experienced almost a 50 percent
increase in the number of wildfires last year from 2012, according to
the state Forestry and Fire Protection Department, known as Cal Fire.
Some
cities and towns are already taking action.
In
Sacramento, the state capital, local officials last week declared a
water emergency that requires all residents and businesses to curb
water use by as much as 30 percent. Residents are only allowed to
wash cars with buckets and may only water lawns twice a week and only
during the day.
In
nearby Folsom, the local reservoir is so depleted that the building
foundations of a gold-rush town that was purposely flooded a half
century ago are now visible on dry lakebed. The city has asked
residents to cut water use by 20 percent and also is limiting lawn
watering and other water uses.
Brown
had already activated a task force to prepare for the drought, though
he’s acknowledge there is little he can do.
“Governors
can’t make it rain,” he told reporters earlier this month.
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