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California lifts target for 15% water conservation as yet another storm approaches

Sprinklers water a lawn in Los Angeles on June 5, 2022.
Pablo Unzueta
/
CalMatters
Sprinklers water a lawn in Los Angeles on June 5, 2022.

California ended its voluntary statewide target, triggering concerns from experts that many water supplies remain depleted. Other drought measures remain in place.

With the Sierra Nevada smothered in snow, large swaths of the Central Valley underwater and many Californians weary of water, state officials announced today that they are lifting some drought-related provisions on water use.

鈥淥ur water supply conditions have improved markedly,鈥 said Secretary of Natural Resources Wade Crowfoot.

The state is rescinding its request for voluntary 15% water conservation statewide, which was issued in July 2021, and instead, Crowfoot said, shifting to an approach of making conservation a 鈥渨ay of life.鈥

鈥淲e need to maintain our vigilance,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not about going back to normal anymore. It鈥檚 really adjusting to a new normal.鈥

Some of the state鈥檚 emergency provisions were ended and some were left in place. Wasteful uses of water, such as hosing down sidewalks and watering ornamental grass on commercial property, remain banned, according to state officials.

The state, however, is ending its requirement that local water agencies implement , which are locally written water use regulations鈥 such as limits on watering lawns 鈥 that are invoked during water shortages.

In total, 81 drought-related provisions were enacted since April 2021. Just 33 remain in place, said Gov. Gavin Newsom at a press briefing today.

State officials also announced today a large increase in the amounts of water that local suppliers will get from the State Water Project, increasing from 35% announced last month to 75% of requested supplies. The water is provided to 750,000 acres of farmland and 27 million people, mostly in Southern California.

The announcements come as some of the state鈥檚 reservoirs near capacity, with some of the state鈥檚 largest expected to fill by late spring. And the snowpack of the Sierra Nevada, nearing record levels in the southern portion of the range, continues to grow.

When Newsom almost two years ago many water experts said Newsom should have made it mandatory, as former Gov. Jerry Brown did during the previous drought. They also criticized him for failing to reduce use by farmers, who consume 80% of the state鈥檚 delivered water supply.

State officials say even though the 15% target was voluntary, it worked. However, the data does not back that up: Californians 鈥 falling far short of Newsom鈥檚 15% goal.

Heather Cooley, director of research at the Pacific Institute, an Oakland water supply thinktank, said California must not relax its ethos of water conservation.

In spite of wet weather, the state鈥檚 largest water supply 鈥 its groundwater basins 鈥 remain depleted.

鈥淓ven though reservoirs are recovering, groundwater aquifers remain depleted. The Colorado River 鈥 a major water source for Southern California 鈥 is also facing a massive deficit,鈥 Cooley said. 鈥淭he reality is we don鈥檛 have water to waste in California. We need to continue investing in water efficiency to prepare for a hotter, drier future and more intense droughts.鈥

Mike McNutt, spokesperson for the Las Virgenes Municipal Water District in Los Angeles County, said the retraction of the conservation target 鈥渟ends the wrong message鈥 to the public.

鈥淲hy put out messaging that says something different, that says, 鈥榊ou can conserve if you want to, but you don鈥檛 need to鈥?鈥 said McNutt, whose district serving 75,000 people is totally reliant on water from the state aqueduct.

鈥淭he next drought is certainly just around the corner,鈥 he added.

Californians did cut their average water use by 600,000 acre-feet in almost two yearsThat鈥檚 almost two-thirds the volume of Folsom Reservoir and enough water to serve 1.2 million households in a year.

Crowfoot stressed that the drought is not over, noting that drought status 鈥渋s not a completely binary situation.鈥 In some parts of the state, drought conditions have dramatically eased, but not in others. Crowfoot said the Klamath River basin and the region of Southern California that relies on Colorado River water continue to face 鈥渁cute water shortages.鈥

Thousands of households lack drinking water due to depleted groundwater basins , which have been overdrafted for decades and experts agree they

Joaquin Esquivel, chair of the State Water Resources Control Board, said the hope is that cities 鈥渁re not just rebounding鈥 to old ways of water use.

鈥淐onservation remains a priority,鈥 Crowfoot added.

Michael Anderson, a climatologist with the California Department of Water Resources, said snowpack is at 278% of normal, with another storm system expected to hit the North Coast and move inland and south from there, starting Monday. The system, he said, will deliver a relatively cold storm originating in the Gulf of Alaska, unlike some recent blasts of tropical moisture. This means it will drop more snow in the mountains.

鈥淣ot massive accumulations, but could be locally heavy,鈥 he said.

 is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics. 

Alastair Bland writes about water, climate, marine research, agriculture and the environment for CalMatters, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics, and a JPR news partner.