California WaterFix2018-03-07T14:55:09-08:00

California WaterFix

The California WaterFix, formerly known as the Bay Delta Conservation Plan, would build two massive tunnels beneath the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta for an estimated $17 billion and would take 10 to 15 years to complete. The project as originally proposed would build two tunnels to shore up the State Water Project by diverting Southern California-bound water around the fragile San Joaquin Delta.

Currently, California’s largest supply of water is dependent on 50-year-old levees. According to state officials, if a natural disaster occurred it might cause the levees to fail, allowing salt water intrusion which could contaminate the fresh water supply.

The initial plan was to build two 35-mile long tunnels from the beginning of the State Water Project near Tracy to the bank of the Sacramento River. However, in February 2018, the California Department of Water Resources (DWR) announced that WaterFix would be developed in two stages instead.

The first stage will include a single tunnel and two intakes with a capacity of 6,000 cubic feet per second (cfs) while the second phase would add another tunnel and a third intake expanding the capacity to 9,000 cfs.

Approval of WaterFix is dependent on, among other things, local water agencies agreeing to fund the project’s construction and operation. The DWR hasn’t talked enough districts into the plan to cover the entire $17 billion tab, but it believes it has enough money to afford the $10.7 billion cost of just one tunnel right now.

Angelica Obioha, Infrastructure-Info Staff

Gov. Jerry Brown urges ‘yes’ for both Delta tunnels. Will that sway crucial vote?

The Sacramento Bee » Gov. Jerry Brown, in a last-minute bid to forge ahead with one of his legacy projects, urged Southern California’s big water agency Monday to support a plan to build the two Delta tunnels simultaneously. Brown sent a letter to the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California supporting the ambitious $16.7 billion effort to build both Delta tunnels together.

April 9, 2018|

Southern California water agency backs off plan to finance both Delta tunnels

The Sacramento Bee » Southern California’s water agency was going to bankroll most of Gov. Jerry Brown’s $16.7 billion Delta tunnels project, however, that plan died suddenly on Monday, less than a week after staffers from the Metropolitan Water District presented the proposal to the agency’s board of directors. The district ultimately decided the financing plan contained too many risks.

April 2, 2018|

Jerry Brown’s grand California water solution remains in jeopardy as he prepares to exit

Los Angeles Times » State officials announced last month that they would move ahead with the construction of one giant water tunnel under the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta rather than two. The announcement did little to settle the fate of the project, which Gov. Jerry Brown’s administration considers vital to sustaining water deliveries to one of the country’s richest agricultural regions and the urban sprawl of Southern California.

March 5, 2018|
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