The Opinion Pages | Editorial
Measure California’s Water
California’s water board voted Tuesday
to impose new rules that would reduce the state’s urban water use by 25
percent, as mandated by Gov. Jerry Brown at the beginning of April. By
requiring towns and cities to cut back, the state expects to save about
1.3 million acre-feet of water over the next nine months. Rationing in
urban areas will be tiered. Cities and towns that have already been
conserving water will not have to cut as much as areas that have not.
But
the state has yet to address another big problem: Its system for
allocating water from rivers and streams — an essential tool for
regulating agricultural water use in the state — is not up to the
challenge of dealing with a major drought. For one thing, this system
does not similarly reward conservation.
In
times of drought, the state board cuts off water-rights holders in
reverse order of seniority, not based on how much water they use. And
even if the board wanted to move to a use-based system, it does not have
anything close to up-to-date information on how much water each rights
holder is actually drawing. Those whose rights predate 1914 must report
their monthly use every three years; those with rights newer than 1914
must file annually.
Even
those numbers are not reliable. Rights holders who don’t use all the
water they are allowed could have their allocations lowered in the
future, which gives them an incentive to overreport their use. Even if
they don’t consciously overreport, not all agricultural users have the
technology needed to measure their water use accurately. And reports
filed at one- or three-year intervals don’t tell the water board who’s
using the most water now.
If
the state required accurate, near-real-time data from all rights
holders, the board could identify those rights holders who are using the
most water and restrict their use. It could also issue partial water
restrictions rather than cutting rights holders off entirely. Such a
system would encourage users to conserve to avoid harsher reductions. It
could free up more water for cities, fish and wildlife. It might even
make more water available for some agricultural water-rights holders if
those putting the heaviest burden on the watersheds are restricted.
A rational system along these lines would not require major changes in the laws governing water use, according to a 2014 paper
by Theodore Grantham, a research biologist for the United States
Geological Survey, and Joshua Viers, a watershed scientist at the
University of California, Merced.
Installing
and monitoring measuring devices would be costly. And it wouldn’t solve
all of California’s water woes — the state still needs stricter regulations on groundwater pumping and meters for all urban users. But it would be a crucial step in the right direction.
Droughts in California may become more frequent, and their effects more severe, as the state feels the effects of climate change. The state can’t respond to them if it doesn’t know who is using how much.
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