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Archive for the 'drought' Tag

Snowpack prompts boost in state water supply

April 1st, 2010, 3:23 pm by

The agency that manages much of California’s water supply increased the amount allocated to downstream agencies Thursday, saying recent storms have improved the snow pack in the Sierra Nevada Mountains.

Lake Oroville. Photo courtesy Department of Water Resources

But the new allocation — 20 percent, meaning 20 percent of what water agencies requested — remains a fairly low figure. Some reservoirs, such as Lake Oroville, also remain low, so the state Department of Water Resources will continue asking California residents to conserve.

“Statewide, the snowpack is hovering right around normal, which is a welcome thing after three dry years,” said the agency’s director, Mark Cowin. “We do expect to get more precipitation before the spring is over, but after April 1 is typically considered the end of snow season.”

The latest readings placed the Sierra snowpack at 106 percent of normal, up from 81 percent of normal at this time last year.

The agency started the year with its lowest water allocation ever: just five percent. Typically, the figure is raised as the winter rain and snow increase water supplies.

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Satellites reveal extreme water loss in California

December 14th, 2009, 5:21 pm by

New satellite measurements reveal that California’s Central Valley and snow-capped peaks have lost massive amounts of water over the past six years — enough, in fact, to fill up Lake Mead. drycropsgoc

More than 30 cubic kilometers of water have been shed from the state’s San Joaquin and Sacramento drainage basins since 2003, according to measurements by twin gravity-detecting satellites known as the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment, or GRACE. One cubic kilometer equals about 264 billion gallons.

Drought and excessive pumping of groundwater have combined to cause the water loss, said UC Irvine civil and environmental engineering professor James Famiglietti.

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State water allocation is lowest ever

December 1st, 2009, 1:15 pm by

The agency that manages much of the state’s water supply announced its lowest initial allocation ever — just 5 percent of the amount that downstream water agencies requested. orovillemarinagoc1

The low figure is likely to be revised upward once winter rains hit the state, and Orange County water officials say the preliminary figure won’t prompt any new action.

But the lowest-ever allocation is another sign that California remains unusually dry, its reservoirs alarmingly low.

“There’s a 90 percent chance the allocation will increase as we move through the winter months,” said Ted Thomas, spokesman for the state Department of Water Resources. “This is a very conservative estimate.”

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Most of California declared a ‘drought disaster’

September 22nd, 2009, 12:24 pm by

The U.S. Department of Agriculture has declared most of California a drought disaster area because of crop losses, with Orange County among them but considered indirectly affected. mead

The designation covers 50 of California’s 58 counties, and allows farmers suffering losses to receive emergency loans.

Twenty-one counties are considered primary disaster areas, with 29 — Orange County among them — listed because they have boundaries adjoining the primary counties. Riverside County, which borders Orange County, is considered a primary disaster area.

It is the state’s third consecutive year of drought, and much of California, including Orange County, falls into the U.S. Drought Monitor’s “severe” drought classification.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

(Photo: Cracked bed in Lake Mead on the Colorado River in 2005; AP file.)

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“Shorter shower” device: a key to fighting drought?

July 21st, 2009, 11:34 am by

The idea is surprisingly simple: attach a five-minute timer to the wall of your shower, and save tens of thousands of gallons of water each year.

A San Diego company, Coast Molding Inc., is selling the device through Shortershower.com. And a number of water agencies across the state are providing the round, hourglass-shaped timers, held up by a suction cup and protected by a plastic shell, either free or at low cost, the company says. shortershower1b

The device sells for $7.99 on the company’s Web site, and is expected to be available by Christmas at Home Depot and Wal-Mart, spokeswoman Tracy LeRoux said.

 

Would you be willing to cut your shower to five minutes to conserve water?
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Fire-season forecast: four large fires in O.C. region

July 2nd, 2009, 2:46 pm by

Orange County’s native plants are dried out and ready to burn, and a U.S. Forest Service forecast says the region can expect four large fires between August and October — the current average, and the highest number in Southern California. fireslidegoc

The dry conditions are stoking concern about Fourth of July revelry and the potential for errant fireworks. The Orange County Fire Authority is placing reserve firefighters on duty in places like the county’s eastern canyons for the holiday.

And the agency has again rolled one fire season into another, continuing the closure of some county open-space areas to the public for the third year in a row.

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