Drought may hasten demise of California's enigmatic Salton Sea
29
May, 2015
Created
by accident and sustained by agricultural water privileges, the fate
of Salton Sea in California may be sealed by the state's historic
drought. If the lake isn’t restored, it could spell ecological
disaster for humans and wildlife alike.
Created
by an accidental Colorado River canal breach in 1905, Salton Sea
benefitted the area's rich farming culture, as agriculture in the
Imperial Valley long received more water from the river than was
proportional. The sea was sustained by (often toxic) farming run-off.
The area became a tourist destination in the 1950s and 1960s, yet the
situation became increasingly unsustainable.
Colorado
River dependent states like Nevada and Arizona demanded more share of
resources starting in the 1990s.
A
Quantification Settlement Agreement was signed among several
California water agencies regarding allocation of water from the
Colorado River in 2003.
According
to the 2003 deal, farmers in the state's Imperial Valley agreed to
halt working on some 50,000 acres and to send that water to San Diego
and Coachella Valley residents. The urban areas paid for water
conservation efforts in the Imperial Valley, including lining canals
and drip irrigation systems.
Salton
Sea was given 32 billion gallons of water per year pursuant to the
agreement since the lake had been sustained through agricultural
runoff since it was created by the canal breach.
“That’s
a lot of water for a lake that not a whole lot of people like,”
Michael Cohen, a senior research associate at the water-policy
non-profit Pacific Institute, told The Washington Post.
This
spring, California Governor Jerry Brown ordered a 25 percent cut in
urban water usage based on ongoing drought conditions across the
state. This contributed to the ongoing dispute as to whether large
quantities of valuable water should be squandered on the lake.
Should
the lake be preserved?
Since
2003, Imperial Irrigation District has put water directly into the
350-square-mile southern California lake -- the state's largest -- to
stem its receding shoreline.
This
week, Imperial County and the Imperial Irrigation District agreed to
settle a 12-year dispute over restoration of Salton Sea. The conflict
stems from the 2003 agreement and pledges made by the state and the
various entities involved.
"This
settlement agreement sends a clear message that Imperial Irrigation
District and Imperial County are united in our efforts to advocate
for a Salton Sea restoration plan," said Antonio Ortega,
governmental affairs officer for the Imperial Irrigation District,
according to Courthouse News.
The
2003 agreement is to end in 2017, leading many to worry about the
environmental ramifications of allowing the lake to dry up amid a
lack of water resources elsewhere.
"The
state of California said in the water transfer agreement that they
would restore the Salton Sea," Jessica Lovecchio, of the
Imperial Irrigation District, recently told KNPR. "To date we
haven't seen any progress with that."
The
state's stalled restoration efforts have frustrated Salton Sea
advocates.
"We're
really pushing for a smaller, but sustainable Salton Sea,"
Lovecchio, with the Imperial Irrigation District, said. "We
still want the Salton Sea here, we just want one that is manageable."
Two
weeks ago, Gov. Brown proposed a task force focused on expediting
conservation of the Salton Sea.
"Prior
comprehensive plans to restore the sea are no longer feasible due to
cost and decreased water availability resulting from the drought in
California and in the southwestern states," the governor wrote.
Though
locals have seen these kind of efforts before. They want concrete
solutions from the state.
"Too
many task forces and not enough action," local assemblyman
Eduardo Garcia told the Desert Sun of the proposal.
If
it dries up
The
Salton Sea air basin's poor air quality exceeds the state's standards
for wind-borne dust, according to KNPR. Should the lake dry up, high
levels of arsenic, selenium, and traces of the long-banned pesticide
DDT are lurking dangers.
Preventing
dust spread would be expensive, yet a recent study by the Pacific
Institute found that not addressing the problem would cost nearly $30
billion.
"If
the sea dies, plumes of poison dust will whisk through the air at the
speed of Santa Anas," wrote Logan Jenkins of the San Diego
Union-Tribune.
Imperial
County already leads California in childhood asthma hospitalizations.
"I
almost never go" to Salton Sea, nearby resident Maria Gudiño
told KNPR. "But when I have gone, I have to cover my nose."
Gudiño
said she and three of her children have asthma.
The
lake, at 50 times saltier than the Pacific Ocean based on years of
evaporation and stagnation, is home to only a handful of fish species
that can survive such conditions. Salton Sea's shores are largely
made of dried, ground-up fish bones.
Salton
Sea, however, is a haven for birds: More than 400 species make the
lake the second-most diverse collection of birds in the United
States, according to The Washington Post. If the lake is not
restored, experts say the bird populations will disappear.
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