Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
California Reservoirs Are Flush, but Water Politics May Trump Hydrology
dan_walters
By Dan Walters, CalMatters Commentary
Published 6 months ago on
October 24, 2024

California's water year begins with full reservoirs, but politics and regulations may impact water distribution despite ample storage. (AP/Noah Berger)

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Most of us operate on the calendar year — the 12 months that begin on Jan. 1 and end on Dec. 31.

Dan Walters Profile Picture
Dan Walters

CalMatters

Opinion

Many governments and major corporations use the fiscal year — typically beginning on July 1 and running until June 30 of the following year.

However the federal government’s fiscal year, which began on July 1 for 132 years, was shifted in 1974 to an Oct. 1 start to accommodate federal officials’ insistence on a month-long escape from Washington’s steamy summer weather.

In California, the most important calendar may be the “water year,” which also begins on Oct. 1, because how much the state’s reservoirs have in storage and how much nature provides in the form of rain and snow are existential factors in the lives of nearly 40 million people.

The water year begins on Oct. 1 because historically, the state’s roughly six-month-long rainy season begins in the fall.

Federal and state managers of California’s extensive system of dams, reservoirs and canals that capture, store and distribute water count how many acre-feet (each one 326,000 gallons) they have in the water bank. They then project how much more they can anticipate over the next half-year and plan on how much and when they will deliver water to dozens of local agencies, especially those serving agriculture.

The current water year begins with healthy water savings. After two relatively wet winters, including the blockbuster 2022-23 season that ended several years of drought, major reservoirs have close to 100%, or above, of historic October levels.

Shasta Lake, the largest federal reservoir, has 107% of historic October storage this week, while Lake Oroville, the state’s biggest, is at 96%.

That should be enough to carry the state through a relatively dry 2024-25 winter, which is possible because meteorologists see a 71% chance that the season will be dominated by a La Niña condition in the Pacific Ocean. It often — but not always — tends to push the jetstream to the north, bringing heavier precipitation to the Pacific Northwest but reducing rain and snow to the south, meaning California.

“California experienced record heat and dry conditions this summer, drying out the landscape and putting our hydrology behind before the water year even starts,” state climatologist Michael Anderson said in a statement issued by the Department of Water Resources to mark the 2024-25 water year’s onset. “While there is still a lot of uncertainty around how La Niña could impact the state this year, we know we can count on it to include extreme conditions.”

California’s weather is notoriously difficult to forecast more than a week or two in advance, so the only certainty about the new water year is that it begins with strong storage numbers. That said, how much water is actually delivered to downstream users will depend not only on storage and precipitation but on California’s ever-shifting regulatory climate.

Official state water policy is to become more resilient to the long-term effects of climate change, assumed to be less precipitation in the form of snow and more in rain. That indicates a need for more storage to capture winter rains, such as the pending construction of Sites Reservoir on the western side of the Sacramento Valley.

However, the state also wants San Joaquin Valley farmers, who receive the bulk of water deliveries from federal and state reservoirs, to take less, thus providing more water for wildlife in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.

Meanwhile, Donald Trump is promising that if he returns to the White House he’ll help farmers resist reductions that the state wants.

In California, tricky water politics are as important as hydrological factors such as precipitation and storage.

About the Author

Dan Walters has been a journalist for nearly 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers. He began his professional career in 1960, at age 16, at the Humboldt Times. CalMatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more columns by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.

Make Your Voice Heard

GV Wire encourages vigorous debate on local, state, and national issues. Submit your op-ed to bmcewen@gvwire.com for consideration.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Fresno County Pushes Valley to Highest Rates of Domestic Violence Calls in CA

DON'T MISS

LA Rams Can Bolster a Contending Roster With Another Strong Showing in NFL Draft

DON'T MISS

Mijo Proves Love Is Blind and That One Eye Is More Than Enough

DON'T MISS

Taking a Mental Health Leave From Work Is an Option Most People Don’t Know About

DON'T MISS

Hey PG&E Customers, Get Ready for New ‘Transaction Fees’

DON'T MISS

Fresno County Ending ‘Squaw Valley’ Fight After Latest Court Ruling

DON'T MISS

Exclusive: Tesla to Delay US Launch of Affordable EV, a Lower-Cost Model Y, Sources Say

DON'T MISS

Clovis Reconsiders Recycling Vote. Will a Campaign Contribution Matter?

DON'T MISS

Gov. Newsom Offers $50K Reward in 2022 Kings County Homicide

DON'T MISS

Trump’s White House Launches COVID Website That Criticizes WHO, Fauci and Biden

UP NEXT

LA’s Schools Chief Knows What It’s Like to Be Undocumented

UP NEXT

Valero Books $1.1 Billion Impairment, May Idle California Refinery

UP NEXT

Commercial Salmon Season Is Shut Down Again. Will CA’s Iconic Fish Ever Recover?

UP NEXT

I Have Never Been More Afraid for My Country’s Future

UP NEXT

What To Know About California Reparations: Is State’s Apology the Beginning or the End?

UP NEXT

Butler, Curry Lead Warriors Past Grizzlies to Secure Seventh Seed in West Playoffs

UP NEXT

California Is Preparing to Take Trump to Court to Stop His Tariffs

UP NEXT

7 Takeaways: How the DMV Allows Dangerous Drivers to Stay on the Road

UP NEXT

California Attorney General Declines to Join Musk’s Lawsuit Against OpenAI

UP NEXT

Oil Company Fined Record $18 Million for Defying CA Orders to Stop Work on Pipeline

Taking a Mental Health Leave From Work Is an Option Most People Don’t Know About

2 hours ago

Hey PG&E Customers, Get Ready for New ‘Transaction Fees’

19 hours ago

Fresno County Ending ‘Squaw Valley’ Fight After Latest Court Ruling

19 hours ago

Exclusive: Tesla to Delay US Launch of Affordable EV, a Lower-Cost Model Y, Sources Say

19 hours ago

Clovis Reconsiders Recycling Vote. Will a Campaign Contribution Matter?

20 hours ago

Gov. Newsom Offers $50K Reward in 2022 Kings County Homicide

20 hours ago

Trump’s White House Launches COVID Website That Criticizes WHO, Fauci and Biden

21 hours ago

Fresno ‘Powers Up’ the Nation’s Largest Combined Solar and Battery Storage Project

21 hours ago

Trump Admin Asserts COVID-19 Originated in Chinese Lab, Targets Fauci

22 hours ago

Vendors Back at Fresno’s Art Hop? Survey Wants to Know What You Think

22 hours ago

Fresno County Pushes Valley to Highest Rates of Domestic Violence Calls in CA

Across most of the San Joaquin Valley, calls to law enforcement to report domestic violence have remained steady — or even gone down — in re...

20 minutes ago

20 minutes ago

Fresno County Pushes Valley to Highest Rates of Domestic Violence Calls in CA

Rams
41 minutes ago

LA Rams Can Bolster a Contending Roster With Another Strong Showing in NFL Draft

Mijo, a one-eyed puppy with a heart full of love, is winning hearts everywhere and proving he's the perfect companion for any home.
55 minutes ago

Mijo Proves Love Is Blind and That One Eye Is More Than Enough

2 hours ago

Taking a Mental Health Leave From Work Is an Option Most People Don’t Know About

19 hours ago

Hey PG&E Customers, Get Ready for New ‘Transaction Fees’

19 hours ago

Fresno County Ending ‘Squaw Valley’ Fight After Latest Court Ruling

Tesla Inc. vehicle facility is pictured in Costa Mesa, California, U.S., November 1, 2023. (REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo)
19 hours ago

Exclusive: Tesla to Delay US Launch of Affordable EV, a Lower-Cost Model Y, Sources Say

20 hours ago

Clovis Reconsiders Recycling Vote. Will a Campaign Contribution Matter?

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend