Guest Essay by Kip Hansen
I have one advantage over the journalists of the NY Times when it comes to covering the current drought in California:
Memories.
I grew up in Southern California, in Los Angeles. I lived through drought after drought as a child. I grew up through the wildfire seasons that followed dry summer after dry summer. It was hard to distinguish drought from the usual dry summers and simply no rain for months on end. I remember nights when the horizon was smokey and rose-colored, the LA basin ringed to the north with the hills afire after a long hot summer. The real droughts I remember best, those they told us about in school, when teachers checked the boy’s rooms to make sure no one left the sink-faucets running, are 1958-59 and the famous one in 1961, I was on the East coast when the worst hit in 1977, but my family kept me posted.
Norimitsu Onishi and Coral Davenport (NY Times’ new Environmental journalist) cover the Presidential visit to Fresno, California, with this:
Obama Announces Aid for Drought-Stricken California
In a speech in Fresno, President Obama states “A changing climate means that weather-related disasters like droughts, wildfires, storms, floods are potentially going to be costlier and they’re going to be harsher.” and pledges to “ask Congress for $1 billion in new funding for a ‘climate resiliency’ program to help communities invest in research, development and new infrastructure to prepare for climate disasters.” The President was forced by reality to acknowledge “the difficulties of dealing with the drought in the face of California’s intricate water politics, which have traditionally cleaved along regional lines and have often become mired in epic court battles.”
I will leave it to our host, Anthony Watts, to address this issue, California’s water policies, with which he is far more familiar than I — what I do know is that California’s water policy resembles the worst kind of political dog’s breakfast of compromises and left-over deal-making between Northern Californian agricultural interests and Southern Californian cities drinking water needs. Then there are the inter-state deals, the Colorado River deals, …. yes, it goes on and on…
Onishi and Davenport do some balance reporting, to their credit, and quote Ryan Jacobsen, executive director of the Fresno County Farm Bureau, who says “Mother Nature is not the only reason we’re in this mess,” expressing skepticism about linking the drought to climate change, “California has gone through dry periods in its history, and instead of focusing on something that is questionably tied to this or not, we just want to focus on the immediate drought.”
Representative Devin Nunes, a Republican who represents Fresno, who was not invited to Friday’s event, apparently because he does not belong to the correct political party, attributes California’s water crisis to interference by the federal government which he claims has shut off portions of California’s system of water irrigation and storage and diverted water into a program for freshwater salmon. “There was plenty of water. This has nothing to do with drought. They can blame global warming all they want, but this is about mathematics and engineering.”
In another article, Justin Gillis does a professional job of reporting on the California drought by giving us up front in the lead paragraphs that Obama and his aides “cited the state as an example of what could be in store for much of the rest of the country as human-caused climate change intensifies. But in doing so, they were pushing at the boundaries of scientific knowledge about the relationship between climate change and drought.” Kudos to Mr. Gillis for highlighting this. I am truly pleased to have the opportunity to congratulate Gillis, since in the past, I have often been critical of his work in the Times. Even his title is encouragingly honest:
Science Linking Drought to Global Warming Remains Matter of Dispute
Before I go into too many details, let me give two graphics for those of you not familiar with California. Many Californians consider California to be “two states” — Northern California and Southern California, with rather ill-defined borders. First, here is a population density map of California — the darker brown is the “Black Hole of Population” – where the density keeps growing and growing, seemingly exponentially — there are two — one tiny — at San Francisco Peninsula — and the other huge — at Los Angeles. The dark red areas are very densely populated areas, solid single-family-home suburbias as far as the eye can see. The black spot is Fresno, where the President gave his speech. Everything else barely matters.
Fresno is usually considered Northern California, but not always. The line (pink) is often drawn as shown, but that is a rough rule of thumb, here it runs along the northern county lines of the (west to east) San Luis Obisbo, Kern and San Bernardino Counties from the Pacific Ocean to the California-Nevada border. One could draw the line, for some purposes, just above the population concentration of Fresno County at a 45° angle and be just as usefully correct for many purposes. Some posit that California is really better considered three separate states – the LA-to-San Diego Megapolis, the San Francisco-San Jose-Sacramento Megapolis, and the Rest-of-California Rural State – which is a very functional view – much like considering New York State to be two functionally different states within a state – Gotham City and Upstate.
The next image is a Precipitation Map of California. What it shows is that ALL of Southern California is a desert surrounded by a drier desert. The little bits that don’t appear to be deserts, around to the North of LA, are high mountain tops — all of which I hiked as a boy — that get a little rain/snow in the winter. Almost all of California, as you can see, is technically, desert.
[As an aside, it is those little light blue spots surrounded by yellow, those high mountain tops that get snow, just north of LA that make it possible for a few adventurous souls to snow ski and surf on the same weekend.]
On the precip map, it is easy to see where California’s water must come from (besides the Colorado River, which forms the squiggly line forming the border at the bottom right of the state) – the green and blue mountainous region at the north and east part of the state, the Sierra Nevada mountains. They are rugged and hauntingly beautiful. John Muir studied them for us and wrote about them. They include Mount Whitney, the highest peak in the 48 states–I’ve hiked over it east-to-west and west-to-east. Some useful water comes into California’s Northern Central Valley from the Mount Shasta range, but the majority of all that lovely rain-forest coastal precipitation along California’s northwest coastal mountains flows quietly into the sea, watering the redwoods on the way.
There was a very similar drought – a devastating drought – in 1976 and 1977 — though 2013 was a bit warmer, exacerbating the drying while waiting for rain. Northern California has had some relief with heavy rains earlier in the month, not enough to fill reservoirs, of course, but certainly enough to cheer a few hearts.
I’m afraid that Gillis wanders off into speculation-land when he discusses the findings of a Dr. Sewall, who ran a series of climate “predictions” in 2004 and whose results in which Dr. Sewall now finds, when compared to the current drought in California, a “ — resemblance…so uncanny that Dr. Sewall, who now works at Kutztown University in Pennsylvania, suspects an element of coincidence, but he also calls the correlation ‘frightening.’ — “
It is remarkably unscientific to remark both a coincidence and a “frightening” correlation while positing them to be in any way scientific – particularly when attached to the phrase, as Mr. Gillis does, “getting a glimpse of its [California’s] future.” Personally, I find coincidental frightening correlations unlikely scientific predictors of the future.
Of course, this is climate science. Gillis treats us to what I cheerfully call the “Opinions Vary” section that must be present in any honest climate science discussion: “other research has come to somewhat different conclusions. Many of those studies have found a likelihood that climate change will indeed cause the American West to dry out, but by an entirely different mechanism — the arrival of more dry air from the tropics. And the most recent batch of studies predicts that effect will not really apply to the western slope of the Sierra. Climate projections show that the area should get somewhat more moisture in the winter, not less.”
Our Mr. Gillis points out, quite correctly, that it will take years to sort out the scientific uncertainties. The policy decisions of the past are brought to light by Gillis’ introduction of Dr. Seager of Columbia University who points out that much of the Southwestern United States has been in a drought of off and on over the 15 years (during which the global temperatures have leveled out). “In some areas, moreover, the warmer climate is causing winter precipitation to fall as rain rather than snow, meaning less melting snowpack to help parched states through the hotter summers” Without reservoirs, these areas can expect trouble. Possibly, some of the federal “climate resilience” funds can be put to use to build new California reservoirs to capture rains so cities won’t have to depend on snowpack.
Checking up on the question of reservoirs, I found that only one new reservoir has been built in in California in the 21st century, while there are still ~13 dams/reservoirs still in service from the 19th century (based on available data)—that means they were built in the 1890s. Thus it appears that reservoir building has not been high on California’s priority list. The lesson learned in SW Britain this winter may well apply to California reservoirs, whose true capacity may be well below the rated volume due to silting and lack of dredging.
Summary: The NY Times didn’t do a bad job reporting on the President’s visit to Fresno and the California drought – and fairly well-balanced report on both the visit and the causes and effects of the drought. Justin Gillis did particularly well.
What do we know about the causes of the water problems in California?
1. The population in the Los Angeles=>San Diego Megapolis grew by almost 2 million people in the last ten years, and contains almost 21 million persons today.
2. The SF-SJ-Sacramento Megapolis saw equivalent population growth of over 10% but contains only 8.8 million persons.
3. Altogether, California garnered a total 3.7 million extra souls in ten years. That’s a lot of people to provide water for.
4. An atmospheric high pressure ridge has been more-or-less parked off the California coast for much of the last three years and such a ridge tends to push moisture-bearing winds to the north, so that the water falls closer to Seattle than Sacramento (pencil sketch explanation – reality is a lot more complicated). Many would like to blame this phenomenon on climate change; it is possible but unlikely to be true.
5. Much of California is a desert – measured by precipitation levels. The most people live in the drier, southern part of the state; the population of the drier part of the state is growing the fastest.
6. California is an agricultural state that depends on irrigation to grow nearly half of America’s fruits and vegetables. That’s a lot of water.
7. California is prone to short-term (1-2 year) droughts (recently: 1958-59, 1961, 1976-77, 1986-91, 2001-02, 2006-07). Historically, the American Southwest is prone to periodic mega-droughts, the last one in the 13th century (and possibly the 14th and 16th centuries, opinions vary).
8. The first seven items point up to this: True demand** for water likely exceeds supply and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future – and will nearly always be borderline – as populations and agriculture continue to increase demand.
9. All problems of water supply in California are exacerbated by the convoluted politics of water policy unique to California and understood only by a few true insiders – complicated by interference from various Federal agencies on behalf on various non-human species – and almost continually under litigation. Don’t forget the inter-state treaties and agreements and international agreements over Colorado River water.
**True Demand = True Demand can be defined as the actual demands of all the stake holders as if they were to receive all the water they desired with enough to spare, as well as enough to fulfill their medium-term and long-term projected future needs. For California, this would include neighboring states and Mexico, in consideration of the Colorado River. As is easily seen, if True Demand is met, there would be no squabbling, no litigation, no political infighting, no inter- and intra-agency intrigues and all the other nonsense that currently defines California water policy. It is an impossible goal under present circumstances and will remain so unless there is some fantastical technological breakthrough which magically produces freshwater as a bountiful waste product.
So, my short answer? Way too many people in the wrong place. The LA=>San Diego Megapolis is built in a desert with no fresh water in sight and city planners allow unlimited growth in all directions, while at the same time, it appears to us outsiders that long-term planning has simply been ignored – no new reservoirs have been built to capture and retain more of the precipitation that does fall and otherwise runs into the sea. Instead, Californians argue and squabble and litigate over what water they have. None of this leads to a solution.
California does have serious water supply problems. There is a drought. The true demand for water far exceeds the usual supply.
Coping strategies include the usual: Agriculture needs to change their methods to reduce water usage and increase efficiency. Industry needs to self-examine and reduce usage. In years of shortage, like this, anyone with a clean car should probably receive a citation for wasting water on vanity and brown lawns should be a badge of community solidarity. Golf courses should have green greens and brown fairways.
The list of demand reducing ideas has been run up before; it is printed in the newspapers and on billboards for every serious drought. They’ll do it again. California will tough it out, with all extra three point seven million of them this time.
I wish them Good Luck and God speed.
# # #
Moderation Note: I will be glad to answer any of your questions about living in California during the 1950s and 60s droughts, hiking the Sierras or the mountains surrounding the LA Basin. I know almost nothing about current California water policy that I haven’t read in the two NY Times articles. I do know about the water diversions for fresh water salmon in the Sacramento Valley area – a part of the EPA plan on the SF Bay Watershed [ see http://www2.epa.gov/sfbay-delta ].
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This just in. California’s water problem is due to fracking. It’s from the David Suzuki Foundation so it must be accurate. Right?
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/david-suzuki/fracking-_b_4811381.html
@Kip Hansen,
Thanks for the articles of recent, pointing out the bias and flawed coverage by the NY Times environmental desk. You likely will get more views here than your comments on Dotearth and certainly would never get the editors at the Times to address their errors in public. Please make a point of continuing to post rebuttals here, so a larger audience can view them.
Reply to Fermi Pyle ==> Green lawns are normally banned under drought restrictions.
Reply to Steve S. ==> The nay-sayer types are (nearly) always wrong. Nature does what she does, with little or no respect for the opinions of mere mankind.
Reply to Tom ==> The need for fresh water is very democratic — the same for all — regardless of their immigration status.
Reply to Bill Parsons ==> Thanks, I had forgotten that Obama had studied in LA.
Reply to Tim Churchill ==> Here’s the ticket –> Catch frogs, place in burlap bags, drive to Monterey, sell frogs to Doc on Cannery Row.
Reply to Jimbo ==> Alfalfa is not “hay” as you know it. “a leguminous plant with cloverlike leaves and bluish flowers. Native to southwestern Asia, it is widely grown for fodder.” It is fed to animals. See an earlier reply on this. Alfalfa is grown using Colorado River water in the Imperial Valley. Why this makes a difference is part of the whole California water policy mess. A very large percentage of California’s agricultural output is exported — to other states in the US and to other countries. The news report about the alfalfa is propaganda of sorts.
Reply to Henry Clark and James the Elder ==> Thanks for doing the numbers on daily water usage. On our sailboat, when at anchorage, we restrict ourselves to 5 gal/day, fresh water, for two persons, total.
More on the winter of 76-77 – a strong analog to this winter, across the entire US – CA drought & east of the rockies cold :
http://www.nwas.org/digest/papers/1977/Vol02No4/1977v002no04-Wagner.pdf
http://www.erh.noaa.gov/iln/climo/summaries/winter76-77/cold1977.php
History. It repeats itself. Except when historians become hysterical. Then, everything is unprecedented.
Reply to Duster ==> Ah, a true “Three Stater” (maybe even a “Four Stater”, abandoning everything south of a line from Marin through Placer Counties to their fates). We’ll give you the Cascades, you are right, I meant to write the Mt. Shasta area. The N/S California border wars are not likely to be settled here, but thank you for the lively conversation. It is always a pleasure for me to drive that great pass over the Tehachapis, where I once viewed an epic lightening storm, never to be forgotten. Now I hear that the pass is filled with wind mills.
Here I write for the average man, for whom desert means a land with little or no rain, where the rivers are dry most of the year. If I had said that Los Angeles and surrounds were the steppes….what would they think? Mongolia? I thought for my purpose “desert” and “drier desert” would do. You, however, are more correct.
Reply to Roger Sowell ==> Rather, the Water Resources Board was discussing “how much water must be provided to meet a person’s basic health and safety needs.”
Reply to John ==> Yes, that news is part of the “Opinions Vary” section. The past has been much dryer and much wetter. That’s all true and we don’t really know what that means for the future, other than we ought to prepare infrastructure for both cases.
Reply to Steve from Rockwood ==> Nuts, huh? I prefer a Nissan, anyway.
Reply to nvw ==> Very kind, thank you.
Duster says:
February 19, 2014 at 11:16 am
This essay brings forward several thoughts. Clearly, the author is quite right about the California population distribution, It is mostly in the wrong places…..
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
The only reasonable solution is reverse osmosis as many others have pointed out. It is not dependent on rainfall.
If that does not work, build a border fence around Southern California. /snark
David Wells says (February 19, 2014 at 5:45 am): “My suggestion is to stop recycling green rhetoric and recycle the waste water instead unless of course that is already being done.”re
It is being done in some places. The city of San Jose and partners recycled about 10.6 million gallons per day in 2012:
http://www.sanjoseca.gov/index.aspx?NID=1587
I suspect this is just a fraction of total water use, but every bit helps. The water is non-drinkable, but suitable for most other uses, including irrigation.
As I recall–my memory may be faulty–the recycling was initiated partly to reduce the amount of fresh water flowing into San Francisco Bay, i.e. to keep up its salinity for ecological purposes.
This is a great post. To update, one more piece of fat on the fire is the 2003 Quantification Settlement Agreement which affects Colorado River water and Salton Sea restoration. A summary is here: http://saltonsea.ca.gov/media/ppr_summary.pdf
Today’s Department of Water Resources California Water News carries two items about the presidential visit, plus an interview with Peter Gleick:
http://www.scpr.org/blogs/environment/2014/02/18/15876/in-california-drought-news-rationing-unlikely-farm/
http://www.chicoer.com/editorials/ci_25175969/editorial-obama-not-much-help-drought
http://kalw.org/post/interview-environmental-scientist-where-has-all-californias-water-gone
Finally, the Metropolitan Water District commissioned a study of historical rainfall in 1931, incorporating Mission records going back to 1769-1770. The present drought is nothing new. The report can be obtained at:
http://cepsym.info/history/RainfallStreamRunoffSoCA_since1769.pdf
and
http://books.google.com/books/about/Rainfall_and_stream_run_off_in_Southern.html?id=sJMJAQAAIAAJ
Kip Hansen says (February 19, 2014 at 11:48 am): “On our sailboat, when at anchorage, we restrict ourselves to 5 gal/day, fresh water, for two persons, total.”
Kevin Kostner can beat that:
http://www.ovguide.com/video/waterworld-1995-drinkingrecycledpiss-922ca39ce10036ba0e1114e52fac5949
🙂
Kip,
I have greatly benefited from and enjoyed your climate comments o’er the years.
I second the motion made above that you grant WUWT readers the privilege of easier access to them.
It was the USVI that originally introduced me to life in a water-constrained environment. As a young person (many decades ago), I was shocked by the idea that an island surrounded by water could be so dry.
Keep up the fight for reason, truth and common sense !
The once-irrelevant “how about that weather” filler commentary is now, like everything else, political.
Others have already pointed out desalinization, which isn’t happening at least in part because it would avert a (politically) useful crisis.
Merovign says (February 19, 2014 at 12:40 pm): “Others have already pointed out desalinization, which isn’t happening at least in part because it would avert a (politically) useful crisis.”
San Diego’s plant is scheduled for 2016. Santa Barbara may reactivate its plant, which was closed upon completion because the rains had returned. Sand City’s small plant opened in 2010:
http://www.nbcnews.com/#/science/environment/parched-california-pours-mega-millions-desalination-tech-n28066
However, the article mentions strong “environmentalist” opposition to desalination plants, partly because the increased energy use would increase emissions of so-called “greenhouse gasses”. 🙁
Kip, I would imagine you remember this.
http://archive.bangordailynews.com/2002/07/15/baxter-park-shows-few-signs-of-77-fire-extensive-blaze-threatened-katahdin/
Some comments from a long-time Californian (both northern and southern) who studied this stuff formally in school ca. 1980, and has kept up since then.
Virtually all the water in the California system comes from what falls in the eastern mountains. Both the SF Bay area and LA/San Diego area depend on water shipped a long way away. This would not change much if more of the population were in the northern coastal cities rather than the southern.
In researching for a term paper on the subject, I found the following gem from the archives of Pat Brown, California’s governor in the 1960s, and father of our current governor. In a handwritten note on a document related the then-proposed California Water Project that would take more water south, he said (and this is only a slight paraphrase), “If we don’t send this water south, the people will come north.”
With regard to the Colorado river water, there was great concern even then that the allocations of water, which dated from the 1920s, were based on unusually high precipitation levels at the beginning of the 20th century, and that the relatively lower average levels of the late 20th century were simply a reversion to the norm.
The water shortages of recent years have been grossly exacerbated by court-ordered releases from the reservoirs to maintain a minimum freshwater flow into the delta that drains into the SF Bay, in the name of protecting the “endangered” delta smelt (useful for bait if at all), and now, to try to restore salmon runs to the Sierra rivers. Without these, there would be concern, but not panic, over the past few lower-than-average years. (Actually, two years ago, the snowpack was well above average – there was a lot of snow left in mid-July near Lake Tahoe, a pain for hiking.)
Here’s a good article from Victor Davis Hanson, a Fresno rancher among other things:
http://victorhanson.com/wordpress/?p=6987#more-6987
As someone from the agricultural arena and a Californian, this state will become a mega-Israel in the coming years or decades. Every drop of irrigation water will derived from the cities in tertiary form (e.g lower quality).
R. Mead
Clovis, CA.
Reply to Bromley the Kurd ==> That’s hysterical.
Reply to Gail Combs ==> Quite right on RO — but the fence idea didn’t work.
Reply to Gary Hladik (x2) ==> “Grey water” recycling has been in use in a lot of areas, to water golf courses for instance, in place of fresh water. In Frank Herbert’s novel “Dune”, they harvested the water from the dead.
Reply to Neil Jordan ==> Great links for further perspective.
Reply to Merovign ==> If you follow the links provided by Neil Jordan, you’ll see that Californians are aware that RO desal plants are a solution in their future and should be under construction now.
Effectively there have been no increases to storage for 30 years. To boot, we lose an opportunity every time flood conditions occur in the main river basins. The excess water flows unhindered to the sea, in such situations. That water during floods is never utilized by salmon, smelt, wetlands, etc. More dams would not address this, the prime dam sites are mostly already taken. Instead, some sort of lowland diversion and storage would be appropriate.
Re Kip Hansen says: February 19, 2014 at 12:11 pm
Reply to Duster ==> Ah, a true “Three Stater” (maybe even a “Four Stater”, abandoning everything south of a line from Marin through Placer Counties to their fates).
I recall in the 1950s that there was a proposal to create a new state joining arid south-eastern Oregon with arid northern Nevada. A critic at the time proposed a name for the new state: NevOre NevOre Land.
Kip Hansen: Reply to LKMiller and Lee ==> There is no easy explanation for California water policy.
Isn’t that the truth! There are people politicking hard to restore the riparian ecosystems — i.e., to let even more of the scarce water flow unimpeded to the ocean.
My perception of California is that it is more than just two states. There are: Northern California which would include everything north of about San Luis Obisbo but only the coastal area inland up to but not including the Central Valley. Southern California is the coastal area below SLO. Then there is the “Inland Empire” which would be everything inland of the coastal area south of the Garlock fault zone and would include San Bernardino, Riverside, and Imperial counties. Then there is the Central Valley which is basically the I-5 corridor north of the Garlock fault zone (north of the Tehachapis) all the way up to Yreka and beyond. And finally there would be the mountain region which would be everything from Inyo county on north to Modoc County and eastward to the foothills. Also, the culture of Northern California changes significantly at San Francisco. From SLO to SF is pretty much the same but going north out of SF there is a big change. For example, Humbolt County is way different from Monterey County.
Kip Hansen: Reply to Merovign ==> If you follow the links provided by Neil Jordan, you’ll see that Californians are aware that RO desal plants are a solution in their future and should be under construction now.
Only 1 has been completed (iirc, it is the only one that has even been started), in Carlsbad. All of them have been opposed by citizens organizations, and the litigation involved in the permitting process for the Carlsbad plant consumed years.
Hi Kip – I experienced (in the SF Bay Area) the 70’s drought that you missed and what I remember most is that public cooperation with water conservation was so effective that the local utilities agency (charmingly acronymed EBMUD [East Bay Municipal Utilities District, if I remember correctly]) had to raise their water rates to avoid going bankrupt. This does suggest a lot of waste in day-to-day usage.
The article on Australian desalinization plants was most interesting for what it left out – the shuttered Melbourne plant (Victorian Desalinisation Plant). It was built at great expense because of a drought and the CAGW hype-of-the-day that Australian cities would become ghost cities due to lack of water. Then the rains came, as they have always come eventually, and the dams filled (and now we learn that we will all drown in CAGW floods). The other reason was extreme resistance from Green groups – they hate the plant and claim it will have a deleterious effect on assorted wildlife. If they ever build the windmills to run the plant I’m sure that will be true.
I’m living off tank water at the moment and watering the garden from a dam, but the last few years of flooding rains have deserted Queensland and another drought has started. Parts of the state have gotten good rains recently, but not here. I’m getting by on less than 10 gal a day for personal use and hoping the rains return before the dam runs dry. I do miss long showers with high flow heads: perhaps that should be added to the Deteriorata.
Correction to my previous post: the Carlsbad desalination plant is not yet complete.
http://www.cnbc.com/id/101410845
Doug Huffman says:
February 19, 2014 at 4:28 am
Good post. Good memories of good times. John Muir Trail N-S July 1966. Family farmed pears in Santa Clara on eponymous Coffin Road where I remember an artesian well out behind the hands’ cabins.
——————————————————–
I still remember the taste of the beautiful fruit that came from the Santa Clara area. Then Safeway came along in the early 60s and started marketing their tasteless standardized, but beautiful looking produce products. They finally wised up in the mid 90s and improved the quailty of their fruit varieties. Land prices then went up as the population grew and the beautiful orchards were converted into housing and shopping malls. I had always heard that the Santa Clara orchard soil was some of the richest orchard growing soil in the world. The tastes that I can remember so clearly verify that to my mind. It is hard to find fruit that matches those flavors. I stopped eating apricots a long time ago, because they had become a mere shadow of waht they used to be for their flavor and aroma.