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Source of this article - Los Angeles Times, June 11, 2006
With the easy sources tapped out and the region's thirst growing, officials
adopt new technologies and habits to stretch supplies.
By Gary Polakovic, Times Staff Writer
A powerful thirst is building in Southern California as forecasters predict the
addition of about 2 million new households in the region over the next 20 years.
In the past, finding water for all those extra showers, toilets and lawn
sprinklers would have been easy: Look beyond a mountain range, find a wild river
and divert it to Los Angeles.
But those days are over. The rivers are
tapped, and there's more competition for their resources. So where will the
water come from?
Part of the answer can be found at Loyola Marymount
University, where a new cleaning process slashed the amount of water needed to
flush giant cooling towers that regulate the campus' heating and
air-conditioning system, saving 1.4 million gallons a year.
The
university also switched to front-loading washing machines, turned to treated
wastewater for landscaping and installed motion-sensing faucets and low-flow
urinals that require one-fourth less water.
"We have more students and
faculty, water rates are up, but our utility bills are down," said Gerald
Robinson, energy manager for the college near Marina del Rey. "So we're actively
pursuing more conservation measures."
Such steps may seem like drops in
the bucket, but their widespread use add up to big savings. Water customers
across the region — including vineyards, housing subdivisions, parks,
restaurants and farms — are in the midst of an ambitious push to find more
efficient ways to use the state's most precious natural resource.
Indeed, Southern California today gets half of its water from imported
sources, compared with two-thirds a decade ago. Per capita water use in the
region was 205 gallons a day 10 years ago; today it's about 175
gallons.
Doing more with less has become the cornerstone of water
management policy for one of the biggest and driest megalopolises on the
continent. Unlike previous droughts, the last one — which ran from 1999 to 2003
and required no rationing in Southern California — went largely unnoticed
because of the success of such programs, officials said.
"We've come to realize over the last decade that we're
not building new dams, new aqueducts and moving more rivers to Southern
California," said Jeffrey Kightlinger, general manager for the Metropolitan
Water District, which provides 60% of the region's water. "We're creating the
equivalent of a new river by conservation, water storage and paying transfer
fees" to move water around the state.
Over the next two decades, Southern California's population is expected
to grow by 6 million — equivalent to two Chicago-size cities. Most of that
growth will take place in the deserts and canyons of Los Angeles, Riverside and
San Bernardino counties.
Roughly 1 million acre-feet of water will be
needed annually to serve the newcomers, according to the MWD. An acre-foot is
about 326,000 gallons, enough to cover an acre 1 foot deep or supply two
households for a year.
Drought-reduced flows in the Colorado River and
efforts to restore ecosystems in Northern California, including Mono Lake in the
Owens Valley, also mean less water for thirsty cities in the south.
Water
supply disputes were a chief reason legislators earlier this year were unable to
put Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's $49-billion public works bond measure on the
June ballot. Republican lawmakers opposed attempts by Democrats to strip
provisions from the spending package to build new reservoirs in Northern
California.
Rather than pursue resources they don't have, officials
increasingly are searching for ways to maximize use of the water they do
have.
"The water for Southern California growth is going to have to come
from conservation, recycling and cleanup of groundwater basins," said Jonas
Minton, project manager for the Planning and Conservation League, a statewide
environmental coalition. "This is a new paradigm."
The result is that
the region's thirst-quenching quest has moved well beyond now-ubiquitous
low-flow showerheads. New technologies and practices, such as those at Loyola
Marymount, are spreading across the region.
In the lnland Empire, newly
installed pipes and "spreading basins" along the Whitewater River near Palm
Springs and Rancho Cucamonga helped capture more runoff during the drenching
winter of 2004-05. The basins collected more than 20,000 acre-feet of water.
A new subdivision of about 400 houses in the hill country east of
Murrieta features "California friendly" landscaping that includes
drought-tolerant deer grass, California lilac and coffeeberry.
The
landscaping is moistened by drip irrigation run on a computerized timer that
receives satellite information to calculate evaporation rates using temperature,
barometric pressure and wind data. Other builders in San Diego, Riverside and
San Bernardino counties are starting to use similar landscaping. About half of
residential water use occurs outdoors.
"It's easy, it's low maintenance,
I don't ever see the sprinklers come on," said David Fafard, 34, who just bought
a house in French Valley. "It's so cheap, I don't even think about the water
bill."
Even contaminated water in aquifers is being reclaimed.
In
Chino, water agencies installed pumps and filters six years ago to remove
nitrates from a sprawling 240-square-mile subterranean pool of tainted water in
one of the fastest-growing areas in the nation. So far, about 27,000 acre-feet
has been restored, said Martha Davis of the Inland Empire Utilities Agency.
Similar projects are underway in Orange County and the San Gabriel
Valley.
"This is the future of Southern California," Davis said,
"figuring out how to take care of local water assets and maximize
use."
This is why water agencies are also targeting the state's growers,
who make up the largest consumers. Eight of every 10 gallons used in California
goes to growing crops, irrigating orchards and watering livestock.
The
Bureau of Reclamation recently funded a project in the Temecula area to show
wine growers how to improve efficiency. Vineyards that use drip irrigation based
on weather conditions have cut water use by nearly a third.
The MWD pays
farmers in the Palo Verde Valley near Blythe to fallow land during dry spells —
gaining about 100,000 acre-feet of water for cities — and has reached similar
agreements with rice farmers in the Sacramento Valley.
In addition, the
district spent $200 million to line small, leaky irrigation canals in the
Imperial Valley, yielding 105,000 acre-feet. Lining the dirt-bottom Coachella
Canal should be completed by 2008 to yield 96,000 acre-feet for use in San
Diego.
"The current practice of diversifying water supplies and building
reserves allows us the flexibility we need to withstand changes in demand and
supply to maintain a high degree of reliability," the MWD's Kightlinger said.
"Based on current projections, we plan to have enough water for the
future."
But the region still faces many challenges. It must also contend with
nature's unpredictability, including the potential effect of earthquakes on
water delivery, as well as climate change.
The Colorado River is prone to
wide fluctuations in flow. Indeed, the river doesn't convey enough water to meet
the allotments for seven Western states and Mexico, which own its water
rights.
Measurements made before 1922, when the water was divvied up,
recorded an average annual flow of 16.5 million acre-feet, but that proved to be
an unusually high-flow period. The long-term average flow in the river is about
15 million acre-feet. During the last drought, flows fell to about 5.4 million
acre-feet.
Officials are confident that they have enough water reserves
and flexibility in the delivery system to cope with short-term droughts of five
to six years. But they acknowledge that they are not prepared for long
droughts.
Glen MacDonald, a geography professor at UCLA, gives Southern
California water agencies high marks for more efficient use of water, but he
warns that a "mega-drought" spanning 10 to 15 years would push water supplies to
the breaking point. Such events have occurred three times over the last 400
years in the Southwest.
Concerned about the potential for long-term
drought, a split Huntington Beach City Council approved plans in March to build
a $250-million desalination plant.
"We live in a desert," said
Councilwoman Cathy Green. "We need all the sources of fresh water that we can
develop."
Other threats persist.
Schwarzenegger has
unsuccessfully sought federal disaster aid to shore up aging levees in the Bay
Delta, where nearly two-thirds of the state's water flows. A major quake or
storm could potentially collapse levees and imperil much of the state's water
supply. And environmentalists warn that, in the long-term, global warming could
mean less snow in the Sierra and the Rockies, resulting in less water during
summer months.
Conservationists praise steps to use water more wisely but
fault water agencies as well as state and local governments for not pursuing
more conservation measures.
The most recent California Water Plan
produced by the state Department of Water Resources shows that between 1.2
million and 3 million acre-feet of water could be saved just in the big cities
through aggressive conservation.
The Pacific Institute, an Oakland-based
think tank, has identified numerous strategies to slash water use by 20% over
the next 25 years. They include retrofitting 7 million homes with low-flow
toilets, requiring labels identifying water-efficient appliances and hardware,
and setting rate structures so that customers that use the most water pay the
most.
"California is a water-rich state," said Peter Gleick, president of
the organization. "The problem is not with the quantity of water we have, the
problem we have is how we use it."
Quenching a big thirst
Conservation efforts and local
supplies meet less than half the Southland's growing need for water. Here's a
look at the effect over time of conservation, recycling and planned desalination
efforts, and where Southern California's water currently comes from. Here's a Metropolitan Water District breakdown of sources,
based on a 2000-04 average of 5,039,203 acre-feet* per year:
- Local
supplies** and conservation: 47%
- State Water Project: 29%
- Colorado
River Aqueduct: 19%
- Los Angeles Aqueduct: 5%
- Storage:
1%
*Each acre-foot is enough to meet the needs of two average California
households for one year.
**Local supplies include water recycling and
groundwater recovery projects.
Note: Total exceeds 100% due to
rounding.
Source: Metropolitan Water District