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Regionalism in Water Resources Management

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Presentation on theme: "Regionalism in Water Resources Management"— Presentation transcript:

1 Regionalism in Water Resources Management
Blueprint Learning Network November 30, 2006 John K. Woodling California Department of Water Resources

2 California Water Systems
Central Valley Project (1937) State Water Project (1960) Hetch Hetchy (1913) Mokelumne Aqueduct (1929) Los Angeles Aqueduct (1908) Colorado River Aqueduct (1932)

3 California Water Systems

4 Water Management Transitions
Era of Conflict 1850 1900 1950 2000 Westward Focus Water and Power Development Environmental Priorities

5 California Water Plan Key Initiatives:
Integrated Regional Water Management Statewide Water Management

6 Scenario Demand Changes by Region (by Year 2030)

7 Resource Management Strategies
Reduce Water Demand Agricultural Water Use Efficiency Urban Water Use Efficiency Improve Operational Efficiency & Transfers Conveyance System Reoperation Water Transfers Increase Water Supply Conjunctive Management & Groundwater Storage Desalination –Brackish & Seawater Precipitation Enhancement Recycled Municipal Water Surface Storage – CALFED Surface Storage - Regional/Local Improve Water Quality Drinking Water Treatment and Distribution Groundwater/Aquifer Remediation Matching Quality to Use Pollution Prevention Urban Runoff Management Practice Resource Stewardship Agricultural Lands Stewardship Economic Incentives (Loans, Grants, and Water Pricing) Ecosystem Restoration Floodplain Management Recharge Areas Protection Urban Land Use Management Water-Dependent Recreation Watershed Management

8 Range of Additional Water for Eight Resource Management Choices

9 Integrated Regional Water Management
Why IRWM? Water management actions and issues are interconnected Issues don’t obey political boundaries A variety of entities are responsible for different actions IRWM promotes a sustainable, efficient approach to water management by bringing together interests, issues, and solutions

10 Integrated Regional Water Management
Integration Considerations Water quality and quantity Demand management and supply enhancement All beneficial water uses Upstream, downstream, and instream effects Land use, energy, and other resources Broad societal costs and benefits

11 Integrated Regional Water Management
Participants Water purveyors Wastewater agencies Flood control agencies Cities & counties Native American tribes Self-supplied water users Stakeholder organizations Industry Environmental Community State, federal, and regional agencies or universities

12 Implementation Proposition 50 - $500 million for IRWM grants
Proposition 84 - $1 billion for IRWM grants Local cost shares of 60-90%

13 Planning Grants 33 Awards $500K to 1.5 million

14 Implementation Grants
16 proposals Requesting $380 million Total costs $2 billion 7 recommended for funding $25 million grants


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