How much Delta water is pumped?

Jim, we joke that those anchors are hand made in China and shipped via slow boat......but in reality our beloved [?] leader Les has to manually apply the anchor to your RO#. He usually does this in batches when he gets a break in his other duties around here. I'd give it at least 1 week or until the CC charge shows up on your account.......

As far as the water flows go, remember we had several drought years both in the 80s and in the 90s with flood years in between. The available water varies widely from year to year and is usually unpredictable to boot!

I' glad to see someone getting well informed about the ecosystem issues of the delta. The questions and answer posed here will inform many more then yourself!
 
Flutterby,

I can wait, but I do want my anchor sometime!

This is a great education for a lot of people - thanks to all for their input.

I would love to make up some sort of summary sheet that will grab peoples attention and get them involved. Honestly, I don't think too many people realize what a serious mess this is, but if they did, they would join in trying to find a common solution. Although not a giant group, something at the marinas that let people see whats happening is a good place to start.

I beleive the single biggest fix is conservation - not exactly an "American" tradition, but I think it is a great time to start a movement! Might be like the gas thing - raise the price 5X and conservation will follow. We that love the Delta might start an investigation into what it would take to raise the cost of the Delta water 5X or ??. It would certainly cut down on demand, which would cut back on usage (the real goal), and raise a lot of money for the Delta recovery effort. Seems simple to me - am I missing something?

Just kidding, not simple!

Jim
 
State Water Project and Federal Central Valley Water Project

From the 1950’s to 1970’s different government agencies at the State and Federal level implemented a massive water development program in California. This program was built upon the traditional supply augmentation approach to water development. Unfortunately this approach to water development is flawed. The main weakness of the traditional supply based method is that it assumes that the demand for water is perfectly inelastic and unchanging over time. An inelastic demand assumes that there is little quantitative response to changes in the price of water. Under this planning approach the quantity of water to be delivered by a water project is fixed, and the only question is how to minimize the costs of supplying it. Economic analysis is then performed to see if the total costs of the water project are less than the total benefits.

Both the State Water Project (SWP) and the Federal Central Valley Water Project (CVP) were developed using the principles of the supply-based approach to water development. The SWP was originally projected to supply an average annual quantity of 4.2 million acre-feet of water in two stages. The first stage of 2.2 million acre-feet was built and put into service in the late 1960’s and early 1970’s. However, subsequent attempts to build the remaining 2 million acre-feet capacity have met with effective opposition from environmental interests, who want to prevent any further water development, and current contractors, who know that the average cost of water delivered by the system will have to increase by up to 300 percent to finance the completion of the planned project.

In 1994 the SWP project contractors and operators met to renegotiate the conditions for water sales among contractors and the allocation of cuts in water deliveries during drought periods. The resulting Monterey agreement also enabled contractors who overlie a state operated groundwater storage project to exchange the control of the project for surface water entitlements; these entitlements could then be transferred to urban contractors. Finally, the agreement sanctioned the permanent transfer of 130 thousand acre-feet of water from agricultural to urban users.

The CVP parallels the SWP and delivers 4.6 million acre-feet of water to both
urban and agricultural contractors. Urban contractors receive 10 percent of total water deliveries while the remaining 90 percent of water is diverted to agricultural contractors. The CVP was operational in 1965, but by 1992 there was considerable political pressure to modify the operation of the project to reduce environmental damage to different fish populations in the Sacramento River Delta. The resulting Central Valley Project Improvement Act (CVPIA) reallocated water to environmental uses by cutting water deliveries by 1 million acre-feet in normal rainfall years and by 804 thousand acre-feet in critical rainfall years. The CVPIA mandated that 800 thousand acre-feet of water be re allocated to instream uses to protect the salmon runs, while 400 thousand acre-feet of water be reallocated to wildlife refuges (Hanak, 2003).

Water markets in the CVP districts are limited to local sales among agricultural contractors. These sales are short in duration and are generated by differences in the water allocations between farm regions and years. Due to institutional constraints, CVP water is still largely used for agricultural irrigation despite a three-fold difference between the value of water in nearby urban sectors and agricultural sectors.

In recent years, State and Federal law have mandated a set of modifications that affect both the state and federal water projects in California. In 1996 and 1997 California developed the 4.4 Plan that aims to reduce diversions from the Colorado River to 4.4 million acre-feet over a period of 15 years. Moreover, in 2000 the Environmental Water Account (EWA) was implemented by the state and federal governments. The purpose of the EWA is to regenerate the fisheries of the San Francisco Bay-Delta system while simultaneously securing water supplies to both urban and agricultural users. Both these developments have encouraged water trading.

http://giannini.ucop.edu/CalAgBook/Chap7.pdf

watertransfer.jpg


Brokering Delta water is money.
 
yzer,
Good info. Is the chart the water from the Colorado? If they are going to reduce it, as your note says, someone won a battle to save that poor river - it has all but dried up. If that is the case, it puts more pressure on the Delta to replace it! The good news I suppose, is that there was a win in saving a natural beauty!
Jim
 
Yes, the water trading chart includes Colorado River water. California's share of Colorado River water is under tighter restrictions now. This is one of the reasons why the State wants more Delta water. This situation will not change until Delta water becomes so scarce or expensive that desalination looks like an economical choice. San Diego is already moving ahead with a small desalination plant to "test the waters." For a region that faces the prospect of "poop to soup" recycling and LA's water leftovers: desalination is looking better and better for San Diego.
 
yzer, can you explain "poop to soup recycling"? I've never heard of that phrase......careful now! [:-bigeyes2]
 
Heh, heh. Las Vegas aleady does it in an indirect way by discharging treated wastewater into Lake Mead: which eventually goes into the San Diego water supply. Actually, the water quality of poop to soup is just as good as any tapwater. It just means the water that goes down the commode is going to get treated and come out again from your tap. Science aside, people tend to accept the idea with some reluctance. One drawback is all of the pharmaceuticals that may not get fully separated from the waste water, but it's claimed that even viruses and chemicals get filtered out with state-of-the-art treatment plants.

The process is also called "toilet to tap." It's a choice that may become more common as water gets harder to come by in much of the west.

http://www.governing.com/articles/0805water.htm
 
Thanks! I have heard of "toilet to tap." I believe some communities along the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers use this. And of course that water flows through the delta!
 
Many (if not most) of the cities and towns located along the Northern CA watershed discharge treated municipal waste water into the river system. Those discharges must meet federal and CA EPA specs. However, those specifications are not nearly as stringent as the toilet to tank state-of-the-art treatment plants I'm talking about.

The existing EPA regulations for municipal discharge into the rivers are fine. Dilution, natural cleansing and time work together to make this kind of discharge safe for water quality. The problem is we have municipal treatment facilities like Marin County that don't meet these lower requirements year after year.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/02/02/MNSTUQQO6.DTL

http://www.healthyrivers.org/slog/2008/02/07/sewage-spills-san-francisco-go-unreported-not-unnoticed#

what the EPA says about Marin:
http://yosemite.epa.gov/opa/admpres...7a8400070c27cc4b852573ed00821d8d!OpenDocument

that includes cows:
http://yosemite.epa.gov/opa/admpres...4316485e3c6318788525732a006325bf!OpenDocument
 
Back
Top