If you don’t understand the California water scene, you’re in a large company. Most of the state’s residents don’t either.
Partly because it is almost impossibly complicated.
Some explanation is in order.
In the first place, most of California receives practically no rain between May and November. Agriculture thus relies heavily on irrigation, using water from the great state and federal water projects.
The state’s Central Valley—the heart of its agriculture, including the produce industry—runs some 450 miles more or less north-south (more or less) between Redding in the north and Bakersfield to the south. It is 40-60 miles wide at various spots.
These valleys are created by the Sacramento River in the north and the San Joaquin River in the south. They meet in the Delta, a marshy region southwest of Sacramento. (For more on the Delta, see here.
These rivers are largely fed by rainfall, runoff, and snowmelt from the Sierra Nevada Mountains in the east.
The torrential rains of the past few weeks (which delivered 15-25 inches of rain to various areas) have put an end to the “extreme” aspect of the drought.
But they have resurrected a perennial issue in the fertile but semiarid state. It focuses on the Delta, which is fed not only by the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers, but other rivers coming down directly from the Sierras.
The Delta is not only the center-point of California’s water system but of controversies about it.
These have to do with how much water should be allowed to flow through the Delta into San Francisco Bay and how much should be diverted for agricultural use (especially in the San Joaquin Valley).
Agricultural interests want more of the Delta water pumped south so they can grow crops without having to delve even further into their depleted groundwater supplies. Of course, they feel this need especially acutely now, after years of drought.
Environmental interests want to keep the Delta flow-through high to maintain it as a wildlife habitat.
Here is another detail you need to know: by and large, California agricultural interests favor (and are favored by) Republicans, while environmental interests favor (and are favored by) Democrats.
The Democrats control both the governorship and the Legislature. This helps explain why many California agricultural leaders (rightly or wrongly) contend that the state government is blind to their interests, such as increased Delta pumping.
This article is not a call to action, nor does it engage in editorializing.
It is simply explaining some basics without which you just won’t understand what’s going on with California water.
It took me some years to figure all this out, so I’m trying to make it easier for my readers.
If you don’t understand the California water scene, you’re in a large company. Most of the state’s residents don’t either.
Partly because it is almost impossibly complicated.
Some explanation is in order.
In the first place, most of California receives practically no rain between May and November. Agriculture thus relies heavily on irrigation, using water from the great state and federal water projects.
The state’s Central Valley—the heart of its agriculture, including the produce industry—runs some 450 miles more or less north-south (more or less) between Redding in the north and Bakersfield to the south. It is 40-60 miles wide at various spots.
These valleys are created by the Sacramento River in the north and the San Joaquin River in the south. They meet in the Delta, a marshy region southwest of Sacramento. (For more on the Delta, see here.
These rivers are largely fed by rainfall, runoff, and snowmelt from the Sierra Nevada Mountains in the east.
The torrential rains of the past few weeks (which delivered 15-25 inches of rain to various areas) have put an end to the “extreme” aspect of the drought.
But they have resurrected a perennial issue in the fertile but semiarid state. It focuses on the Delta, which is fed not only by the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers, but other rivers coming down directly from the Sierras.
The Delta is not only the center-point of California’s water system but of controversies about it.
These have to do with how much water should be allowed to flow through the Delta into San Francisco Bay and how much should be diverted for agricultural use (especially in the San Joaquin Valley).
Agricultural interests want more of the Delta water pumped south so they can grow crops without having to delve even further into their depleted groundwater supplies. Of course, they feel this need especially acutely now, after years of drought.
Environmental interests want to keep the Delta flow-through high to maintain it as a wildlife habitat.
Here is another detail you need to know: by and large, California agricultural interests favor (and are favored by) Republicans, while environmental interests favor (and are favored by) Democrats.
The Democrats control both the governorship and the Legislature. This helps explain why many California agricultural leaders (rightly or wrongly) contend that the state government is blind to their interests, such as increased Delta pumping.
This article is not a call to action, nor does it engage in editorializing.
It is simply explaining some basics without which you just won’t understand what’s going on with California water.
It took me some years to figure all this out, so I’m trying to make it easier for my readers.
Richard Smoley, contributing editor for Blue Book Services, Inc., has more than 40 years of experience in magazine writing and editing, and is the former managing editor of California Farmer magazine. A graduate of Harvard and Oxford universities, he has published 12 books.