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Regional Leaders Hail Settlement Agreement

Community leaders from across San Diego County expressed their support for the end of long running litigation between the San Diego County Water Authority and Metropolitan Water District following the morning news conference announcing the settlement.

San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria

“Settling litigation between Metropolitan and the Water Authority is a springboard for stabilizing rates through water exchanges and transfers. I’m proud of the work our city delegates have done to get to this point and believe strongly that this is necessary to secure our future as a city and region.” – San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria

“The San Diego County Water Authority’s skilled and trained workforce keeps the water flowing across our region. By ending 15 years of litigation, the Water Authority can continue their focus on reducing the cost of water and the workers can focus on what they do best – making sure we never have to think about whether water will flow from our faucet.” – Brigette Browning, President, San Diego and Imperial Counties Labor Council, AFL-CIO – The Union of Unions

Brigette Browning, President, San Diego and Imperial Counties Labor Council, AFL-CIO – The Union of Unions

“We applaud the Water Authority and Metropolitan for ending this long-running litigation, recognizing that we’re stronger together. Our $262 billion economy runs on the supply the Water Authority provides. Looking ahead, the creation of water markets in California and across the Southwest will provide rate benefits that businesses in our region need to grow and thrive.” –  Mark Cafferty, President & COO, San Diego Regional Economic Development Corporation

“Biocom California as an organization was literally founded around the issue of water availability in the 1990s. One of the reasons we were able to grow to be one of the largest life science clusters in the world is because of the foresight of the San Diego County Water Authority. We are thrilled that two entities we work with and respect have resolved their differences, and are excited for what this means for California’s water future.” – Tim Scott, President and CEO, Biocom California

Met Imported Water Subcomm: From Crisis to Collaboration: The Past and Future of Colorado River Management Copy

The Colorado River’s water future was a major topic on the agenda at the inaugural meeting of the Metropolitan’s Subcommittee on Imported Water, where Bill Hasencamp, Manager of Colorado River Resources, delivered an update on the ongoing post-2026 guidelines negotiations. These discussions will set the course for managing the Colorado River’s dwindling resources at a time when water reliability is more critical than ever.

How AI Demand is Draining Water from Areas that Need it Most

Each time you ask an AI chatbot to summarize a lengthy legal document or conjure up a cartoon squirrel wearing glasses, it sends a request to a data center and strains an increasingly scarce resource: water. The data centers that power artificial intelligence consumes immense amounts of water to cool hot servers and, indirectly, from the electricity needed to run these facilities.

Facing Shortages, Cities Tap Sewers to Bolster Drinking Water Supply

On a hot day, there’s nothing quite like a refreshing drink of water. But how would you feel if that water was sourced from the sewer?

Mexico to Send Water to Texas Farmers After Trump Threat Over US Treaty

Mexico will make an immediate water delivery to Texas farmers in an effort to address its shortfall under a decades-old water treaty that has drawn tariff threats from Donald Trump, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum announced Friday.

California’s Snowpack Report Card is In. What Does It Mean for the Water Supply?

Some measure the year by calendar, by birth dates or by tax returns. For California water managers, the key date is April 1. That’s when researchers push their trusty tubes down into the snow covering the Sierra Nevada to see how much has accumulated just as the wet season typically peaks. How’d we do this water year?

New Desalination Technology Being Tested in California Could Lower Costs of Tapping Seawater

Californians could be drinking water tapped from the Pacific Ocean off Malibu several years from now — that is, if a company’s new desalination technology proves viable. OceanWell Co. plans to anchor about two dozen 40-foot-long devices, called pods, to the seafloor several miles offshore and use them to take in saltwater and pump purified fresh water to shore in a pipeline.

Strong Reservoir and Snowpack Levels Boost California’s Water Outlook

The water outlook in California is bright, with major reservoirs exhibiting strong levels and a near-average snowpack, according to the latest data.

The state’s three largest reservoirs – Trinity, Shasta and Oroville – are currently holding more than 75% of their capacity, a significant boost compared to typical levels for this time of year.

Report: U.S. Water, Sewer Bills Have Increased 24% in Five Years

According to a new comprehensive analysis of drinking water and sewer rates, the combined water and sewer bill for a typical U.S. household has increased by 4.6% from 2023 to 2024 and about 24% in the past five years.

Where San Diego’s Water Comes From, Explained

Water in California, while always a hot topic, entered the national spotlight at the start of 2025. Where the San Diego region’s water comes from, how it’s provided and who’s in charge of what are big questions that water professionals address every day.

What are the biggest sources of water for San Diego County?

In 2024, about 60% of the region’s water supplies were from the Colorado River, about one-third were from local sources and the rest was from Northern California through the State Water Project. The State Water Project is operated by the State of California and is separate from the Central Valley Project operated by the federal government.

Regardless of the source, all the water delivered to homes and businesses across the region meets strict state and federal quality standards.

How has our region’s water supply changed over the years?

In 1991, San Diego County got 95% of its water from the Metropolitan Water District (MWD) in Los Angeles, leaving the region’s water supply outside of San Diego’s control. A lack of local resources left the region susceptible to supply cutbacks from its major single major source. In 1991, MWD imposed an supply reduction of 31%, prompting the San Diego region’s civic and business leaders to demand greater investments and increased control over the county’s water future. In the following three decades, the Water Authority invested  roughly $3 billion in regional water reliability projects. That included cementing the largest water conservation-and-transfer deal in U.S. history to secure conserved water from the Imperial Valley, partnering with a private company to build the nation’s largest seawater desalination plant and super-sizing San Vicente Reservoir by raising the height of the World War II-era dam. Now San Diego has a locally controlled and diversified water supply to make sure the taps always turn on.

SDCWA’s water portfolio over the years.

Why doesn’t San Diego County use much groundwater?

Before 1947, the San Diego region relied heavily on local surface water runoff in normal and wet years, and on groundwater pumped from local aquifers during dry years when stream flows shriveled. As the economy and population grew exponentially, local resources became insufficient to meet the region’s water supply needs, and the region increasingly turned to imported water supplies. Today, groundwater is a small but important resource, especially in places like the South Bay where the aquifers are relatively large. Overall, it accounts for about 5 percent of the region’s water supply portfolio.

What is being done to create additional water supply here in the region?

Coordinating with 22 member agencies to develop long-term, local water reliability is a key component of the Water Authority’s mission. In fact, a growing number of local water sources across the San Diego region are managed by local retail agencies — and they are critical to ensuring long-term supply reliability. Local projects reduce demand on imported supplies and provide local agencies with more control.

In San Diego County, agencies are investing in seawater desalination, water recycling and water purification to create the water reliability our region needs to thrive.

What does the future of water look like for San Diego County?

Even in very dry years like 2025, regional investments mean there’s sufficient water to sustain our economy and quality of life.  In fact, the region has done such a good job securing water, that it’s talking with other agencies across the Southwest about selling some of locally controlled water to combat rate increases in the county and support the larger regional economy.

For more information about San Diego’s water sources, click here.