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Challenging California’s Water ‘Scarcity’ Narrative

California doesn’t have a water scarcity problem. It has a distribution problem, according to Nícola Ulibarrí, whose new research is reshaping how policymakers think about one of the state’s most pressing challenges.

In a report commissioned by UC Berkeley’s Possibility Lab, Ulibarrí argues that California’s existing water infrastructure already collects enough water to sustain all state residents. The real crisis, says the UC Irvine associate professor of urban planning and public policy, is that thousands of Californians remain disconnected from that abundant supply.

California’s Water Storage Strategy Showing Progress After Series of Storms

A strategy to improve water storage statewide after a multi-year drought is showing continuing signs of progress.

Current water conditions across the state have improved because of ongoing water-conservation efforts from a multi-year drought that started in 2021, according to a press release from Gov. Newsom’s office.

The Western US Is in a Snow Drought. What Comes Next Is Even Scarier

The mountains of the western United States are looking remarkably brown this winter. The region is facing one of its worst snow droughts in decades, and while the snowsport industry is already feeling the effects, the impacts this summer could be far worse.

Although much of the region received plenty of precipitation in fall and early winter, most of it fell as rain due to unusually warm temperatures. Then, a lengthy dry spell took hold in January, which certainly didn’t help. The lack of snow isn’t just bad news for skiers and snowboarders—it’s also a major concern for the West’s water supply, which is far more reliant on a healthy snowpack than rainfall.

Officials Thrilled After Stunning Turnaround of Crucial US Water Supply: ‘It Gives Us Comfort’

For many, heavy rains are a headache. Storms send pedestrians scurrying under umbrellas, trying to stay dry, and can cause major traffic jams for motorists. But for California, recent heavy rains have been more than welcome.

The Mercury News reported that large atmospheric storms have filled the state’s reservoirs to historic levels. Hundreds of billions of gallons of water have refilled the reservoirs, easing concerns about future shortfalls for the time being.

Senator Padilla Introduces Bills Targeting California Water Supply Challenges

According to a Feb. 4 press release, Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Calif., has introduced two bills aimed at addressing long-term water supply challenges in California and across the American West.

Padilla, a member of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, introduced the Making Our Communities Resilient through Enhancing Water for Agriculture, Technology, the Environment, and Residences Act, known as the MORE WATER Act, and the Growing Resilient Operations from Water Savings and Municipal-Agricultural Reciprocally Beneficial Transactions Act, known as the GROW SMART Act.

Optimism but No Deal After ‘Historic’ D.C. Meeting About Colorado River’s Future

Governors and negotiators from the seven Colorado River basin states, including California, met behind closed doors for about two hours in Washington on Friday to talk with Interior Secretary Doug Burgum about the dwindling waterway’s future.

After they left the meeting, governors were quick to issue statements praising the gathering as “productive” and “meaningful,” but no deal among the states was announced by Monday afternoon.

Carlsbad City Council Member New Water Authority Secretary

The San Diego County Water Authority Board of Directors on Thursday, Jan. 22, unanimously elected Carlsbad City Councilmember Teresa Acosta as the board’s new secretary.

Acosta replaces Joy Lyndes, who stepped down following her recent announcement that she will not seek re-election to her position on the Encinitas City Council this year.

California Water Officials Issue Warning as Key Water Supply Number Plunges

A California water official has warned that the longer the Golden State goes without adequate snowfall this winter, the “harder it will be to catch up” to the levels needed to maintain California’s reservoir water supply through the dry summer months.

The message came as the California Department of Water Resources (DWR) conducted its second snow survey of the season last week. Snow surveys are designed to measure water content from statewide snow depth, which is a crucial number for statewide water supply forecasts, given that snowpack provides about 30 percent of the state’s water supply.

Trump’s Water Ambitions Have a Staffing Problem

Federal water managers and the local agencies they serve usually gather every January in Reno, Nevada, to swap wish lists, from higher dams to new reservoirs to changes to endangered species rules. This year, at the Mid-Pacific Water Users Conference, the focus was more basic: whether the federal water system has enough people left to keep it running.

“We’re left with so many holes, there’s no way we can do business the way we used to,” Adam Nickels, acting regional director for the Bureau of Reclamation’s California region, told the gathering last week.

California Increases 2026 State Water Project Allocation to 30%

California’s Department of Water Resources (DWR) has increased the 2026 State Water Project (SWP) allocation to 30% of requested supplies, up from the initial 10% announced Dec. 1, following mid-December storms that boosted available water supplies. The SWP delivers water to 29 public water agencies serving approximately 27 million Californians and 750,000 acres of farmland.

According to DWR, SWP allocations are based on hydrologic conditions, existing reservoir storage and planning assumptions that the remainder of the year will be dry. While December storms improved conditions statewide, January has been unseasonably warm and dry, leaving snowpack and precipitation below average for this time of year.