Drought may mean reductions around the valley
By KEVIN COURTNEY
Register Staff Writer
November 20th, 2009
November 19th, 2009
November 14th, 2009
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November 12th, 2009
Local cities are searching near and far for water, hoping to cobble together a large enough supply for Napa Valley residents to survive a third dry year.
As things stand, American Canyon and St. Helena are contemplating mandatory conservation measures, while Calistoga will consider voluntary cutbacks.
Napa and Yountville are the valley’s two most water-affluent cities, with no special conservation measures in the offing.
Felix Riesenberg, the county’s principal water resources engineer, gave this assessment to the Napa County Flood Control District’s board of directors on Tuesday.
Despite a dismally dry December and January — traditionally, two of the wettest months — Riesenberg said it was too early to panic. “It’s part of our job not to come out and say ‘The sky is falling’ until it is falling,” he said.
Napa is in the best position, with likely access to 28,720 acre feet, but an estimated 2009 demand of only 15,500 acre feet, he said.
“They have a very aggressive water conservation program,” Riesenberg said. “They’ve set themselves up to be in good shape.”
Despite a decade of substantial growth, Napa used the same amount of water in 2007 that it consumed in 1997, Mayor Jill Techel, a flood board member, said.
Napa is relying on its two local reservoirs for 22,000 acre feet, while tapping five sources outside the county for some 7,000 acre feet, Riesenberg said. The city’s goal is to use outside sources first, keeping as much local water as possible in reserve for 2010.
Yountville, which uses 600 acre feet per year, expects to have no trouble obtaining that amount from state-owned Rector Reservoir, Riesenberg said.
St. Helena has the greatest shortage. Residents would be expected to consume 2,000 acre feet this year, but only 1,500 acre feet are available, Riesenberg said.
The St. Helena City Council intends to declare a water emergency, allowing the city to impose mandatory conservation measures, including limits on outdoor irrigation.
American Canyon would be expected to use 3,080 acre feet this year, which closely matches a potential supply of 3,090 acre feet, Riesenberg said.
But several of American Canyon’s sources are iffy, requiring special purchases and abundant flows through the Sacramento Delta this spring, Riesenberg said.
For this reason, the American Canyon City Council set in motion on Tuesday steps leading to a mandatory conservation ordinance to reduce consumption.
Calistoga has access to 765 acre feet, but could be expected to consume 800 to 820 acre feet, Riesenberg said.
Mayor Jack Gingles, who sits on the flood board, said he would propose that the Calistoga council adopt voluntary cutbacks. “It just seems we should be more concerned than we are,” he said.
A key component of every city’s water supply, except St. Helena, is the State Water Project, which is projecting deliveries of just 15 percent of contract amounts this year.
This could rise if the spring is a wet one, but it could potentially fall if dry conditions persist, Riesenberg said.
The weather pattern for Northern California may be changing, with back-to-back storms predicted for today and Friday, forecasters report.
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napamouth wrote on Feb 5, 2009 1:04 AM:
jwk wrote on Feb 5, 2009 7:01 AM:
kingsbridge wrote on Feb 5, 2009 7:50 AM:
Bauhausfan wrote on Feb 5, 2009 7:59 AM:
"The Stockholm International Water Institute talks about 'an acute and devastating humanitarian crisis'; the founder of the World Economic Forum, Klaus Schwab, warns of a 'perfect storm'; Ban Ki-Moon, the United Nations Secretary General, has raised the spectre of 'water wars'. And, as the population keeps growing and getting richer, and global warming changes the climate, experts are warning that unless something is done, billions more will suffer lack of water - precipitating hunger, disease, migration and ultimately conflict." "
Bauhausfan wrote on Feb 5, 2009 8:04 AM:
There is no more fresh water on Earth today than there was a million years ago. Yet today, 6 billion people share it. Since 1950, the world population has doubled, but water use has tripled. " "
napadad wrote on Feb 5, 2009 8:37 AM:
napadad wrote on Feb 5, 2009 9:01 AM:
Press Clippings Climate Change Drought Water Shortage Water Wars
Across the U.S.,
water battles have begun. They suggest a war lasting for decades. At center stage, three states are in a stalemate over Georgia's Lake Lanier, whose water supply is 11 feet below the November average due to drought. A man-made lake in Northern Georgia, Lake Lanier provides the majority of Atlanta's drinking water and is the start of the Chattahoochee River, which supplies water for parts of Alabama and Florida. Lake Lanier represents the steady shrinking of lakes, rivers and basins throughout the U.S. that previously had more than enough water. New weather patterns, arguably related to climate change, are forcing utility companies to find new water supplies. If current weather trends persist, within a decade, these water storage areas may not satisfy demand.
Human-caused global warming has been shrinking the snowpack across the mountain ranges of the West for five decades, suggesting that the region's long battle for water will only worsen, according to a computer analysis released Thursday. As temperatures have increased, more winter precipitation has fallen as rain instead of snow, and the snow is melting sooner, reported the study published in the journal Science. The result is that rivers are flowing faster in the spring, raising the risk of flooding, and slower in the summer, raising the risk of drought "
Farmgirl wrote on Feb 5, 2009 9:07 AM:
Jay Jacobson wrote on Feb 5, 2009 9:24 AM:
Paddy wrote on Feb 5, 2009 10:05 AM:
shellman wrote on Feb 5, 2009 10:27 AM:
Cadence wrote on Feb 5, 2009 10:52 AM:
If the 10,000,000 + people in the desert don't get the water, they'll be forced to move to where the water is, namely, northern California.
You want them here?
Actually it's not a bad idea. Make Napa Pipe 20 or better, 50 stories high since it has unlimited water and the influx from SoCal would give it an unlimited market to boot.
We all win! "
amazed wrote on Feb 5, 2009 12:36 PM:
krusty wrote on Feb 5, 2009 2:32 PM:
Cadence wrote on Feb 5, 2009 3:21 PM:
I just hope the SoCal refugees don't notice the wheels on the Napa Pipe water taxis... they might start asking questions. "
db76 wrote on Feb 5, 2009 4:07 PM:
someguyinnapa wrote on Feb 5, 2009 4:44 PM:
Sounds to me that we need a DUI chaingang out there cutting back the overgrown brush and fire fuel; not controlled burns.
Now there's a thought... "
steph wrote on Feb 5, 2009 5:16 PM:
Of course, Israel is the leader in water recycling and desalination.
Some are against the idea of desalination for reasons not fully articulated.
A solar-powered desalination plant...
Hmm....
(Even Ruff might get behind that, right Ruff?) "
are n bee wrote on Feb 5, 2009 8:02 PM:
krusty wrote on Feb 5, 2009 8:08 PM:
A customer (not a single person) there can use no more than 150 gallons a day. Three violations of the rule and they can have their water shut off. "
4466 wrote on Feb 5, 2009 9:59 PM:
someguyinnapa wrote on Feb 5, 2009 10:07 PM:
I spent a few years at Travis AFB as a Fire Fighter. And I am poking fun at the article from yesterday that talked about the controlled burns....
and yes, water tankers are often used (where accessable via fire road, that's what a fire road is for) along with the bull dozer lines and the men with shovels....
so, again.... maybe a DUI chaingang would be more prudent to clean up the overgrown brush....
save water
and if its yellow, let it mellow
if its brown, flush it down... "
dellasumbrella wrote on Feb 5, 2009 10:20 PM:
Sarcasm, sorry.
Thank you Bauhausfan & napadad. The info you present is valuable to all. "