Effective July 1, the Water Authority is reducing water supply deliveries to its 24 member agencies by 8 percent. The Water Authority is taking this action as a response to reduced water supplies caused by regulatory restrictions on water deliveries from Northern California, lingering drought, and a 13 percent cutback from the Water Authority's largest water supplier, the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California.
In April 2009, to prepare for these cutbacks, the Water Authority declared a Level 2 "Drought Alert," enabling member agencies to implement local mandatory water restrictions. Restrictions will vary by member agency. To find out the restrictions in your area, please visit www.sdcwa.org/manage/droughtordinance_agencies.phtml
1. San Diego County Water Supply
2009-10 Outlook
San Diego County Water Authority
July 2009
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2. Water Authority Background
Wholesale water agency
created by State
Legislature in 1944
24 member agencies
35-member board of directors
Serves 3 million people and
region’s $171 billion economy
Service area
920,000 acres
97% of county’s population
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3. Who Provides Your Water?
Individual customers Local Water Agencies
served by local retail Camp Lakeside WD City of Santa Fe
water agency Pendleton
Carlsbad National City*
Poway
Rainbow
ID
South Bay
Local agencies supplied MWD MWD Irrigation
District*
by wholesaler (Water City of Del City of Ramona Vallecitos
Authority) Mar Oceanside MWD WD
Water Authority secures City of Olivenhain Rincon Del Valley
supplies from outside Escondido MWD Diablo
MWD
Center
MWD
the region for 24 local Fallbrook Otay Water City of San Vista ID
agencies PUD District Diego
6 cities Helix WD Padre Dam
MWD
San
Dieguito
Yuima
MWD
14 water/utility districts WD
3 irrigation districts * Member of the Sweetwater Authority
1 military base
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4. San Diego County’s Water Sources (2008)
LAKE
SHASTA
San Diego County imports
LAKE more than 80% of its
OROVILLE
water supply
State Water
Project
(Bay-Delta) Colorado River
28% 54%
Local Water
Supply Projects
18%
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5. Three Challenges to Our Water Supply
1. Regulatory
Pumping restrictions are sharply limiting
imported water from Northern California
2. Drought
Last three years in California
8 of last 10 on the Colorado River
3. Low storage
Major reservoirs have been drawn down
to low levels
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6. Water Reliability in 2009
Reliable
ow
W ater
ge
Regulatory restrictions have
/Sn
ra
Sto
severely cut water supplies
in
Ra
ter
from Northern California
Wa
al
nu
An
ty
Ca paci
g
Pu mpin
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7. Fish Protections Restrict Pumping
Delta smelt
Central Valley
steelhead
Longfin smelt
Banks Pumping Plant
State Water Project Chinook salmon
Green sturgeon
Additional regulatory restrictions announced 6/4/09
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8. Impacts of Regulatory Restrictions
on Southern California’s Supplies
Bars show normal water
deliveries from the State 1,851,000 AF
Water Project under 1,709,000 AF
varying conditions.
980,000 AF
415,000 AF
Drier Years Wetter Years
AF = Acre-feet. One acre-foot = 325,900 gallons.
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9. Impacts of Regulatory Restrictions
on Southern California’s Supplies
Reductions in water
supplies from the State 1,851,000 AF
Water Project due to 1,709,000 AF
Delta smelt restrictions 43% lost
44% lost
980,000 AF
40% lost
24% lost
415,000 AF
315,000 AF 585,000 AF 960,000 AF 1,060,000 AF
Drier Years Wetter Years
AF = Acre-feet. One acre-foot = 325,900 gallons.
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10. Impacts to San Diego County
Metropolitan Water District (MWD)
will allocate supplies
13% cut from MWD starting July 1
Water Authority allocating supplies
to its 24 member retail agencies
Regional shortage: 8%
Cutbacks to agriculture: 13% to 30%
Financial penalties in place
“Drought Alert” condition
Mandatory water use restrictions
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12. Diversifying San Diego County’s
Water Supply Portfolio
1991 2010 2020
Local Supplies
Dry-Year
40%
QSA Transfers
95% Supplies 2%
Local Supplies
20% 16%
MWD
Supplies
QSA 29%
Supplies
31%
MWD Supplies
62%
Metropolitan Water District Seawater Desalination
Imperial Irrigation District Transfer Local Surface Water
All American & Coachella Canal Lining Recycled Water
Conservation Groundwater
Dry-Year Water Transfers 12
13. Diversification Strategy is Working
Colorado River Quantification Settlement Agreement (QSA)
155,000 AF in FY 2010
Ramping up to 280,000 AF/YR by 2021
Expanding development of local supplies
Recycled water
Groundwater
Seawater desalination
Conservation
$3.7 billion Capital Improvement Program
Historic regional infrastructure investments
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14. The Impact on Rates
$ $$ $$$ $$$$
Colorado River State Water Spot Water Loss of Sales
Water Project Transfers (Shortage)
<2003 2003-2007 2008> 2009-10?
Supply challenges make securing water more expensive
Shift to more-expensive supplies is driving up the cost of water
from MWD, the Water Authority’s largest supplier
Water Authority passes increased costs to member agencies
18.1 % rate increase to take effect Sept. 1, 2009
Member (retail) agencies pass costs to ratepayers
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15. We need to work together
Businesses/residents must save more water
now, and in future
Visit www.sdcwa.org to view local agency
restrictions
Support local water supply reliability efforts
Push state leaders to fix Bay-Delta
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16. Questions?
San Diego County Water Authority
Speakers Bureau Requests and Information
speakersbureau@sdcwa.org
(858) 522-6708
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