HomeMy WebLinkAbout2008-07-22; Municipal Water District; 660; Presentation Update On Drought and Water SupplyWlj CARLSBAD MUNICIPAL WATER DISTRICT - AGENDA BILj" I^^ X l
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AB# 660
MTG. 7/22/08
DEPT. PW/M&O
RECEIVE A PRESENTATION UPDATE
ON DROUGHT AND WATER SUPPLY
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CITY MGR. / M
RECOMMENDED ACTION:
Receive an updated presentation from the General Manager on Drought and Water Supply
conditions.
ITEM EXPLANATION:
This informational report provides an update to current drought conditions in the Colorado
Basin, California and the San Diego region. The report will also discuss potential water supply
cutbacks and provide information related to the desalination project.
FISCAL IMPACT:
Several factors can influence revenue received by the District. These include water supply
reductions, wet weather seasons, etc. Staff will monitor and analyze these, and other potential
scenarios, throughout the year to determine financial impacts to the District.
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT:
Delta smelt, a species listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act, have been
impacted by State Water Project pumping. Recently, a U.S. District Judge has ordered the
reduction of pumping by the State Water Project and/or the release of more water upstream of
the State Water Project pumps in an attempt to establish temporary guidelines for the protection
of the delta smelt and other fish species.
The delta smelt are found in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta in Northern California
and the actions related to the reduction in State Water Project pumping do not have a direct
local impact for Carlsbad.
EXHIBITS:
None
DEPARTMENT CONTACT: Mark Stone 760-438-2722 mston@ci.carlsbad.ca.us
FOR CITY CLERKS USE ONLY.
BOARD ACTION: APPROVED
DENIED
CONTINUED
WITHDRAWN
AMENDED
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CONTINUED TO DATE SPECIFIC D
CONTINUED TO DATE UNKNOWN D'
RETURNED TO STAFF D
OTHER-SEE MINUTES D
Drought and Water Supply UpdateCarlsbad Municipal Water DistrictBoard of DirectorsJuly 22, 2008Mark Stone
AgendaCurrent Water Supply Conditions Governor ActionsDrought ResponsePotential CutbacksNext Steps
Governor Proclaims Statewide Drought – June 4, 2008Critically dry conditions in 2007 and 2008Snowpack water content at 67% of normalRunoff forecast at 55% of normalDriest spring on record in northern CaliforniaReservoir levels low – Oroville and Colorado River Basin system at about 50% percent of capacityLargest court-ordered delivery restrictions in state history
Lake OrovilleJune 2005: 897.12 Feet Elevation – 3,492,262 Acre Feet
Lake OrovilleFebruary 2008: 719.86 Feet Elevation – 1,412,524 Acre Feet
Executive Order by the Governor – June 4, 2008Agencies strongly encouraged to take aggressive action to reduce water use in 2008 and prepare for potential worsening conditions in 2009DWR to take immediate actions to address drought conditions and delivery limitationsState of Emergency proclamation –June 12, 2008
MWD – 2009 and BeyondAllocation MethodologyFive-Year Supply Plan under developmentShortages could be significantProlonged multi-year shortages possibleFour action areas:Extraordinary ConservationFast-Track Local ResourcesDevelop Short & Long Term Delta ImprovementsTransfersActions are critical to reducing risk
Water Authority Drought Response ActionsDMP activation – June 2007Launched 20-Gallon Challenge – June 2007Stored imported water in local reservoirs – 2007/2008Adopted Blueprint for Water Conservation – July 2007Moved to DMP Stage 2 – December 2007Released Model Drought Response Ordinance – March 2008Launched “Save it or Lose it” campaign – May 2008Secured short-term water transfers – April 2008Allocation Preparation – Underway
Potential CutbacksExisting IAWP cutbacksResidentialCommercial/Industrial
What’s Next?Develop Water Authority 5-year supply plan in coordination with MWDAddress consistency between Water Authority and MWD allocation methodsDrought Conservation OrdinanceAddress future development projects Mandatory cutbacksLocal Supply ProjectsSeawater Desalination
Questions?