Some common questions on California water (Part I)

by Jay Lund

California water infrastructure

California’s water network (by Josh Viers, UC Merced)

People are interested in California water problems, and they ask reasonable questions.  Here is a first installment of short science-based answers to some reasonable questions often heard at public and private discussions of water in California.  (Longer answers are possible, of course.)

  1. Why doesn’t California just build desalination plants to end water shortages and leave more water in streams for the environment?

Desalting ocean water is expensive, about $2,000-$3,000/acre-ft.  This cost is too high to be economical for almost any crop in California.  This cost is also over $1,000/acre-ft more than other sources available to California’s cities (including wastewater reuse, conservation, and buying water from farmers).  Providing only 20% of California’s urban water use by desalinating sea water (1.4 maf/year) would cost households at least $3.5 billion/year (about $300/household per year).  The environment would benefit more from other expenditures of such money.

https://news.bloombergenvironment.com/environment-and-energy/california-touts-desalination-but-take-it-with-a-grain-of-salt

  1. How much water do we lose from evaporation? Wouldn’t reducing evaporation from reservoirs be cheaper than building new reservoirs?

Evaporation is the second largest flow of water in California, following precipitation.  Average California precipitation is roughly 200 million acre-ft/year, with roughly 70 maf/year of river runoff, meaning that most precipitation (~130 maf/yr) evaporates quickly back to the atmosphere.  Additional evaporation of runoff occurs from agricultural fields, reservoirs, and urban landscapes (evapotranspiration is roughly 26 maf/yr from crops, 2 maf/yr from cities, and 2 maf/yr from reservoirs and canals).  Evaporation in all its forms is most of the water that falls on California.

Retaining and reducing evaporation is usually difficult, because it is so widely distributed and driven by the sun, which we all enjoy in California.  Farmers often manage irrigation to reduce unproductive evaporation from bare soil.  Water system operators sometimes shift water among reservoirs to reduce evaporation.  Since the 1950s, researchers have experimented with adding covers and thin layers of floating chemicals to reduce evaporation from reservoirs, but these are rarely economical or environmentally friendly.

https://water.ca.gov/Library/Modeling-and-Analysis/Statewide-models-and-tools/Economic-Modeling-and-Analysis-Tools

  1. If we are short of water, why don’t we just build new reservoirs?

Just as a refrigerator stores food, but does not make it, reservoirs don’t make water, but only shift it in time.  For reservoirs to supply water, they must first fill with water from an earlier wetter time.  Even the largest reservoir cannot reliably supply more than its river’s average annual inflow.

Reservoirs are important and attractive because of California’s seasonally variable streamflows and wet and dry years.  They can reliably store water from California’s wet winters for the following dry summer, because modest amounts of storage can refill every year.  Larger reservoirs become less efficient for storing water from wetter years for dry years, when a reservoir might need several years (or longer) to refill.  Large reservoirs for over-year drought storage often refill infrequently, but re-paying for their construction occurs every year.

Increasingly large reservoirs become more expensive and refill less frequently, providing less water per unit of storage expansion and cost.  The additional water supplied from larger reservoirs can become very expensive.  In addition to these limitations of physics and economics, environmental objections and concerns often arise for new and expanded reservoirs.

https://californiawaterblog.com/2011/09/13/water-storage-in-california-2/

  1. On California’s coast, why don’t we gather fog water?

California’s coast is often foggy and some of its coastal ecosystems receive a sizable share of their water from summer fog.  But for humans, the costs of gathering fog water will almost always greatly exceed the costs of alternative water sources or the value of the water use they would supply.

https://californiawaterblog.com/2015/01/26/demystifying-mist-as-a-source-of-water-supply/

  1. Why doesn’t California import water from the Pacific Northwest, the Great Lakes, or the Mississippi River? They seem to have extra water. 

The Pacific Northwest, Great Lakes, and Mississippi River all have relatively abundant water supplies.  These water sources also are all far from California, with mountain ranges in between.  Constructing and operating aqueducts, tankers, or railcars to move water great distances is expensive, and moving water (which is heavy) over mountains is very energy-intensive.  The cost of moving water these great distances typically exceeds the value of the additional water uses in California (Perrier and Fuji water might be exceptions).  Environmental, political, and legal opposition also would likely be barriers to California importing large amounts of water.

Some Larger lessons

Some broader lessons arise from this first set of common questions on California water.  First, there are many ways to get water in California, which vary tremendously in cost, availability, environmental impact, and practicality.  Second, because so many potential water sources are available in California, it is sometimes said, “There is rarely a shortage of water, but more often a shortage of cheap water.”  California is often a dry place, and the relative costs and benefits of different water supplies and demands typically drive the use, rejection, and research for water management options.

Jay R. Lund is Director, Center for Watershed Sciences and a Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of California – Davis

About jaylund

Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Civil and Environmental Engineering Vice-Director, Center for Watershed Sciences University of California - Davis
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19 Responses to Some common questions on California water (Part I)

  1. gboisrame says:

    The “further reading” section appears to be missing. Other than that, this is a great overview!

  2. Chris Gilbert says:

    It’s important to underline how much energy water use takes in California. One fifth of the electricity and other energy used in California goes towards water use! If that electricity is generated by natural gas, coal or another fossil fuel that’s contributing to climate change.

    • jaylund says:

      This is a good point, but the quantities are not right. The often-quoted 20% of electricity used for water in California is overwhelmingly for water heating by end users. Still a few % of total energy use is for pumping water from groundwater and for water projects, as well as wastewater pumping. This is from a CEC report in 2005. About 15% of California’s electricity is from hydropower, on average.

  3. Chris Gilbert says:

    So hydropower more than compensates for that used for water use (outside of water heating.)

  4. Judy Adler says:

    After the passage of Proposition 72 last June (I wrote the original proposal to make rain harvesting a widespread reality in California as a water conservation and job creation tool) is I am seeing little action to promote such low cost and easy to install systems. I hope you can prove me wrong! If solar can be mandated why not water capture. Water is an equally precious resource. Rainharvesting and water conserving landscape designs should be required and training provided as part of climate change responses and sustainability programs in our state. It seems to me California could take the lead as it has with other green initiatives. I have more ideas. Feedback please. Judy Adler

    • jaylund says:

      Some limitations of urban rainwater harvesting are explored in a another blog. But, Shasta and Oroville can be thought of as rather large rain capture systems. https://californiawaterblog.com/2015/02/08/the-romance-of-rain-barrels/

    • Chris Gilbert says:

      Actually, water could be considered a more precious resource than sunlight.

      • jaylund says:

        Many things can be considered. Economically, people usually pay more for water than sunlight. But in southern California the additional housing cost in a sunnier climate probably exceeds the additional water costs – also illustrating the importance of things other than water and sunshine.

  5. spreckrosekrans says:

    You say reservoirs do not create water? Why then do people call Hetch Hetchy the source of San Francisco’s water?

  6. Dawna says:

    Thanks for continuing to post articles like this. We all need to be educated on California water use.
    I hope to see more articles on groundwater replenishment.

  7. Douglas Deitch says:

    Here’s a good question for you, good Professor/Dr. Lund?
    How much ground water storage resource in acre feet per month is permanently lost in the Central Valley by sinking 2 inches, as was reported years ago @ https://www.santacruzsentinel.com/2015/08/19/central-valley-locales-sinking-2-inches-a-month-as-groundwater-is-drained/ ? … and what (if anything) have you done about it?

  8. rocko says:

    I like the idea of this post. However, you may want to preface it by stating why you are taking an economic perspective to address different questions. I am not sure that an answer is science based if it relies purely on economic reasoning.

    I am hoping Part II will address groundwater banking prospects. Most of our CV rivers are managing reservoir encroachment by modestly sized flood releases over a very long duration due to downstream levee ratings.

  9. Roger Wachtler says:

    I believe in California with increased population and increased agri-business we have now reached the maximum of our available water through resources like dams, reservoirs and diversions. The only reason desalinization currently costs so much is that not enough research has been put toward this area. We must begin to look for alternative sources and restore habit and allow access for species migration. Through sheer ignorance we have put dams in all the wrong places creating the collapse of salmon and steelhead populations throughout our nation.

  10. Kent Deines says:

    I think the the comparison of the cost of desalinated water to traditional sources is the wrong way to look at it. How about comparing it to the cost of not having any because that maybe the ch
    oice?

    • jaylund says:

      Costs should usually be compared with those of the least expensive available supply. I don’t buy a Lamborghini when I could buy a Chevy (or a Tesla) – unless I’m in the market for glamor.

  11. Matt Sokol says:

    Thanks for this bblog post

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