Current:Home > MarketsCalifornia wants to store floodwaters underground. It's harder than it sounds -AssetLink
California wants to store floodwaters underground. It's harder than it sounds
View
Date:2025-04-18 07:47:03
For much of the last few decades, when the sky didn't produce enough water for his cows and crops, Dino Giacomazzi — like most farmers in California's southern Central Valley — pumped it from the earth. Underground aquifers, vast bank accounts of stored water, were drained.
Now, after a historically wet winter, Giacomazzi and the state of California want to put some of that water back.
"It is a no-brainer, win-win, multi-benefit opportunity," said Giacomazzi, standing on his Central Valley farm, which depends on groundwater to grow almonds, lettuce and tomatoes for pizza sauce.
More water stored underground means fewer flooded farms, and more water available to farmers like him during the next inevitable drought.
An area nearly the size of New Orleans is already flooded downstream of Giacomzzi's farm. State officials have warned more water is coming as warmer temperatures cause a record Sierra Nevada snowpack to melt. This week, however, they said some communities, such as Corcoran, should be safe from rising floodwaters because of levee improvements, favorable weather and efforts to spread the water upstream.
But capturing the extra water is an opportunity that Giacomzzi worries is being missed.
"The condition we find ourselves in right now is that there are billions of gallons of water just flowing right through us, right on by, and heading down and filling the Tulare Lake," Giacomazzi said, referencing the long-dried lake — once the largest west of the Mississippi River — that's come roaring back to life during this winter's storms.
California water officials are scrambling to catch as much of the floodwaters as they can. In January, as a series of atmospheric rivers blasted the state with rain and snow, the State Water Resources Control Board announced it was accelerating permitting for projects that put water back into the aquifers.
"Projects that capture available precipitation, stormwater, or floodwaters to recharge depleted groundwater basins need to be ready to capture high flows when they are available during each wet season," said Karla Nemeth, the agency's director.
Two months later, California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed an executive order making it easier for farmers to divert water onto their lands.
But in some parts of the Central Valley, like Giacomazzi's, bureaucracy, water rights and a history of over-pumping are creating roadblocks.
"The issue with these water systems in California is that every couple of miles in this state, it's a completely different independently-operated situation," Giacomazzi said. "There isn't really a coordinating body that sits over the top if that says, 'Here's what we need to do. Let's do it together.'"
A test for California's climate future
California has always experienced dramatic swings from drought to floodwaters. Those swings are expected to become more severe as temperatures rise due to human-caused climate change.
In that sense, the situation playing out in California this year could be a window into the state's climate future, said Daniel Mountjoy, director of resource stewardship for Sustainable Conservation, a California-based nonprofit water group.
"I've worked in water my entire career and one of our sayings is never waste a good crisis," he said, standing next to a field of purposely flooded grape vines at a vineyard north of Fresno. "This is our chance for everyone to be aware of what's possible."
California water experts like Mountjoy, hydrologists and environmental watchdog groups have long warned the Central Valley's use of groundwater was unsustainable. Parts of the southern Central Valley that are now flooded, have sunk by as much as 28 feet over the last few decades — deflated like a punctured balloon — because so much water has been pumped from the ground.
The state aimed to address the problem with legislation in 2014 that requires local water agencies to bring their underground accounts into balance.
"We're going to have to put in as much as we pump out," said Eric Holder, an irrigation research assistant with the University of California.
Cutting groundwater use could be painful. A study by the Public Policy Institute of California last year found that an estimated 500,000 acres of farmland would have to go unplanted in the southern Central Valley over the next 20 years to help restore water underground. That's even with increased capturing of storm waters in a year like this. The region produces billions of dollars in almonds, pistachios, dairy and other produce every year.
"We've got to find a safe landing pattern," Mountjoy said. "Come up with a way to reduce the pumping or increase the groundwater supply."
Some farmers are flooding their fields
With so much of the state awash in water, the focus in California is on increasing groundwater supply — stashing more into the bank account — by flooding farmland.
In some areas, like Giacomazzi's, there isn't enough incentive for farmers to flood their fields, or the infrastructure doesn't exist to divert water from canals and streams.
"It takes a lot of money to excavate a basin and build the structures to divert water off the system," said Mark Larsen, general manager of the Kaweah Delta Water Conservation District. "And then you have it sitting [dry] most of the time waiting for a year like this."
In some water districts, like Madera County's, in the heart of the Central Valley, farmers are being incentivized to use their existing infrastructure to flood their fields with free or reduced cost water.
"That's our way to motivate people to take that water, spread it and get that water in the ground when it's available in years like this," said Thomas Greci, general manager of the Madera Irrigation District.
Nick Davis, who owns a vineyard with his twin brother outside of Madera, has decided to participate. He's been dumping water on his grape vines since the heavy rains started this winter, sinking more than 4 times the amount of water he typically uses on the vines into the ground.
"We're all skeptical about trying new things," Davis said. "But we feel it's important to just do our part and put it back in the ground."
He's hopeful the state will give him credit for all of the water he's returning to the aquifer, or pay him for the water that he's deposited. Incentives like that, Davis said, would make other farmers think more seriously about flooding their fields in the current moment and in wet years to come.
"We understand that we are part of the problem," Davis said. "But we also want to be part of the solution when it's possible."
veryGood! (78)
Related
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Dua Lipa Shows Off Her Red-Hot Hair With an Equally Fiery Ensemble
- 16 Amazing Sales Happening This Weekend You'll Regret Missing
- The Philippines and China report a new maritime confrontation near a contested South China Sea shoal
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- California man who’s spent 25 years in prison for murder he didn’t commit has conviction overturned
- The Air Force’s new nuclear stealth bomber, the B-21 Raider, has taken its first test flight
- 131 World War II vets die each day, on average; here is how their stories are being preserved.
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- NATO member Romania pushes to buy 54 Abrams battle tanks from US
Ranking
- How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
- Feeling crowded yet? The Census Bureau estimates the world’s population has passed 8 billion
- Keke Palmer accuses ex Darius Jackson of 'physically attacking me,' mother responds
- China denies accusations of forced assimilation and curbs on religious freedom in Tibet
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- French far-right leader Marine Le Pen raises a storm over her plan to march against antisemitism
- Horoscopes Today, November 9, 2023
- 16 Amazing Sales Happening This Weekend You'll Regret Missing
Recommendation
'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
Partial list of nominees for the 66th Grammy Awards
From loons to a Lab.: Minnesota's state flag submissions do not disappoint
Melissa Rivers Reveals How Fiancé Steve Mitchel Asked Her Son Cooper's Permission Before Proposing
Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
RHOBH's Crystal Kung Minkoff Says These Real Housewives Were Rude at BravoCon
Koi emerges as new source of souring relations between Japan and China
File-transfer software data breach affected 1.3M individuals, says Maine officials