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Improving Regional Water Reliability in the Sacramento Region May 9, 2017
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Improving Regional Water Reliability in the Sacramento Region...2017/05/09  · Key Recent Regional Infrastructure Improvements Cooperative Transmission Pipeline and Howe Transmission

Feb 03, 2021

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  • Improving Regional Water Reliabilityin the Sacramento Region

    May 9, 2017

  • What are We Doing?

    • Identifying operational, institutional and physical improvements to expand reliability of each member’s water supply

    • Exploring an expansion of conjunctive use in the region• Current/near-term yield• Long-term yield based on planned

    improvements

    • Exploring interest in establishing water bank, both for internal and external partners

  • Why are We Doing It?

    • Have some vulnerable infrastructure

    • Courtesy of recent drought• Nearly dry Folsom Lake served as a

    wake-up call on the vulnerability of the American River Basin

    • Water right curtailments compel us to develop backup supply options

    • Regulatory requirements for Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA)

    • Future climate might alter the reservoir systems that we have relied on in the past

    A very dry Folsom Lake (2015)

    Collapsed Bear River Canal (2011)

  • Water for the Sacramento Region

  • Result of Supply Imbalance

    • Multiple cones of depression developed slowly over 60+ years

  • Key Recent RegionalInfrastructure Improvements

    Cooperative Transmission Pipeline and Howe Transmission Pipeline

    • Imported >300 TAF since mid-1990s

    Freeport Regional Water Project

    • 185 MGD intake (2010)

    • 85 MGD in County

    • 50 MGD SWTP in County, expandable to 100 MGD

    CTP

    Howe

    FRWP

  • In-lieu Conjunctive Use is Already Proven Successful Locally

  • Significant StoragePotential

    • Most of basin has been fairly stable over past 10+ years

    • In excess of 2 million acre-feet available storage space in Sacramento County

    But how will we get it in the groundwater basin?

  • Significant Urban In-Lieu Recharge Potential

    0

    2,000

    4,000

    6,000

    8,000

    10,000

    12,000

    14,000

    16,000

    18,000

    Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

    Average Monthly Groundwater Production 2011 through 2014 (acre-feet)

    Sacramento Suburban WD

    Sacramento County Water Agency

    Rio Linda/Elverta CSD

    Golden State Water Company

    Fair Oaks Water District

    Del Paso Manor Water District

    City of Sacramento

    Citrus Heights Water District

    Carmichael Water District

    California American Water

  • Constraints to Optimizing Conjunctive Use

    • Differences in cost of water = lack of incentive

    • Limitations of American River Watershed

    • Lack of system interconnections

    • Differences in water quality

  • Reclamation Water Banks

    • Authorized by Central Valley Project Improvement Act of 1992

    • 9+ existing water banks in CA

    • Reclamation does not own/operate facilities

    • Once established:• Can bank own CVP water outside contract area

    • Can bank for other CVP contractors

    • Can have long-term banking contracts (typically >10 years)

    • Requires: • Demonstrate “banking” and “recovery” capacity

    • Demonstrate no harm to other groundwater users

    • Bank water before it can be recovered

  • Ultimate Goal –Regional Water Bank

    • Key Benefits• Reduce impacts of future droughts by

    establishing a local “reservoir” in the groundwater basin

    • Create additional supply yield by operating basin as storage reservoir

    • Promote investing in facilities and operations needed for local reliability

    • Includes a “loss factor” to ensure a net benefit to basin

    North American Subbasin

    South American Subbasin

  • Steps Toward USBR-recognized Water Bank

    • High level look at opportunities created by near and long-term improvements with initial look at potential partners (Regional Water Reliability Plan)

    • Update regional modeling tool to conduct technical analysis to further define opportunities and evaluate impacts

    • Complete environmental analysis, establish governance, develop legal agreements, and engage with partners